You can help fight COVID-19 by aiding research. Help slow the spread of COVID-19 by self-reporting your symptoms daily, even if you feel well. Together we can get out of lockdown safely and beat the disease.
Join millions of people supporting scientists at King’s College London to help our health services track the spread of COVID-19.
Contributing to research
You will contribute to advance research on COVID-19 in partnership with leading scientific institutions like King’s College London and TwinsUK, one of the most clinically detailed studies in the world.
Help slow the spread
Help slow the spread of COVID-19 by self-reporting your symptoms daily, even if you feel well, by identifying:
How fast the virus is spreading in your area
High-risk areas in the UK
Who is most at risk, by better understanding symptoms linked to underlying health conditions
Share the app
This app (formerly known as the Covid Symptom Tracker) helps health services track the spread of COVID-19. Share it with your friends and family so more people are submitting their symotoms and we can stop the spread.
You will be asked to share some general information, such as your age and some health information, such as whether you have certain diseases.
Tracking your symptoms
We will ask you every day to let us know how you feel, so you can share your symptoms. We will also ask whether you have visited the hospital, what treatment you received there, and whether you have been tested for COVID-19 (Coronavirus).
Help stop the spread
If you would like to help out in this difficult time, then you can. Download the app and share daily your own status, even if you are well. With your help we can understand much better the situation up and down the country, how the disease presents itself to different people, and how it progresses.
This is a new virus which the UK has never seen before. There are a wide range of symptoms, which differ between people. With your help we can understand better how the disease presents itself depending upon individual factors such as health and age.