What the market looks like in 2026
Fear of flying affects 25–40% of the population, and the market responding to it has grown accordingly. Mental health apps broadly are projected to reach $36 billion by 2034, and the fear-of-flying niche has attracted everything from pilot-built turbulence trackers to Stanford-backed hypnosis platforms to full clinical VR systems.
The challenge: most apps claim high success rates but few deliver the combination of clinical validation, comprehensive features, and offline functionality that nervous flyers actually need. No current app market leader works reliably in airplane mode — the environment where you need it most.
Here's what actually exists across four categories.
CBT-based therapy apps
The market leader. 40+ years of development, 10,000+ graduates, and a unique methodology from a licensed therapist who is also a former airline pilot. Uses "Strengthening Exercise" techniques to link flight stimuli to calming memories. Includes a G-Force meter and turbulence forecasts that users consistently praise.
- Deepest methodology in the market
- G-Force meter is genuinely calming
- Real turbulence forecast data
- 40+ years of refinement
- Full program is $595 — 20x competitors
- Complex pricing with many upsells
- Requires significant consistent practice
- No recent peer-reviewed clinical trials
Developed with the VALK Foundation — founded by KLM, University of Leiden, and Schiphol Group — this has the strongest clinical foundation of any consumer app. Their RCT with 1,026 participants proved both 2-day and 1-day CBT programs produce clinically significant anxiety decreases at 12-month follow-up. Effect sizes of 0.98–1.14. The app works offline with a panic button and audio guidance.
- Best clinical evidence base
- Offline panic button audio
- Low price for the quality
- RCT-validated protocols
- Interface feels dated
- In-person program costs significantly more
- Limited English-language content
Turbulence-focused apps
The only app that uses your phone's actual sensors — accelerometer, gyroscope, barometer — to track real aircraft movement and explain what every bump and sound means in real time. Created by a pilot-psychologist with 22+ years flying experience and 8,000 program graduates. The AlexAI feature provides 50+ anxiety regulation techniques. When it works, it's exceptional.
- Real-time sensor-based tracking
- Explains every sound and sensation
- Pilot-psychologist credentials
- Pre-flight briefing with route data
- App crashes during flights — critical failure
- Users report losing purchased credits
- Per-flight pricing gets expensive
- Needs working connection for setup
The best value in the market for a single specific use case: knowing how turbulent your specific route will be before and during a flight. Uses pilot-grade weather data, includes NLP techniques and a "Panic Mode" emergency feature. Years of consistent user praise for forecast accuracy. The limitations are real: iOS only, US/Canada/Mexico/UK/Western Europe coverage only.
- Best-in-class turbulence forecast accuracy
- $1.99 one-time — exceptional value
- Works in airplane mode after setup
- iOS only — excludes Android users
- Limited geographic coverage
- No therapeutic component
A purely statistical approach: enter your flight details, get the crash probability (typically one in several million). Featured by major media outlets, created by Vanilla Pixel, includes airline safety rankings. The app itself says it's "for entertainment purposes only" and has no therapeutic component. Some users find statistics calming; others find the crash-focused framing anxiety-provoking. Results vary strongly by individual.
- Free
- Simple, fast, well-designed
- Useful for statistical reassurance seekers
- Crash-focused framing helps some, hurts others
- No therapeutic component
- Self-described as entertainment, not treatment
Not sure which approach fits your anxiety type?
The free ReadytoFly assessment takes 5 minutes and identifies your specific fear profile — so you get a program matched to what's actually driving your anxiety.
Airline and in-person programs
Airline programs offer the most immersive experience — but at substantial cost and limited geographic availability.
| Program | Price | Format | Success claim |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Airways Flying with Confidence | £279–£399 (online: £195) | Full day + 45–60 min experience flight | 98% (50,000 graduates over 35 years) |
| easyJet Fearless Flyer | £89–£219 | Virtual ground course + experience flight | 95% (13,000+ since 2012) |
| Lufthansa Aviation Training | ~€400–600 | Full-day seminar + exclusive charter flight | 50% anxiety reduction (research-validated) |
| Virgin Atlantic / Lovefly | Digital subscription | 30-day digital + webinars with pilots | 98% historically |
The airline programs are the gold standard for immersive, one-day transformation — but they require travel to specific airports (mostly UK and European), cost $300–$600+, and are unavailable to the roughly 80% of the market who aren't near those locations. Their reported success rates are high, but the methodology is not always transparent.
What no app in the market gets right
After reviewing 30+ solutions, the critical missing features across all categories are consistent:
- Reliable airplane mode functionality. SkyGuru crashes during flights. SOAR requires internet for key features. TurbCast works offline but has no therapeutic content. Being disconnected is precisely when nervous flyers most need support.
- Personalization beyond generic content. All current apps deliver the same content regardless of whether you're afraid of turbulence, engine noise, crashing, loss of control, or claustrophobia. These are different fears requiring different approaches.
- Evidence-based CBT with affordable one-time pricing. VALK/ZeroPhobia has the clinical evidence but limited consumer polish. SOAR has the polish but costs $595. There's a clear gap for an app that combines clinical rigor with accessible pricing.
- Crisis intervention protocols for severe episodes. No consumer app includes structured in-flight crisis protocols matched to clinical severity.
How to choose the right tool for you
The right answer depends on what's specifically driving your anxiety:
- If your main fear is turbulence and you want real-time reassurance during the flight: SkyGuru for most routes, TurbCast (iOS) as a reliable backup. Combine with an understanding of what turbulence actually is.
- If you need statistical reassurance before booking or flying: Am I Going Down? is free and works. The safety statistics article on this blog covers the same ground with more context.
- If you want a clinical program with the strongest evidence base and can travel to Europe for it: British Airways Flying with Confidence or easyJet Fearless Flyer. VALK Foundation in the Netherlands for the most research-validated program.
- If you want CBT and ACT-based therapy that works offline on any device and addresses your specific fear profile rather than generic content: that's the gap ReadytoFly was built to fill.
Frequently asked questions
This article reflects independent research and competitive analysis. Pricing and features may have changed since publication. ReadytoFly is one of the products discussed. We believe in transparent, honest comparison — that's why we've included the limitations of all products including our own.

