Skip to content
All articlesCompare9 min read
Compare

Longevity Clinics Compared (2026)

Every kind of longevity clinic on one page, from testing memberships to imaging centers to at-cost peptide access, ranked on the things you can actually measure: price transparency, physician and pharmacy oversight, breadth, and access.

A warm, happy, colorful photo of a healthy adult smiling as they compare options on a bright kitchen table
Image: pru

Longevity clinics now span very different products: wide blood panels, five-figure imaging memberships, aging-wellness studios, and transparent at-cost peptide access. This page puts the leaders on one page and ranks them the only way a buyer's guide should, on objective criteria you can check yourself: how transparent the pricing is, whether a licensed physician and a real pharmacy stand behind the medicine, how much is on offer, and how easily you can get it.

It does not rank anyone on results or how well their program works, because that depends on you and your clinician. On the objective grounds, pru ranks first for the specific job of prescribed, at-cost peptide access, and each other provider's genuine strengths are noted where they lead.

The leaders, ranked at a glance

The fastest read is the table. It ranks providers on objective criteria only, pricing transparency, physician and pharmacy oversight, and access, not on results. pru sits first because it is the most transparent on price (at cost, itemized), pairs a licensed physician with an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy, and focuses on one thing. The others each lead on a different job, noted in their rows. Prices shift often, so treat every figure as a starting point and confirm current terms on each brand's site.

~$60/mo
pru's compounded semaglutide, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan; at cost, the lowest medication price we found. Membership is separate
$99-397
monthly range still-compounding rivals charge, most landing $199-299
4 exited
Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame left compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026
Sources: pru pricing; internal compounded-GLP-1 market survey, 2026. Costs vary by provider and month.
ProviderAll-in cost / key factsWhat's included
pruMedicine priced at cost: compounded semaglutide about $60/mo, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication price we found. Flat membership about $50/mo billed annually is separate, unlimited at-cost access to the platform and clinician messaging.LegitScript-certified telehealth for compounded peptides. Licensed physician confirms fit and sets dose; FDA-registered 503A pharmacy prepares it with a Certificate of Analysis; medicine passed through at cost, itemized, no markup.
SuperpowerAbout $499 per year for the membership, including the baseline panel.A wide blood panel, on the order of 100+ biomarkers in one draw, organized into a dashboard you track over time. Testing-and-insight focused; points you toward treatment rather than dispensing it.
LifeforceAbout $129 per month, with supplements and treatments priced separately on top.A recurring loop: a focused panel repeated quarterly, at-home phlebotomy, and telehealth clinicians who can prescribe optimization treatments. The headline is the membership; therapies add to it.
Fountain LifeCORE around $2,995 and up; full-diagnostic APEX around $19,500 to $21,500 per year, varying by market.Premium precision diagnostics: full-body MRI, coronary CT angiography with AI analysis, brain MRI, comprehensive panels, and AI-assisted cancer screening, with concierge physician access. In person at physical centers.
Modern AgeWas assessment and service based before it closed. Wound down its clinics in March 2024.An aging-wellness studio concept: bone-density scans, biomarker and hormone panels, clinician follow-up, plus skin and hair services. Not currently operating.
Ranked on objective criteria (price transparency, physician and pharmacy oversight, access), not on results. Figures reflect public materials and shift over time; verify before you buy.

HOW TO READ THISThese providers are not all the same product. Some are testing memberships, one is a five-figure imaging clinic, one has closed, and pru is at-cost peptide access. The ranking is on measurable criteria only. For the specific job of prescribed peptides at a fair price, pru leads; for the jobs the others are built for, they lead.

How this guide ranks providers

A buyer's guide should rank on things you can verify, not on outcomes it cannot promise. So this page uses four objective criteria, and nothing about how well a program "works," which depends on you and your clinician.

  • Pricing transparency. Is the total clear and itemized, or is a low headline number followed by separate line items? At-cost, itemized pricing ranks highest.
  • Physician and pharmacy oversight. Is there a licensed physician setting the plan and a real, licensed pharmacy behind any medicine, documented with a Certificate of Analysis? This is a safety criterion, not a marketing one.
  • Breadth and focus. What is actually on offer, and is the provider built to do that job well rather than spread thin?
  • Access. How easily can you get it, telehealth from home, an in-person center, or a clinic that has closed?

WHAT WE DON'T RANK ONThis guide never ranks anyone on results, efficacy, or how much weight anyone loses. Those depend on the individual and the clinician, not on the provider's ranking. Every position here rests on price transparency, oversight, breadth, and access, criteria you can check yourself.

pru: the transparent, at-cost option

pru is a LegitScript-certified telehealth membership focused on compounded peptides. A licensed physician reviews your history and confirms whether a peptide is appropriate for you (or advises against it) and sets your dose, an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy prepares the medicine with a Certificate of Analysis, and the peptide is passed through at cost. On the objective criteria this guide uses, that is what puts pru first for prescribed peptide access: the pricing is the most transparent, the oversight is complete, and the focus is narrow by design.

