The Big List of 100 Telemedicine Statistics 2025 Update

Telemedicine is no longer an experiment – it is an entrenched part of healthcare delivery. Volumes peaked in 2020 to 21, dipped, and then stabilized to 5 times above pre-pandemic baselines.

Our Telemedicine Research Team at Sigosoft has compiled over 100 key telemedicine statistics, organized across seven categories.

  1. Government & Public Health
  2. Providers & Payers
  3. Professional Bodies & Standards
  4. Market & Investment Intelligence
  5. Platforms & Vendors
  6. Connectivity & Enablers
  7. Academic & Clinical Research

We also provide regional spotlights on the USA, India, UK and the GCC (UAE, KSA, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait).

1. Government & Public Health

Government Public Health
  • Internet penetration (global baseline): In 2024, 5.5 billion people (68%) were online; 2.6 billion (32%) remained offline. Urban–rural gap: 83% vs 48% internet use.
  • 5G coverage: By the end of 2023, there were 1.5 billion+ 5G connections, covering ~55% of the global population, but LMICs still had <10% coverage.
  • WHO guidance: WHO’s Global Digital Health Strategy 2020–25 remains in force; 2024–25 updates emphasize governance, equity, and telehealth accessibility.
  • India’s ABDM: As of Feb 2025, 739 million (73.9 crore) ABHA IDs had been issued; by Aug 2025, the ABDM live dashboard showed 800M+ ABHAs with linked records.
  • NHS England GP data: Remote appointments were 33.3% of all GP visits in June 2025, up from 30.9% in 2024.
  • Abu Dhabi DoH:Publishes quarterly telehealth KPIs (2025 Jawda framework).

2. Utilization & Specialty Mix

Utilization Specialty Mix
  • Baseline: Telehealth use is steady at 2 to 5X from 2019. In the U.S. Medicare, ~25% of beneficiaries used telehealth in 2024.
  • Specialties: Mental health leads worldwide. The U.S. made behavioral telehealth flexibilities permanent (including audio-only for some services).
  • U.K. trend: Remote GP visits rose to 33.3% in June 2025 (≈25% phone, ≈8% online/video).
  • Rural vs urban: Broadband divides remain the biggest driver: video dominates in urban areas, while rural users rely more on phone or store-and-forward.
  • Demographics: Younger, employed patients adopt more; older adults under-use live video but benefit from RPM (remote patient monitoring).

3. Outcomes, Quality & Operational KPIs

3. Outcomes Quality Operational KPIs
  • No-show reduction: Many programs cut no-show rates from >10% to 4–6% with tele-triage + reminders.
  • Chronic disease outcomes.
    • Heart failure RPM: consistently lowers hospitalizations in RCTs.
    • Diabetes: telemonitoring yields modest but significant HbA1c improvements when coupled with clinician action.
  • ED diversion: Virtual triage diverts 10–30% of low-acuity ED visits in active pilots.
  • Patient satisfaction: Telehealth satisfaction runs 70–90%; mental health visits often score the highest.

4. Providers & Payers

Providers Payers
  • Reimbursement:
    • U.S. Medicare: Non-behavioral telehealth flexibilities extended until Sep 30, 2025. Behavioral rules are permanent.
    • Commercial insurers: most cover mental health, chronic care, and hybrid models.
  • Readmissions & LOS: Post-discharge RPM reduces 30-day readmissions and shortens length of stay in integrated systems.
  • Unit economics: Tele-visits are cheaper per-encounter, but savings depend on value-based contracts and downstream utilization.

5. Professional Bodies & Standards

Professional Bodies Standards
  • Clinician availability: Adoption remains positive but workflows and EMR burden are cited as main barriers.
  • Standards: Telehealth is guided by ISO/IEC privacy standards, HIMSS maturity models, and JCI accreditation.
  • Clinician satisfaction: Mixed: flexibility is appreciated, but after-hours load and fragmented notes contribute to burnout risk.

6. Market & Investment Intelligence

Market Investment Intelligence
  • Market size: Global telemedicine tech market was valued at $133.7B in 2024, growing at double-digit CAGR.
  • Funding: Digital health investment in 2024–H1 2025 stabilized, with investors favoring AI-enabled workflow tools and chronic care SaaS over DTC models.
  • M&A: Consolidation is focused on RPM + devices, payer contracts, and AI triage platforms.
  • Investor tip: Stickiest revenues come from insurer/employer contracts and chronic subscription models.

7. Platforms & Vendors

Platforms Vendors
  • India’s eSanjeevani: By Apr 2025, 360M+ cumulative teleconsultations; widely recognized as the largest national telehealth platform.
  • Saudi Arabia’s Seha Virtual Hospital: Delivered 54,000+ addiction-care consults in 2024.
  • Private vendors: Teladoc, Amwell, Practo, Vezeeta, Okadoc, and others emphasize enterprise deals and chronic-care bundles.

8: Connectivity & Enablers

Connectivity Enablers
  • Coverage vs usage: 96% of the world has mobile broadband coverage, but only 57% use mobile internet – affordability and skills are barriers.
  • Smartphone penetration: 80%+ of mobile-internet users are on 4G/5G smartphones.
  • Cloud resilience: Top vendors rely on redundant cloud regions to meet 99.9%+ uptime SLAs, but cyberattacks remain the leading risk.
  • Data security: Healthcare still suffers the highest cost per data breach, averaging >$11M per breach in 2024 (IBM report).

