9 Total
4 High severity
5 Medium severity
0 Low severity
Summary

This is Noom's legal agreement that controls how you can use its weight loss and wellness app, including what Noom can do with your health data like weight, food logs, and fitness information. The most important thing to know is that by using Noom you give up your right to sue in court or join a class action lawsuit — all disputes must go to private arbitration — unless you opt out in writing within 30 days of first agreeing. If you have a paid subscription, it will automatically renew and charge your payment method unless you cancel before the renewal date.

Technical Summary

This document constitutes Noom's Terms and Conditions of Use governing the legal relationship between Noom, Inc. and users of its weight management and wellness platform, established through clickwrap acceptance. The most significant obligations include users' agreement to binding arbitration administered by AAA with a class action waiver, automatic subscription renewal terms with charges to payment methods on file, and Noom's right to modify or terminate services at its discretion. Notable deviations from industry standard include a 30-day opt-out window for arbitration, explicit health data collection practices that intersect with HIPAA-adjacent but non-HIPAA-covered wellness data, and a broad intellectual property license granted to Noom over user-submitted content. The document engages CCPA/CPRA for California residents, FTC Act Section 5 regarding auto-renewal and deceptive trade practices, and state consumer protection statutes; material compliance considerations include Noom's FTC settlement history regarding subscription billing practices and the sensitivity of health and biometric data processed through its platform.

Evidence Provenance
Captured April 19, 2026 06:18 UTC
Document ID CA-D-000396
Version ID CA-V-000752
Wayback Machine View archived versions →
SHA-256 e97ea3991a4d1587bdf20765e8cd37ff191835cb5f51aef11be28929d07c0a99
✓ Snapshot stored ✓ Text extracted ✓ Change verified ✓ Cryptographically signed
Institutional Analysis

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Change Timeline
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Analyzed Changes

1 change analyzed since monitoring began.

What changed Noom updated their Noom Terms of Service on April 03, 2026. Change detected: 29 sentence(s) added, 18 sentence(s) modified. Document contained 385 sentences after update.
Consumer impact Noom's updated Terms now include plain-language summaries at the top of key sections, making it easier to understand your rights and obligations as a user. The update explicitly confirms that Noom is not a medical service, users must be at least 18, and Noom can suspend or revoke your access at any time for unspecified reasons. You can review the updated Terms directly on Noom's website to understand the conditions under which your access could be terminated.
Why it matters The new plain-language summaries make the Terms easier to understand, but the explicit statement that Noom can revoke access at any time — with no stated reason or notice — is a significant power the company has now made unambiguous. Users and organizations relying on Noom for health support should be aware their access is not guaranteed.

Recent Clause-Level Changes Apr 3, 2026

9 provisions unchanged.

View full change record →
High Severity — 4 provisions
Medium Severity — 5 provisions

Cross-platform context

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Applicable Regulations

CCPA/CPRA
California, USA
CFAA
United States Federal
CAN-SPAM
United States Federal
GDPR
European Union
HIPAA
United States Federal