Mojo vs. Relatio App Review 2026
Can an App Help Resolve Psychological ED? My 2026 thoughts about Mojo & Relatio...
Click here for my original 2024 Mojo app review.
Note: I do NOT receive any kind of commissions or have any affiliate relationship with the companies whose products I review. I'm independent. Any biases I have come from 20 years of helping guys resolve their psychological ED and sexual performance anxiety issues.
Introduction
I did a full, in‑depth review of Mojo a while back, before they expanded their focus and added their AI guide.
I’ll remind you of a few high points from that review, then we’ll dive into Relatio and wrap up with which app I’d choose and why.
If you want the full deep‑dive on Mojo, I’ll link that video so you can check it out after this.
Mojo Refresher
Mojo is a UK‑based app that, in the past, had been specifically focused on ED.
It’s more broad‑based now, though. They bill themselves as "the first sex and relationship therapist." So going beyond ED to cover other sex, relationship, and wellness issues for women and couples as well as guys.
No worries for us, though. They still offer a strong focus on helping guys resolve erection issues.
I know they added a LOT to other parts of the app, bt For the purposes of this review, I’m keeping things focused on the ED side of things.
What really stood out to me the first time I talked about them still stands - they hit the ED problem from a lot of different angles:
CBT‑style work, pelvic floor training, communication skills, breathwork, fantasy and masturbation exercises, meditation, and some basic sex tips.
It’s set up like a course. You answer questions up front, then move through a structured sequence of lessons and exercises day by day.
The big strengths, both then and now, are:
• Professional, modern design and production that feels friendly, not clinical
• A mix of text, audio, video, interviews, and live‑therapy‑style clips that keeps it interesting and fresh
• Clear, straightforward teaching around the cognitive and behavioral ideas
• Good guided audio so you can focus on what you’re feeling instead of memorizing instructions
• Subtle, confidence‑building language that, as a hypnotherapist, I really appreciated
• Plus some nice community options so you don’t feel alone with this
For psychological ED, that structure and variety matter, because it’s not just telling you “relax”—it’s actually helping you change the thoughts, habits, and avoidance patterns that keep the problem in place.
On the skeptical side, I said in my earlier review—and I still say—that CBT‑type approaches are great for some guys but won’t go deep enough for everyone.
If your ED is tied into old experiences, deeper emotional patterns, or any other more complex or stubborn problem structure, an app isn’t going to replace working with a skilled therapist.
What’s new in Mojo: AI guide
Since that review, Mojo has added an AI guide that’s built right into the flow of the app.
You choose from six different coach “faces” at the start; they look almost like real people.
It’s not a huge problem—just a “that’s a little weird” feeling of talking to someone who’s clearly not real.
No big deal; I adjusted to my faux Ewan‑McGregor‑looking guy pretty quickly.
More important is what it does:
You choose how long you want to spend each day—5, 10, or 15 minutes
The app builds a routine around that and reminds you to do it at about the same time daily
The AI checks in, takes your feedback, and adjusts your plan over time
And you can talk to it at any point along the way with other questions
So instead of you wandering around the app, it feels like someone is walking you through a well‑designed program.
It gives you a bit of that “being guided by a therapist” feel while still very clearly being an app.
To be clear, it’s not therapy—it doesn’t know your whole history or hold a treatment plan—but it imitates some of the structure and questioning in a way I think most guys would find comforting.
The AI tends to ask good questions before it offers suggestions, which I liked.
When I asked things like, “Can you give me another technique for dealing with the panic I feel right before vaginal penetration?”, Mojo’s AI would ask some good questions about the specifics, then send me to different audios or mini‑courses inside the app.
That’s not how I’d work one‑on‑one with a client—I rarely sit there handing out “technique numbers 2, 7, and 13”—but for an app, it’s a solid way to point you toward useful tools.
Relatio: what it offers for psychological ED
Now let’s talk about Relatio.
There’s no clear indication of who actually created Relatio.
In the app stores the developer is listed as Arbinare Limited, but that’s about all you see.
That’s different from how Mojo used to feature their founders.
At this point, both apps have a more anonymous feel.
Right away, just from the website and onboarding, Relatio feels more like a relationship app that also helps with ED.