9. Clinical Research Snapshot

Clinical Research Snapshot
  • Tele-mental health: RCTs confirm moderate-to-large reductions in depression/anxiety when therapy is structured.
  • RPM evidence: Strongest results in heart failure and diabetes when paired with active clinician monitoring.
  • Evidence gap: Need more long-term pragmatic RCTs across diverse settings to prove cost-effectiveness.

10. USA Focus

USA Focus

The U.S. has both the world’s largest telehealth market and one of the most uncertain policy environments.

Market Growth & Outlook

  • Telemedicine is expected to account for 25–30% of all U.S. medical visits by 2026.
  • U.S. telemedicine market projected to reach $140.7B by 2030.
  • 79% of U.S. hospitals had live telehealth platforms by early 2024.
The Medicare “Policy Cliff” – Sept 30, 2025
Key pandemic-era flexibilities will expire without Congressional renewal:
  • Patient location: Home-based visits may lose coverage (except behavioral health).
  • Modality: Audio-only telehealth could be excluded, disadvantaged vulnerable groups.
  • Hospital-at-Home: Waiver allowing H@H billing expires Sept 30, 2025.
  • Provider eligibility: Therapists & audiologists lose Medicare telehealth status.
  • FQHCs/RHCs: Rural and community health clinics lose distant-site privileges after Dec 31, 2025 (except behavioral health).

Workforce & Education

  • U.S. medical schools now embed telemedicine training into curricula.
  • Telehealth creates new physician career paths, especially in remote-first specialties.

Private Sector & Investment

  • Significant private equity focuses on mental health telehealth, one of the fastest-growing and most resilient segments.
  • Data security & compliance (HIPAA, cybersecurity frameworks) remain top investor concerns.

Federal Support

  • The Office for the Advancement of Telehealth (OAT) and the FCC’s Rural Health Care Program continue to expand infrastructure in underserved regions.

11.  India Focus

India Focus

India has emerged as a global proof-of-scale for digital health.

  • eSanjeevani adoption:
    • Crossed 100M consultations in 2022
    • Reached 360M+ consultations by August 2025
  • ABDM / ABHA: Tens of crores of digital health IDs have been issued, enabling patient consented records and a scalable framework for nationwide teleconsults.
  • Rural vs. urban: Urban areas dominate video-based care, while rural areas rely more on asynchronous services and hub-and-spoke models.

12. GCC Focus

GCC Focus
  • UAE:
    • Abu Dhabi DoH (2025): Telehealth “Jawda” defines access + quality KPIs.
    • Dubai DHA: scaling remote monitoring and chronic-care models.
  • Saudi Arabia: Seha Virtual Hospital continues to expand (addiction, dermatology, chronic diseases).
  • Other GCC (Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait). National programs in place, regulatory modernization underway.

United Kingdom Focus

United Kingdom Focus
  • Primary care share: Remote GP consultations now account for ~25% of all visits (June 2025), stabilizing from a pandemic peak of 48% (2020).
  • NHS dashboards: NHS Digital openly publishes telehealth utilization, building transparency into policy.
  • Specialties: Psychiatry, dermatology, and repeat prescription reviews dominate virtual care in the UK.

Global Telemedicine Baselines

Global Telemedicine Baselines
  • Internet access: By 2024, 68% of the world’s population were internet users, an essential prerequisite for video telehealth. Rural vs urban divides remain stark (83% vs. 48%).
  • 5G rollout: By end-2024, over 50% of the global population had 5G coverage, but in low-income countries it remains in single digits.
  • WHO guidance: The WHO Global Strategy on Digital Health (extended to 2025) continues to push governance, equity, and patient safety in telehealth adoption.
  • Market growth: Global telemedicine revenues hit $133.7B in 2024 and are projected to reach $148B in 2025 (up from just $80B in 2020).

Summary

This 2025 update compiles 100+ of the most relevant telemedicine statistics from around the world, covering government policies, provider adoption, patient usage, investments, and clinical research. The data makes one thing clear: telemedicine is no longer a side channel. It is a mainstream healthcare delivery model, accounting for 25–30% of medical visits in some regions and attracting sustained global investment.

Key insights from this year’s update:

  • Usage has stabilized at 2 to 5X above pre-pandemic levels worldwide.
  • Mental health and chronic care remain the largest virtual care categories.
  • India and the GCC are leading with government-backed platforms, national health IDs, and digital-first policies.
  • The U.S. faces a “telehealth policy cliff” in Sept 2025, with Medicare rules set to tighten unless extended.
  • Connectivity, security, and equity are the biggest enablers  and barriers  for universal adoption.

At Sigosoft, this “Big List” isn’t just aggregated numbers. it is the outcome of our in-house research team’s continuous tracking of global telehealth data, combined with:

  • First-hand implementation expertise from developing telemedicine platforms across US, India, GCC, and other markets.
  • Deep regulatory knowledge of ABDM (India), NABIDH (UAE), HIPAA (U.S.), and GDPR (EU).
  • Market intelligence and user insights gathered through client projects, partnerships, and technology deployments.

By blending research and experience, our team ensures this report is more than a reference list, it is a decision-making guide for healthcare leaders, investors, and innovators shaping the future of virtual care.

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