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Agewell GuideCLINICS · Q2 2026Get the weekly briefing
Physician-led medical membershipSources checked

Cenegenics review: cost, what you get and follow-up

Cenegenics sells an in-person performance assessment followed by ongoing physician and health-coach access, quarterly laboratory monitoring and an annual review. One official page advertises a $3,499 starting investment. Its FAQ lists a $4,495 to $13,000 assessment, a $550 to $750 monthly program fee and $350 to $600 in typical monthly supplies, and says the complete program averages $14,000 to $21,000 a year. A written first-year total matters more than any single headline price.

What we checked

Price, program scope, clinician time and follow-up.

We checked the provider’s current program pages and, where available, independent or regulatory sources listed below. We then separated standard inclusions from optional costs and open questions. Every source carries the date we reviewed it.

The short answer

Is Cenegenics worth considering?

Public price ranges with conflicting official pages

Cenegenics is a substantial medical membership rather than a one-off blood panel: the public format includes a four-to-six-hour assessment, an approximately two-hour physician consultation and repeat monitoring. Its weakness is not a lack of services but an inconsistent public price story and broad claims attached to hormone and performance care. Buy only against an itemized first-year estimate, a named prescribing clinician and a monitoring plan tied to established diagnostic criteria.

Published price
Programs from $3,499 · FAQ states $14,000–$21,000 yearly average
Service type
Physician-led medical membership
Where
United States and international · 27 locations stated
Information checked

At a glance

The facts that change the decision

Initial visit
Four to six hours at a center, according to Cenegenics
Physician time
The official FAQ describes an approximately two-hour physician consultation
Core testing
Laboratory work, DEXA, VO₂ max, carotid ultrasound, cognitive and functional testing
Ongoing care
Quarterly laboratory monitoring, coaching, physician access and an annual in-center review
Public cost
$3,499 advertised start; FAQ states a $14,000–$21,000 yearly average after assessment, fees and supplies

Best fit

  • Someone who wants an in-person baseline plus ongoing physician and health-coach contact.
  • A buyer prepared to travel for the main assessment and handle later reviews remotely.
  • A patient who wants DEXA, exercise testing, laboratory work and medical interpretation in one program.

Ask before booking

  • What is my complete first-year cost, including the assessment, program fee, medication, hormones, supplements and travel?
  • Which physician will manage me, and how many physician appointments or hours are guaranteed after the assessment?
  • What symptoms and repeat laboratory results are required before hormone treatment is prescribed?
  • Which tests are standard at my chosen location, and which are optional add-ons?
  • Can I export every laboratory result, image and clinical note to my primary-care doctor?

Choose something else if

  • You want a fixed, simple annual price with no likely medication or supplement bill.
  • You are seeking routine primary care, urgent care or insurance-billed disease management.
  • You would start hormone treatment from a single laboratory result without symptoms, repeat testing and a clear diagnosis.

What Cenegenics actually sells

The service has two parts. First comes concierge blood collection and an in-person assessment covering body composition, cardiovascular fitness, carotid imaging, cognition and physical performance. The clinic then uses those findings to build an ongoing nutrition, exercise, supplement and, when prescribed, hormone or medication plan. That makes Cenegenics closer to a private medical membership than an executive physical that ends after one report.

Cenegenics cost and what is included

Cenegenics uses two different price frames. A current landing page advertises a $3,499 starting investment. Its FAQ lists a $4,495 to $13,000 assessment, typical supplies of $350 to $600 a month and a program fee of $550 to $750 a month; it says the Performance Health Program averages $14,000 to $21,000 per year in total. Treat $3,499 as a starting figure rather than an all-in first-year quote and ask which assessment and service level it covers.

Physician time and follow-up

Cenegenics says the initial day includes about two hours with a personal physician. The continuing program describes quarterly blood draws, coaching check-ins, ongoing physician access and an annual in-center review. Public pages do not promise a response time, a fixed number of physician appointments or the same cadence at every location. Confirm who will prescribe, who answers between visits and how often that clinician personally reviews your results.

The testing list needs clinical context

DEXA and supervised exercise testing can provide useful baselines, but not every screening test belongs in every asymptomatic adult. Cenegenics includes carotid ultrasound in its standard assessment, while the US Preventive Services Task Force recommends against screening the general asymptomatic adult population for carotid artery stenosis because harms can outweigh benefits. Ask what personal risk factor supports each test and what happens after an uncertain result.

Hormone treatment is a diagnosis, not a membership perk

The Endocrine Society recommends diagnosing male hypogonadism only when compatible symptoms accompany consistently low testosterone confirmed with repeat morning testing. It also sets contraindications and follow-up requirements. Cenegenics says hormonal treatment is used when clinically indicated, but the buyer still needs the exact diagnosis, drug, pharmacy, monitoring schedule, fertility discussion and exit criteria documented before starting.

Cenegenics vs Humanaut and Comite Center

Cenegenics has the broadest location network and publishes more detail about the initial physician consultation. Humanaut publishes a lower Path membership price and a defined four hours of annual provider time, but that tier is not presented as physician-led. Comite Center uses a more bespoke diagnostics-and-intervention model without a public fee. Compare first-year total, prescriber credentials, retesting cadence and which findings enter ordinary medical care.

Questions people ask about Cenegenics

How much does Cenegenics cost?

One official page advertises programs from $3,499. The FAQ lists a $4,495 to $13,000 assessment, $550 to $750 monthly program fee and typical $350 to $600 monthly supplies, and says the complete program averages $14,000 to $21,000 a year. Request an itemized quote.

What does the Cenegenics assessment include?

Cenegenics lists laboratory testing, DEXA, VO₂ max, carotid ultrasound, neurocognitive testing, a physical and functional assessment, coaching input and an extended physician consultation.

How much physician time does Cenegenics include?

The clinic FAQ describes about two hours with a physician during the initial assessment. It does not publish a guaranteed annual total for later physician contact, so confirm that separately.

Does Cenegenics accept insurance?

Cenegenics says it does not accept insurance. Some costs may be eligible for HSA or FSA payment, but eligibility and reimbursement are not guaranteed.

Is Cenegenics a replacement for primary care?

No. Cenegenics describes itself as a private practice that supplements primary care. Confirm which clinician owns routine screening, urgent problems, specialist referrals and any abnormal result.

Sources checked for this review

By David Persson · Review updated 2026-07-16 · Sources checked 2026-07-16 · Read the clinic review methodology · Submit a correction

Agewell is an independent buyer’s guide, not a medical provider. Screening and treatment decisions should be made with a qualified clinician who knows your history.

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