Michael B Jordan Partners With Doctors to Launch Free Mental Health App for Young Men
Health | By Sofia Reynolds | March 29, 2026

Michael B. Jordan is putting his star power behind a cause he says is deeply personal: men's mental health. The 39-year-old actor and producer announced on Saturday the launch of "MindRight," a free mobile application designed specifically to provide mental health resources, peer support, and crisis intervention tools for young men aged 16 to 30. The app, developed in partnership with leading psychologists and the Jed Foundation, is available immediately on iOS and Android.
"Men are taught to be tough, to hold it in, to figure it out alone," Jordan said during a launch event at the Boys & Girls Club in his hometown of Newark, New Jersey. "I bought into that for a long time. It nearly broke me. This app exists because I don't want any young man to feel like asking for help makes him weak. It makes him strong." Jordan has previously spoken about seeking therapy after the emotional toll of his role in "Creed III" and a very public breakup.
The app features AI-powered mood tracking, guided meditation sessions, a library of video content from therapists and athletes, and a 24/7 text-based crisis line staffed by licensed counselors. Crucially, it also includes a peer mentorship program that connects users with trained volunteer mentors who have navigated similar challenges. Jordan personally funded the app's development with a $5 million investment and has secured additional backing from Nike, Google.org, and the NBA Players Association.
Mental health professionals have praised the app's design for meeting young men where they are, with an interface that avoids clinical jargon and uses language and visuals that feel relatable. "The biggest barrier to men seeking help is the first step," said Dr. Victor Schwartz, clinical associate professor of psychiatry at NYU. "An app like this, backed by someone young men admire, can lower that barrier dramatically." MindRight has already been downloaded over 500,000 times since its soft launch earlier this month, with usage data showing particularly strong engagement among 18-to-24-year-olds.