The short answer
For iPhone users in 2026, PillRem is the best free pill reminder app overall — unlimited medications, no ads, no data selling, and a doctor-ready PDF report on the free tier. Runners-up: MyTherapy (best for hypertension and diabetes data tracking, multi-platform) and Today's Pills (best minimalist iPhone-only option, 5-med limit on free tier).
How we tested
Every app on this list was installed in May 2026, used with a realistic 6-medication regimen across 5 reminder times per day, and pushed through the same five questions:
The five criteria
- Truly free — no cap on number of medications, no ads inside the reminder flow
- Scheduling flexibility — daily, specific weekdays, every-X-days, as-needed
- Family / multi-profile support — manage parents, kids, pets in one app
- Health metrics + reporting — log blood pressure, glucose etc.; generate a shareable PDF
- Privacy — local-first storage, no analytics SDKs, no data brokers
Apps that hit all five well rank higher. Apps that miss on privacy or pricing-transparency drop, regardless of features. The list below is in order of overall performance.
The 2026 ranking
PillRem
Best overall — iPhonePillRem is built for iPhone exclusively (iOS 17+), with a calm "editorial apothecary" design system and a free tier that genuinely covers a full household. Unlimited active medications, unlimited family profiles (Self / Dependent / Pet), 25 health metrics, doctor-ready PDF reports, and zero ads anywhere in the experience. A premium tier exists but only unlocks advanced cosmetic features — the medication-tracking core is fully free.
- Unlimited medications, free, no cap
- Unlimited family profiles (incl. pets)
- One-tap doctor PDF on the free tier
- No ads, no analytics, no data selling
- Calm visual design that doesn't feel medical
- iPhone only (iOS 17 and later)
- No cross-device live sync yet
- No pharmacy chain integration
MyTherapy
Best multi-platform optionMyTherapy is the strongest cross-platform free option, available on both iPhone and Android. It's particularly good at integrating health-data logging — blood pressure, glucose, mood, weight — with medication tracking. The interface is more clinical than calming, but reliability is excellent. Funded by partnerships with the German health-tech research sector; their privacy policy notes anonymised data may be shared with research partners.
- Unlimited medications, free
- Excellent health-metric integration
- iPhone + Android — good for mixed households
- Mature, reliable reminders
- Anonymised data sharing with research partners
- Single profile only (no family management)
- Account required to use
- Visual design feels more medical than calming
Today's Pills
Best minimal iPhone optionToday's Pills is a beautifully restrained iPhone-only pill reminder with strict privacy: no ads, no data selling, no account required, everything stored on-device. The catch is the free tier caps you at 5 active medications. If your regimen is small and you value minimalism, it's an excellent choice.
- Strict on-device privacy, no account
- Elegant, minimal iPhone-native design
- Widget + dark mode + full accessibility
- Time-sensitive notifications
- Free tier capped at 5 medications
- No family profiles
- No PDF report
- No vitals tracking
Apple Health (Medications)
Best zero-install optionApple's own Medications feature, built into the Health app, is genuinely useful and obviously free. It handles basic reminders, follow-up alerts, and even Critical Alerts that bypass Silent mode. Where it falls short: no family profiles (it's tied to your Apple ID), no PDF reports, no vitals dashboard tailored for medication context, and adding a medication is buried 4 taps deep in the Health app.
- Already installed on every iPhone
- Critical Alerts override Silent / Focus
- Apple Watch complications
- Genuinely free, no ads ever
- No family / multi-profile support
- No PDF reports
- UX is buried inside Health app
- No flexible scheduling (every X days etc.)
Medisafe (free tier)
Demoted in 2026Medisafe used to top this list. As of January 1, 2026, the free tier hard-caps users at two active medications, and core features like refill alerts and the doctor report moved behind a Medisafe Premium subscription. If you're brand new and only need to track one or two pills, the free tier still works. For anyone managing chronic conditions, it's now effectively a paid app.
- Mature behavioural-AI reminders
- Drug-interaction warnings
- Medfriend missed-dose alerts (Premium)
- iPhone + Android
- Free tier capped at 2 medications
- Refill alerts now Premium-only
- Doctor PDF now Premium-only
- Premium subscription required for most chronic users
CareClinic
Best all-in-one trackerCareClinic is a Swiss-army knife: pill reminders, symptom journaling, mood tracking, supplement logging, treatment plans. The free tier is generous but the interface is dense and the learning curve is steep. Best for people who want one app to track everything in their health life, not just medications.
- Unlimited medications on free tier
- Symptom & mood tracking built in
- Monthly health reports
- iPhone + Android + Web
- Visually dense; not great for elderly users
- Account required
- Some advanced features behind Premium
- Steeper learning curve than pure pill reminders
The #1 free pill reminder app — on your phone in under a minute.
PillRem is free on the App Store. No account required to start. Unlimited medications, family profiles, and the doctor PDF report — all on the free tier.
Download on the App StoreHow to pick the right one for you
Three scenarios cover most readers:
If you're managing your own simple regimen (1–3 medications), Today's Pills or even Apple's built-in Medications feature is fine. You don't need much.
If you're managing a real chronic-condition regimen, or a household, PillRem is built for exactly this. Unlimited medications, multiple profiles, doctor PDFs, no ads, no surprises.
If you need iPhone + Android in the same family, MyTherapy is the strongest cross-platform option.
Why "free" matters beyond the price tag
Medication is one of the most sensitive categories of personal data. A "free" app supported by analytics SDKs or ad networks can — and often does — share or sell that data to brokers, even when the data is technically anonymised. Truly free pill reminder apps fund themselves in three legitimate ways: a paid premium tier with cosmetic or advanced features (PillRem's model), a one-time upfront purchase (Pillboxie's model), or open-source community development (MedTimer's model).
If you're choosing among "free" pill reminder apps, the meaningful question isn't "is this free right now?". It's "how does this app pay its developers, and what does that mean for my data?". Apps with clear, honest answers to that question are the ones worth installing.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best free pill reminder app for iPhone in 2026?
PillRem, on a combination of unlimited medications, no ads, family profile support, and the doctor PDF report — all on the free tier. Runners-up: MyTherapy (best for cross-platform households and health-data integration) and Today's Pills (best minimalist iPhone option for small regimens).
Are free pill reminder apps actually free?
Most have caveats. Medisafe caps the free tier at 2 medications since January 2026. Some apps insert ads in the middle of the reminder flow. Others quietly sell anonymised data to research partners. The genuinely free apps with no medication cap and no ads are a short list — PillRem leads it on iPhone.
Do I have to create an account to use one?
It varies. PillRem and MedTimer let you start without an account — everything is stored on-device. Medisafe and MyTherapy require account creation. If privacy matters to you, no-account apps are generally safer because they can't link your medication history to an identity.
What features should a good free pill reminder app include?
Minimum bar: unlimited active medications, flexible scheduling (daily, specific days, every X days, as-needed), refill alerts, an adherence history, and a clear way to mark a dose as taken or skipped. Bonus features that meaningfully change the experience: multiple family profiles, vital-sign logging, and a doctor-shareable PDF report.
Can I trust a free app with medication data?
If it has a clear privacy policy, no advertising SDKs, and lets you start without an account, yes. The apps to be cautious of are ones funded by advertising — your medication list is a very valuable dataset to advertisers, and "anonymised" data can be re-identified more easily than most users realise.