The companies collect monetary bets from users who enter weight loss or “wellness” challenges and then create a prize pool among participants that is later distributed to those who successfully complete their goal. WayBetter charges a six-month membership fee of $69 just for the ability to place this monetary bet. HealthyWager doesn’t charge a membership fee, but it does require at least a $200 wager for the duration of its six-month minimum challenge. Participants who fail to meet their goal receive no money.
Refund policies vary between companies. WayBetter offers a three-day refund window and then requires medical documentation to leave a game after that. HealthyWage has a “strict no refunds policy,” citing the power of “negative reinforcement.” The company offers no exceptions, except in “rare, evidence-documented medical situations,” but warns customers to “please prepare yourself for the likelihood that there will be no exception granted.”
Although WayBetter and HealthyWage use gambling rhetoric to promote and facilitate monetary betting, both fervently deny any involvement with online gambling. If the companies were classified as online gambling services they would be subject to intense regulations — and they know it. In a 2016 preliminary offering circular filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, WayBetter acknowledged the risk that it could be “regulated out of business.”
Both companies share the position that users are in control of the outcomes of their bets and thus a commitment contract is not gambling. Suggesting that users are entirely in control of their weight loss, however, ignores the reality that certain health conditions, genetics, and a variety of other factors can impact one’s ability to lose weight.
HealthyWage acknowledges that there are ways to “game” the system and prohibits participants who have recently undergone bariatric surgery, professional athletes/trainers, and users implementing unhealthy rapid weight loss techniques. It is unclear how — or if — the company identifies and removes players in violation of its rules.
WayBetter also lists prohibited actions, including “pregame binging or excessive hydration,” “purging … or excessive dehydration,” and “engaging in weight-loss medical procedures.”
HealthyWage and WayBetter do permit players to use popular weight loss-enhancing Glucagon-like peptide-1 medications like Wegovy, Ozempic, and Mounjaro.