Aim: The aim of the study was to determine the effectiveness of telehealth-based rehabilitation on patient reported outcomes and objective clinical measurements in patients with degenerative meniscal tear. Materials and Methods: A two-armed, randomized controlled study was conducted with 49 participants with degenerative meniscal disease. Patients were randomized into two groups: Telerehabilitation (TR=25) and Conventional Rehabilitation (CR=24). The TR group provided video exercises and self-management education via an online platform. The same protocol was given to the CR group in the clinical setting. Pain, muscle strength, proprioception, functional status, exercise adherence, quality of life outcomes was evaluated at baseline and after eight weeks of intervention. In addition, satisfaction and usability were evaluated at week 8. Results: TR group demonstrated better improvement in terms of activity pain, proprioception, some parameters of the muscle strength outcomes and exercise adherence (p0.05). In addition, more than half of the TR group had a high level of satisfaction and usability. Conclusion: Additional improvements in the telerehabilitation group were noticed in clinician-based measures (proprioception, strength) but not in rest pain, function, and quality of life, despite increased participation and satisfaction.