Apple Shares Updated Human Interface Guidelines for HealthKit, Now Lets Developers Use Apple Health Icon - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Apple Shares Updated Human Interface Guidelines for HealthKit, Now Lets Developers Use Apple Health Icon

Apple today informed developers that it has released updated Human Interface Guidelines for HealthKit, providing new guidance on using the Apple Health app icon, additional guidance on using Apple Health-related terms, and new privacy and data usage guidelines.

applehealthkit
HealthKit is the SDK that allows developers to create integrations with the Apple Health app for health and fitness-focused apps, allowing data collected by the app to show up in the Health app, where it can be aggregated with health data from other apps. Apps are also allowed to access relevant data from the Health app.

The new guidelines for developers who use HealthKit can be found on Apple's developer website. Developers who use HealthKit are required to provide a coherent privacy policy, request access to health data only when needed, and provide descriptive messages when asking for permission to access health data.

Developers are now able to use the Apple Health icon to promote their apps, and unsurprisingly, Apple has a list of specific guidelines for developers who want to use the icon.

Only the Apple-provided guideline can be used, no alterations are allowed, the name Apple Health must be close to the icon, and the icon can't be used as a button. HealthKit integrations should be referred to Apple Health with no outward mention of the HealthKit APIs.

Apple has also created a "Works with Apple Health" badge to allow developers to promote HealthKit-enabled apps on websites.

Apple's complete Human Interface Guidelines for HealthKit can be found on the developer website.

Popular Stories

WWDC26 Stickers Feature

Apple Developer App Gets Liquid Glass Makeover and New WWDC 2026 Stickers

Monday May 11, 2026 10:47 am PDT by
Apple today updated its Apple Developer app, introducing a Liquid Glass redesign and giving developers some WWDC-themed stickers that can be used in the Messages app. The Apple Developer app has a revamped Liquid Glass icon that reintroduces some older design elements while adopting the translucent Liquid Glass aesthetic. The icon has a pencil, paintbrush, and ruler that form the "A" shape,...
Apple Card iPhone 16 Pro Feature

Apple Card Promo to Offer Free AirPods Pro 3

Friday May 15, 2026 8:59 am PDT by
Starting as early as next week, customers who sign up for an Apple Card at Apple's retail stores in the U.S. will receive $249 cash back when they purchase AirPods Pro 3, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. The promotion has yet to be officially announced by Apple, so exact terms and conditions are not available at this time. AirPods Pro 3 are priced at $249 in the U.S., so customers who...
Apple WWDC25 iOS 26 CarPlay Light mode 250609

Six Popular iPhone Apps Now Available on CarPlay

Thursday May 14, 2026 9:10 am PDT by
Apple's CarPlay system for accessing iPhone apps on a vehicle's dashboard screen has received six popular apps in recent weeks: ChatGPT, Perplexity, Grok, Google Meet, WhatsApp, and the indie artist streaming platform Audiomack. Make sure you have the latest version of each app and they will automatically appear on CarPlay. ChatGPT Starting with iOS 26.4, CarPlay supports voice-based...

Top Rated Comments

nutmac Avatar
79 months ago
I love HealthKit but it needs a cloud API for HealthKit devices like Wi-Fi scale and heart monitors. Having to use the device maker's iOS app to update HealthKit data isn't intuitive. Better yet, integrate them to HomeKit so that HomeKit hubs can act as intermediary (and to allow Bluetooth devices) to update these data.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Mdracer Avatar
79 months ago
Will it allow integration with my In-n-Out store locator app to tell me I’ve consumed to many burgers?
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
79 months ago

I love HealthKit but it needs a cloud API for HealthKit devices like Wi-Fi scale and heart monitors. Having to use the device maker's iOS app to update HealthKit data isn't intuitive. Better yet, integrate them to HomeKit so that HomeKit hubs can act as intermediary (and to allow Bluetooth devices) to update these data.
That would be ideal. I wish I could step on my scale and have the data sent automatically to HK without having to launch whichever scale app I have. Same with BP, thermometer, etc. Plus it would save the manufacturers money, since they wouldn't have to write (or relabel) an app.

Like there are already bluetooth profiles for health devices, so why doesn't apple just allow you to pair with the devices directly...assuming the device advertises the profile etc.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
boston04and07 Avatar
79 months ago
Nice, now let’s get an iPad version too...
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)