They lead with “rekindle your relationship,” “reconnect after a breakup,” and “improve intimacy.”
You have to scroll a bit before you see “stronger erections.”
When you sign up, they ask you some questions and build a 60‑day personal plan.
You choose 5, 10, or 15 minutes a day.
I picked 15, but it felt closer to around 10 minutes of real work, which is pretty manageable.
The app has three main sections:
• Home – your 60‑day personal men’s health plan
• Challenges – extra programs you can add on
• AI – different bots for specific topics
The Relatio 60‑day plan
The core of Relatio is that 60‑day track, and it has a very strong emphasis on pelvic health.
• Days are broken into several short sections that usually include:
• A quick educational article
• A daily Kegel workout
• Pelvic Power Training
• A meditation or audio piece
• Some kind of rating or check‑in
Kegel training
The Kegel trainer uses a blue circle and phone vibrations to cue your contractions.
Sometimes the timing of the circle doesn’t quite match the “slow contraction” text, but overall it’s a decent trainer.
I’m not a fan of Kegels as a one‑size‑fits‑all solution, especially for guys who are already tense.
What I like here is that they back it up with Pelvic Power Training: exercises for legs, lower back, and core.
The idea is that the pelvic floor doesn’t work in isolation.
By strengthening the surrounding muscles and your overall conditioning, you’re taking a more complete approach than just “squeeze this one muscle and hope for the best.”
There’s decent evidence that pelvic floor training plus better overall conditioning can improve erection quality for some men, and this lines up with that.
Educational articles
The educational articles are short, and cover things like nutrition, boosting testosterone naturally, stress and cortisol, and sleep and sexual confidence.
The ones that really stood out to me were where they go right at the mental side of ED.
There’s an early piece on intimacy anxiety that lays out how worrying about performance creates a negative cycle and then gives concrete ideas for breaking that loop:
• Open communication
• Breathing together
• Shifting focus from performance to pleasure
• Keeping expectations realistic and celebrating small wins
• Simple steps to strengthen the emotional connection again
That’s very much in line with what I see helping guys in real life, and the bite‑sized format is a plus.
They do ask you to rate things a lot.
Those constant rating prompts got mildly annoying for me—nothing huge, just something to be aware of.
The meditations range from straightforward mindfulness and relaxation to more affirmation‑style content.
Some of it even reminded me a little of light hypnosis language, which I can see being useful for some guys.
There’s also a mood journal and short quotes sprinkled in to encourage reflection.
Relatio’s Explore
In the Explore section, you’ll find extra challenges you can do in addition to the main plan, like:
• A masturbation challenge using stop‑start techniques for premature ejaculation
• A 28‑day “ejaculation detox” challenge for control, anxiety reduction, and confidence
• A couple of other very similar masturbation / “detox” tracks
You’ll also see:
• “She Comes First”‑style material on pleasuring your partner
• A porn‑detox track
• A “boost testosterone naturally” mini‑course
• Content on anxiety, routines, and better sleep
• Relationship material on attachment, codependency, and card prompts for couples
Relatio’s Explore section
Their AI section is split into six topical bots: sex and performance, kegels, mental wellness and confidence, relationships and communication, fitness and nutrition, and Men’s Talk.
I chose the sex and performance track.
It started by asking what I actually wanted to work on—lasting longer, staying strong, or easing performance pressure—and it asked a few questions before giving suggestions, which I liked.
Then it offered some simple tricks to try, a short pre‑sex routine, and extra tips for what to do if you lose your erection during sex.
The tone was friendly, and the advice was reasonable.
Under the hood, it’s pulling from both the app and a wider database of sexual health and wellness information.
That’s why it sometimes gives you techniques you don’t see anywhere else in the app.
When I kept asking it for “another technique” about penetration panic, it was able to give different answers multiple times.
Again, this isn’t the way I’d work with someone live, but for an AI coach inside an app, it’s respectable.
The main difference between Relatio and Mojo is how the AI is integrated.
With Relatio, the AI is a separate resource you go to—it’s more of a smart Q&A buddy than a routine‑runner.
With Mojo, you get the feel of someone walking you through your daily flow and being there as a helpful resource along the way.