At cost is the part that changes the math. Across the broader market, still-compounding providers run from about $99 to $397 per month, with most between $199 and $299, and some quote a low medication price only after you add a separate membership. pru inverts that. There is no markup on the medicine, so the price you see is the pharmacy's price, itemized.

Compounded semaglutide comes to about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication price we have found. The flat membership of about $50 a month billed annually is separate: it buys unlimited, at-cost access to the pru platform and clinician messaging, so the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide without a markup on any of them.

Physician prescribes for you 503A pharmacy compounds + tests (Certificate of Analysis) Ships to you your named vial Ongoing care your doctor stays on
The legitimate path: prescribed, pharmacy-made, and supported

To be precise about what that means: pharmacy-grade means a physician prescribed it and a licensed 503A pharmacy prepared it, documented with a Certificate of Analysis. It does not mean FDA-approved, and compounded peptides are prepared for one patient at a time rather than mass-manufactured. See the at-cost pricing or browse the full catalog.

WHY AT-COST MATTERSBecause pru never marks the medicine up, it has every reason to push the price down, not up. As pru grows and orders more, it negotiates lower pharmacy pricing and passes the savings straight to members. That is the opposite of hiding a low headline behind a second line item.

Superpower: widest first look

Superpower Health built its reputation on breadth. The core promise is a single, wide baseline panel, on the order of 100+ biomarkers, that most routine physicals never run, presented in a clean dashboard you can return to. For someone who has felt brushed off by a standard checkup, seeing that much of their biology in one place is genuinely useful, and at about $499 per year with the panel included, the pricing is refreshingly simple to read.

  • Where it leads: the sheer breadth of a first look, in a dashboard that turns a wall of lab values into something you can follow, at one clear annual price.
  • How it works: you join, complete the baseline panel through a partner lab or at-home draw where available, and review results with guidance built into the platform.
  • Where it stops: the center of gravity is data and interpretation. It is built to tell you what is going on and point you toward action, not to prescribe and dispense ongoing treatment or peptides.

Lifeforce: the ongoing loop

Lifeforce is built around a loop rather than a snapshot. You test on a quarterly cadence, a telehealth clinician reviews the results, and the program can move into treatment: supplements, hormone optimization, and other interventions offered through the membership. The at-home blood draw removes real friction, and the recurring schedule is meant to show whether what you are doing is moving the numbers. That closed loop, test, interpret, treat, retest, with a clinician who can actually prescribe, is where Lifeforce genuinely leads.

  • Where it leads: the recurring relationship, quarterly testing plus a clinician who will prescribe and adjust rather than just advise.
  • How it works: a membership around $129 per month includes recurring panels and clinician access.
  • Watch the total: the base membership and the treatments are priced separately, so the monthly number is a floor. Add supplements or therapies and the real cost is higher, worth mapping before you commit.

Fountain Life: deepest diagnostics

Fountain Life's strength is depth of diagnostics. Founded in 2020 by a well-known group that includes Peter Diamandis and Tony Robbins, it built its membership around advanced imaging most annual physicals do not include.

Its top tier bundles full-body MRI, coronary CT angiography with AI analysis, a brain MRI, comprehensive blood panels, and AI-assisted cancer screening, along with concierge physician access. Reporting in 2026 described it as operating and expanding into new markets. For someone who wants that level of screening and is comfortable with a five-figure annual commitment, it is a genuinely comprehensive workup.

  • Where it leads: advanced early-detection imaging and a deep diagnostic baseline, in person at physical centers.
  • Published pricing: a lower CORE tier around $2,995 and up, and a full-diagnostic APEX tier reported around $19,500 to $21,500 per year, varying by market.
  • Not its focus: ongoing prescription of peptides or GLP-1 medicine at cost. It is built to find things, not to be your low-cost peptide pharmacy.

Modern Age: the one that closed

Modern Age took a different angle on aging. Launched in 2021 by Melissa Eamer, it opened studios in New York, first in the Flatiron district and later on the Upper East Side, with the goal of making aging care approachable rather than clinical. Its assessments covered bone density, biomarkers, and hormone panels, followed by a clinician visit and lifestyle guidance, plus cosmetic services such as chemical peels and microneedling. The concept drew about $33 million in funding.

To be factual about its current status: Modern Age announced it would close and wound down operations in March 2024, with its founder citing an inability to secure the additional capital needed to keep going. Anyone researching it today should know it is no longer operating, which is why it ranks last here on the access criterion, not as a knock on the concept, but because you cannot currently buy it.

How to choose the right one for you

The ranking answers "which is most transparent and overseen." The better personal question is "which job am I hiring one for," because several of these solve different problems and many people use two together. Whichever way you lean, looking into your long-term health now is the proactive move, and being proactive here is what pays off over the years ahead.

  • Want prescribed peptides at a fair, transparent price? That is pru's job: LegitScript-certified, a licensed physician and an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy, medicine at cost, compounded semaglutide about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with membership separate.
  • Want the widest one-time read on your biology? Superpower's baseline panel, at one clear annual price.
  • Want ongoing testing plus a clinician who treats? Lifeforce's quarterly loop, with the treatments budgeted on top.
  • Want the deepest early-detection imaging and can commit five figures? Fountain Life.
  • Researching Modern Age? Note it closed in March 2024 and is not currently operating.

