Best Personal Health Record (PHR) Apps in India 2026: Full Comparison
Best Personal Health Record (PHR) Apps in India 2026: Full Comparison
You searched "PHR app" because a doctor or a tech-savvy relative used the term, and now you're staring at a list of names — ABHA, Eka Care, a couple of others — with no idea what actually separates them. Fair. The category is genuinely new in India, and most of what's written about it reads like a press release.
Here's a straight comparison: what a PHR app is supposed to do, who the real players are, and what separates them in practice.
Key Takeaways:
- A true PHR app means you own the record, not the hospital — it persists even if you switch doctors or cities
- ABHA is the government's own framework and free PHR layer; most PHR apps build on top of it, not instead of it
- Eka Care is currently the largest consumer PHR platform in India by user count
- Most PHR apps stop at storage. The differences show up in what happens after storage — search, summarisation, sharing, and how old paper records actually get digitised
- India's PHR space has maybe five or six real players, which is small compared to how big the underlying problem is
1. What a PHR App Is Actually Supposed to Do
Five things, and most apps only nail two or three of them:
- The patient owns the record — not locked to one hospital's system
- Records come from multiple sources — labs, clinics, hospitals, not just one provider
- The data survives — change doctors, change cities, the record doesn't disappear
- You control who sees what — consent-based sharing, not automatic access for anyone
- It becomes a lifelong account — not a one-time upload that gets abandoned after the first use
Most hospital apps you've used — Apollo's app, Practo, your local clinic's portal — fail point one immediately. They're built around that specific provider's records, not yours as a person who sees multiple doctors over a lifetime.
2. ABHA — The Government Layer Underneath Everything
Before comparing apps, it's worth understanding ABHA, because almost every PHR app in India either builds on top of it or competes with the idea of it.
ABHA (Ayushman Bharat Health Account) is a free, government-issued 14-digit health ID under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission. It's not really an app — it's an identity layer. Over 30 crore ABHA accounts have been generated, and the government's own ABHA app lets you link records from hospitals that participate in the ABDM network, with your consent required for every share.
The catch: ABHA only works for records from hospitals that are actually ABDM-integrated, which is still a minority of Indian healthcare providers, particularly smaller clinics and private practitioners. Your handwritten prescription from a local GP isn't going to show up in ABHA automatically — someone still has to digitise it.
3. The Real Players, Compared Honestly
Eka Care
Currently the largest consumer PHR app in India by scale. Built heavily around ABHA integration, plus features like camera-based heart rate monitoring and AI symptom assessments. Strong at the basics — store, organise, share with ABDM-linked providers. Eka Care also partners with hardware players (it's behind Samsung Health's India health records feature) and has built out a clinic/EMR side for doctors too.
5eCare
A broader healthcare app rather than a pure PHR — ABDM-certified, with OPD token booking for AIIMS and government hospitals, medicine ordering, lab test booking, and PMJAY claims tracking layered around the health record core. Positioned more as an all-in-one access point to government healthcare infrastructure than a dedicated record archive.
MyDigiRecords
Founded by a practising physician, focused specifically on patient-owned record storage with a strong emphasis on organising and indexing records by category and date, plus family profile management. Smaller user base than Eka Care but built with a clear clinical-workflow lens.
Samsung Health (Health Records feature)
Not a standalone PHR company, but worth knowing about — Samsung added an ABHA-integrated health records feature directly into its existing Health app, built in partnership with Eka Care. If you already use a Samsung phone and Samsung Health, this is a zero-extra-app option.
Ayu
Where Ayu differs from most of the above: the starting point isn't "upload your records," it's "we'll read the paper ones for you." Ayu's OCR is built specifically to handle handwritten Indian prescriptions and reports — the photographs of papers most families actually have, not clean digital exports. Beyond storage, it adds AI summarisation across a patient's full history and is built with a doctor-facing dashboard alongside the patient app, which most pure-play PHR apps don't have.
4. Which Fits Your Situation?
5. What's Genuinely Missing Across the Category
A few honest gaps that apply to nearly every app in this space, Ayu included:
Old paper records remain the bottleneck. Most families have years of physical prescriptions, lab reports, and discharge summaries sitting in a folder. Every app in this category, regardless of how polished the interface is, still depends on someone manually photographing and uploading those documents — or on OCR good enough to make that step painless.
Cross-app interoperability is still thin. If you switch from one PHR app to another, there's no guaranteed clean way to migrate your full history. ABHA helps here in theory, but practice lags behind.
Small clinics and individual practitioners are mostly outside the network. The ABDM ecosystem skews toward larger hospitals and chains. A solo GP or a small-town specialist is far less likely to be plugged in, which means their records still depend on the patient doing the digitising themselves.
6. People Also Ask
Is ABHA enough on its own, or do I need a separate PHR app?
ABHA alone gets you the identity and the government health locker, but the experience of actually using it — search, organisation, AI-assisted summaries — depends on the app layered on top. Most people end up using a third-party PHR app that's built on ABHA rather than the bare government app, the same way most people use a banking app rather than visiting the bank's own raw backend.
Are PHR apps free in India?
The core record storage is free across nearly every major app, including Ayu, Eka Care, and the government ABHA app itself. Some apps monetise through add-on services — consultations, lab test bookings, medicine delivery — rather than charging for the record storage itself.
Can a PHR app replace my hospital's own patient portal?
For storage and access, yes, largely. For provider-specific functions — booking with that specific hospital's doctors, viewing that hospital's billing — the hospital's own portal still has a role. A PHR app's advantage is that it works across hospitals, where any single provider's portal doesn't.
How do PHR apps handle old, handwritten prescriptions?
This varies a lot between apps and is honestly one of the biggest differentiators in the category. Basic apps let you upload a photo as an unstructured image. More advanced ones run OCR to extract actual structured data — medicine names, dosages, dates — from that same photo, which is the difference between a digital filing cabinet and something a doctor or an AI summary can actually use later.
7. Conclusion
India's PHR space is still small enough that you can genuinely compare every serious player in one sitting — which won't be true in two or three years. The real test for any of them isn't the feature list on the landing page. It's what happens the first time you actually need to pull up a five-year-old report in front of a new doctor, fast, without digging through a physical folder first.
If a meaningful chunk of your family's medical history still lives on paper, download Ayu and see how the OCR handles your actual prescriptions — that's the honest test, not a feature comparison table.
8. Disclaimer
App features, pricing, and integrations change frequently in this space. Information here reflects publicly available details as of June 2026 — verify current features directly with each app before making a decision.
Want to take control of your health records?
Ayu is a private health records app that keeps all your medical documents organised, accessible, and shareable — right from your phone.
- All records in one secure place
- Share with any doctor in seconds
- AI-powered report explanations


