Tia launched in 2017 with the goal of reinventing women’s healthcare from the ground up. The company operates a hybrid model — combining physical clinic locations in major US cities with a virtual care platform that handles everything from appointments and lab results to messaging with care teams.
Tia’s clinics are designed to feel more like a wellness space than a sterile doctor’s office. Each location offers primary care, gynecology, mental health services, and acupuncture under one roof. The idea is that women shouldn’t need to visit five different providers for interconnected health concerns.
The digital platform ties it all together. Members use the Tia app to book appointments, complete intake forms, access their health records, track symptoms, and communicate with their care team asynchronously. Tia’s approach emphasizes continuity — members see the same providers over time, which is surprisingly rare in modern healthcare.
Tia takes insurance, including major plans like Aetna, Cigna, and UnitedHealthcare. This accessibility was a deliberate choice to differentiate from cash-pay concierge models that price out most patients.
The company has raised over $132 million in venture funding and operates clinics in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Phoenix, with plans for additional markets. Tia serves tens of thousands of active members.
What makes Tia notable in the crowded digital health space is its insistence on owning both the digital and physical experience. Rather than being purely virtual or purely brick-and-mortar, Tia bets that the future of women’s health requires both — connected seamlessly through technology.