ON PRU'S SIDEpru's whole promise is that it is on your side. The medicine is priced at cost, every charge is itemized, the membership is flat and buys unlimited at-cost access so the savings compound and you can stack more than one peptide without a markup on any of them, and a licensed physician and a 503A pharmacy stand behind every order.

A testing membership and pru can even be complements: use one for the picture, use pru for the peptide itself at cost. Choosing to be proactive about how you age is a smart, responsible thing to do, and pru exists to make that proactive choice the accessible one, so take the next step when you are ready. Peptides made simple, for everyone.

Common questions

What is the best longevity clinic in 2026?
There is no single best, because these providers do different jobs. On the objective criteria a buyer's guide can verify, pricing transparency, physician and pharmacy oversight, and access, pru ranks first for prescribed peptides at a fair price: LegitScript-certified, a licensed physician plus an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy, and medicine priced at cost. For the widest one-time blood panel, Superpower leads; for an ongoing test-and-treat loop, Lifeforce; for the deepest early-detection imaging, Fountain Life. None of these rankings is about results, which depend on you and your clinician.
How were these providers ranked?
On objective criteria only: how transparent and itemized the pricing is, whether a licensed physician and a real pharmacy stand behind any medicine with a Certificate of Analysis, how much is on offer, and how easily you can access it. This guide never ranks on efficacy, results, or how much anyone loses, because those depend on the individual, not the provider.
Why is pru ranked first?
On the measurable grounds. pru's pricing is the most transparent in the group: the medicine is priced at cost with no markup, itemized, with compounded semaglutide around $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication price we found. The flat membership of about $50 a month billed annually is separate and buys unlimited at-cost access, so the savings compound with every vial and members can stack more than one peptide without a markup. It pairs a licensed physician with an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy and a Certificate of Analysis, and it focuses only on peptides. That is for the specific job of prescribed peptide access; the other providers lead for the different jobs they are built for.
How does pru's pricing compare to other providers?
Most still-compounding providers run about $99 to $397 per month, with most between $199 and $299, and some show a low medication price only after adding a separate membership. In 2025 and 2026 several large names, Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame, exited compounded GLP-1 entirely. pru passes the medicine through at cost with no markup, so the at-cost price is the price: compounded semaglutide about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with the $50-a-month membership separate.
Is Modern Age still open?
No. Modern Age announced its closure and wound down operations in March 2024 after raising about $33 million, with its founder citing an inability to secure additional capital. It is not currently operating, which is why it ranks last here on access. It is included so anyone researching it has the current facts.
Can I use a longevity clinic and pru together?
Yes, and many people do. A wide panel from Superpower, a recurring loop from Lifeforce, or deep imaging from Fountain Life can show you the picture, while pru handles the peptide itself at cost, prescribed by a licensed physician and filled by an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy with a Certificate of Analysis. They solve different problems.
How does pru keep peptides affordable?
pru runs on an at-cost model. You pay one flat membership, and the medication is passed through at the pharmacy's price with no member markup. Because pru never marks the medication up, we have every reason to push its price down, not up. As pru grows and orders more, we negotiate lower pricing with our partner pharmacies, and those savings go straight to you. Healthcare pricing is usually hidden and inflated; pru is built to sit on your side of it: transparent, at cost, and fighting to make peptides more affordable as we scale.
Do the savings add up if I take more than one peptide?
Yes, and this is where pru's at-cost pricing saves you the most. Because pru never marks the medication up, every vial is priced at cost, so each peptide you add avoids the markup a typical provider builds in. If a physician has you on more than one peptide, or on a stack, that saving repeats on every vial, all under one flat $50 membership instead of a marked-up price on each. The more your protocol includes, the more the difference adds up, which makes doing it the right way a financially responsible choice, not an expensive one.
Sources & further reading
  1. pru catalog, category, and pricing pages. joinpru.com. Accessed July 2026.
  2. Superpower Health. Public membership, biomarker panel, and pricing materials. superpower.com. Accessed July 2026.
  3. Lifeforce. Public membership, testing cadence, and pricing materials. mylifeforce.com. Accessed July 2026.
  4. Fountain Life Memberships: CORE, APEX and APEX Family. fountainlife.com/membership. Accessed July 2026.
  5. New York-based Longevity Clinic Modern Age Has Closed. WWD (wwd.com), March 2024.
  6. Longevity Clinic Modern Age to Close. BeautyMatter (beautymatter.com), March 2024.
  7. Compounded GLP-1 market pricing survey (still-compounding providers, roughly $99 to $397/mo; most $199 to $299; Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame exited in 2025 and 2026), internal pru research, 2026.
  8. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Human Drug Compounding (503A; compounded drugs are prescribed and pharmacy-made, not FDA-approved). fda.gov. Accessed July 2026.

Want more like this?

Subscribe to get new articles delivered to your inbox. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

All Articles