
More than another wellness app.


Ditch the stress and reclaim your day.
The Science of YOU.
Slide the bars. See what your week actually looks like — and what changes when you take even a little of it back.
How many hours of screen time do you average per day?5 hrs
How many hours do you sleep per night?7 hrs
How many hours a day go to work and commuting?9 hrs
How many days a week do you get out for something that isn't work or errands?2 days
When you do get out, how long does it usually last?30 mins
How many of those outings include other people?1
Total free time per year:2,920 hrs
Current active time per year:52 hrs
That leaves 2,868 HOURS going nowhere.
With Bloom, 20 minutes a day reclaims 35 hours — that's 4 full days back in your year.
Sources: DataReportal 2024 (screen time), BMJ 2023 (20-minute activity threshold), Lancet Psychiatry 2018 (social activity impact). Bloom doesn't ask you to be more disciplined. It puts you closer to what's already out there.
What a better week looks like

4,380 Hours
hours a year of routine most people never build

3 in 5
Canadians say they lack consistent weekly structure

87%
of people stick with habits longer when others are involved
What is Bloom Canada?
A Vancouver platform that connects people with group activities, local experiences, and neighbourhood businesses — all in one place.
Is Bloom just another wellness app?
No. Bloom is built around showing up to real places with real people — not tracking, scrolling, or booking.
What's the science behind Bloom's approach?
People who exercise socially report 22% fewer poor mental health days (Lancet Psychiatry). Group participants stick with routines 66% longer (JMIR). Just 20 minutes of daily activity measurably reduces distress (BMJ).
How is Bloom different from Meetup, ClassPass, or MindBody?
Those platforms do one thing each. Bloom connects activities, people, local businesses, and weekly routine into one platform built for ongoing participation — not one-time visits.
Who is Bloom for?
Anyone from their mid-20s to their 70s who wants more from daily life — and the local businesses, professionals, and community leaders who want to reach them.















