Every January, a fresh set of wellness trends slams into our psyche. There’s a new supplement, a new form of therapy, or just a trending idiotic TikTok video that promises the life-changing health hack you’ve been looking for. Some are legit, but some are garbage.
Google Trends and a few clinicians point to the same thing for 2026. Some wellness trends are getting closer to real, regulated care. Others are getting pushy, more salesy, and more optimized for whatever the algorithm rewards.
3 Wellness trends worth leaning into
Emotional Fitness
Emotional fitness focuses on noticing stress earlier and responding with tools that help you regulate, like mindfulness, journaling, breathwork, or mood tracking.
“In high-pressure environments, stress often accumulates until it becomes unmanageable,” said Dr Hannah Nearney, a clinical psychiatrist and UK Medical Director at Flow Neuroscience. “Emotional fitness helps people identify emotional strain before it escalates, reducing the risk of anxiety and burnout.”
Electric Medicine
More clinicians are talking about electric medicine as a real option in mental health. It uses a mild electrical current aimed at brain regions tied to mood, instead of treating the whole body to reach the brain.
“Electric medicine works by speaking the brain’s own language, electrical signalling, rather than forcing chemical changes throughout the body,” said Dr Kultar Singh Garcha, an NHS GP and Chief Medical Officer at Flow Neuroscience.
He also pointed to a major milestone from late 2025, when the USDA approved the first non-invasive, at-home medical device based on transcranial direct-current stimulation for depression.
Low-friction Prevention
This is the boring trend that can actually help. It includes earlier screening, digital mood tracking used alongside clinical care, and telehealth that supports treatment instead of replacing it.
“Unfortunately, prevention in mental health has long been neglected,” Nearney said. “Next year will be about intervening earlier.”
Those three trends share a theme. They fit into real life, and they come with guardrails. Now for the stuff that tends to sell urgency and deliver confusion.
3 trends you should skip in 2026
Unregulated Wellness Devices and Biohacking Hype
As electric medicine gets attention, unregulated “brain” gadgets will keep flooding the market. “We must emphasise that not all devices that claim to stimulate the brain are medical treatments,” Garcha said. The question to ask is simple. Is it a regulated medical device, or a wellness product with big claims and little proof?
Extreme Diets and Detox Myths
Single-food diets, juice cleanses, and “reset” programs will keep cycling through feeds because they promise fast results. “The liver and kidneys already detox the body continuously,” Garcha said. Extreme restriction can mess with nutrition, hormones, and gut health.
Algorithm-driven Wellness
Clinicians are also begging people to stop letting the feed run their health care. The roundup points to one survey that found 87 percent of millennial and Gen Z TikTok users get at least some health tips from social media, yet only about 2 percent of that content lines up with official public health guidance. “Algorithmic popularity is not a proxy for medical accuracy,” Garcha said.
Make 2026 the year you stop outsourcing your health to the internet. And there’s always this age-old advice—does it sound too good to be true? Then it probably is.
The post 3 Wellness Trends to Follow in 2026 (and 3 to Avoid) appeared first on VICE.




