Best fit
- You want a longitudinal physician relationship, not a one-off scan.
- You will use repeat diagnostics, care-team access and follow-up planning across the year.
- You can evaluate add-on therapeutics separately from the diagnostic package.
Fountain Life sells the full membership version of longevity diagnostics: repeated imaging, genomics, advanced biomarkers and a clinical team around the result. The critical buyer question is whether the annual relationship is real enough to justify membership pricing.

This profile synthesizes the clinic’s published information, reputable coverage and first-hand accounts. We have not audited the clinic on your behalf, and we say so.
“A serious premium-clinic offer if the physician team actually owns the longitudinal plan. Expensive, and therefore judged on follow-up, not the diagnostic menu.”
Fountain Life’s membership page describes full-body and brain MRI, coronary CT angiography, bone-density and body-composition scans, genomic and biomarker testing, and ongoing access depending on tier.
Current market coverage lists APEX around $21,500 annually. Fountain Life’s own cost pages position advanced executive-health programs with extensive testing, genetic analysis and full-body imaging as a five-figure annual decision.
The value is not the MRI by itself. It is whether Fountain Life provides interpretation, risk ranking, repeat cadence, specialist escalation and enough physician access that findings turn into decisions.
For an executive team, family office or founder who would otherwise assemble scans, labs and specialist reviews ad hoc, that coordination can be the product.
Fountain Life’s marketing language leans hard into early detection and AI-guided diagnostics. That does not erase the screening caveat: more testing finds more findings, and not every finding improves outcomes.
Before paying, ask for the written test list, exactly what is repeated each year, what therapeutics are separately billed, how abnormal imaging is escalated, and whether reports are portable to your outside physicians.
Skip if you want a one-time scan or a cheap blood panel. This is a membership product, and the price only makes sense if you use the clinical relationship.
Also skip if you are prone to health anxiety and do not have a physician ready to help interpret incidental findings calmly.
Fountain Life’s menu includes serious diagnostics, but the more expansive the menu gets, the more the buyer must separate validated screening from exploratory optimization. The public membership table itself marks some restorative biologics as not FDA approved.
The stronger version of the product is physician-led prevention with transparent escalation. The weaker version is a luxury bundle where abnormal findings and experimental add-ons are left for the buyer to interpret.
Current public market coverage lists Fountain Life APEX around $21,500 per year, while Fountain Life’s own cost pages frame advanced executive-health programs as five-figure packages. Confirm the live quote and tier details directly.
It is a membership-style longevity clinic. The diagnostic menu matters, but the value depends on clinical follow-up and longitudinal planning.
Ask what is included, what is separately billed, who follows abnormal findings, whether outside doctors get the full report, and what changes at renewal.
No single evidence claim should cover the whole menu. Diagnostics, CCTA, MRI and labs belong in a different evidence category from restorative biologics, plasma exchange or other add-ons. Ask for the regulatory status and consent language for each therapy.
By David Persson · Updated 2026-06-12 · Pricing changes – confirm with the clinic · Corrections: hi@agewell.guide
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