Mojo vs. Relatio: Pricing
On price, as of the time I’m recording this:
• Mojo is about $70 for 12 weeks
• Relatio is about $50 for 12 weeks
So Mojo is around $20 more over that same three‑month period.
Prices can change, so always check what’s current, but that’s the general ballpark.
For something as important as ED, an extra 20 dollars over three months isn’t huge if the app fits you better.
And just a quick reminder: if you haven’t already, get checked by a doctor to rule out medical causes—circulation, hormones, medications, that kind of thing.
That might be a quick blood pressure and hormone check, a medication review, and, if needed, a deeper look at cardiovascular health, because ED can sometimes be an early warning sign.
What we’re talking about here is psychological ED, but sometimes there’s a physical piece that also needs attention.
My bottom line on Mojo vs. Relatio
Here’s how I’d boil it down.
Mojo
• Feels like a guided, therapist‑style program for psychological ED
• The AI is part of your routine: it sets your daily length, adjusts the plan, and routes you to relevant content
• Hits ED from lots of angles—thoughts, behaviors, pelvic work, sexual skills, communication
• It’s very polished and user‑friendly, which I think makes it easier to stick with over time
Relatio
• Has a very strong pelvic and “Pelvic Power” focus, backed by general health‑habit content
• Adds challenges around masturbation, ejaculation control, porn detox, and so on
• Brings in relationship, attachment, and communication content in a meaningful way
• Its AI can be quite creative and sometimes pulls from beyond the app content itself
• The AI is more of a topical coach you visit, not the engine that runs your daily plan
When I pushed both AIs with the same anxiety question around penetration, both were able to give multiple, different responses that were on‑topic and practical.
Neither one is doing deep therapy—that’s not what they’re designed for—but both are genuinely trying to be useful coaches.
I don’t see any big deal‑breaker with either app.
The differences are more about design, focus, and how the AI is integrated.
For straight psychological ED—losing erections in the moment, getting stuck in your head—if I had to pick one, I’d go with Mojo.
It hits the problem from more angles, feels smoother and friendlier, and the AI is woven into the experience in a way that makes it feel like you’re being walked through a complete program.
Relatio is good, just not quite as strong specifically for psychological ED.
If saving the ~20 dollars is important to you, or you really want that relationship focus alongside ED work, Relatio could very well get you where you want to go.
I didn’t go deep into every relationship module, so it may actually outperform Mojo on that side of things.
So to be clear: both Mojo and Relatio are good tools.
They’re thoughtful, they’re genuinely trying to help, and the AI does make them more responsive and useful than older, static courses.
Where apps fit – and where they don’t
Now I want to zoom out and talk about the bigger picture, because this is where both apps start to fall short.
If you’re really serious about getting this fully handled, I want to be honest: a real person is almost always a better bet than any app.
Having helped guys fix psychological ED for over 20 years, most of the issues I see would not have been solved by an app alone. There are a few guys where an app might have been enough, but for most, the problem runs too deep, or is too tangled up with past experiences, relationships, and emotions, for a one‑size‑fits‑many approach to fully resolve it.
A pattern I see a lot is this: men come to work with me after they’ve already tried apps like these.
Which makes total sense—they’re private, they’re cheaper, and they’re easy to start.
For some, that’s enough.
For many, the app gets them part of the way there, and then they hit a wall and realize they want a human who can actually sit with their specific story and help them unpack it.
So here’s how I’d think about it:
If you’re just getting started, you’re testing the waters, or money is tight, apps like Mojo and Relatio are solid alternatives. They can absolutely move you forward, build skills, reduce shame, and give you some early wins.
If you’ve been struggling with this for a while, you’ve tried things on your own (maybe including apps) and you’re still stuck, that’s usually a sign it’s time to bring in a person. If you’re truly serious about getting this handled as deeply and efficiently as possible, working with a skilled human is almost always going to beat doing it alone with an app.
That might be with me, or with another therapist, coach, or sex therapist you trust.
The important thing is that you’re getting help so you can actually get this solved—ideally sooner rather than later.
And click here if you want that original Mojo app review.
→ Want to explore more non-medicinal tools for performance anxiety? Explore our full library of Psychological ED Product & Therapy Reviews.
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