Mayo Clinic Executive Health review: cost, what you get and follow-up
Mayo Clinic Executive Health is a hospital-based preventive program for qualifying executives and business leaders, not an open-access longevity membership. Visits are tailored across Rochester, Scottsdale, Jacksonville and London, usually over one to three days. Mayo does not publish one universal price, so the first useful document is an itemized estimate for your campus and selected services.
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 Mayo Clinic Executive Health worth considering?
Quote required
Mayo is strongest for a buyer who values coordinated specialist access and a physician-led hospital program more than a fashionable longevity label. Its public weakness is price transparency. Ask for the base fee, optional testing, physician schedule and year-round support in writing before comparing it with another program.
Tailored executive preventive program inside Mayo Clinic
Locations
Rochester, Scottsdale, Jacksonville and London
Visit length
Often two days; Mayo says the schedule may range from one to three
Price
Individual estimate based on campus, demographics and selected services
Best fit
A qualifying executive seeking a concentrated hospital-based preventive assessment.
Someone whose history may require coordinated specialist access during the visit.
A patient with an existing primary-care doctor who can receive the final plan.
Ask before booking
What is the complete estimate for my campus and protocol?
Which tests are standard and which are elective additions?
How much time will I spend with the executive-health physician?
What support remains available after the closing consultation?
Choose something else if
You are not eligible for the executive program.
You expect 24/7 concierge primary care after the visit.
You want a public fixed price before speaking with the program team.
What Mayo Executive Health includes
Mayo builds the visit around an executive-health physician, a tailored protocol, opening and closing discussions and an action plan. Access to Mayo specialists is the main advantage when the history or testing warrants it. Genetics, multi-cancer blood testing and resilience services are optional rather than standard for every participant.
Mayo executive physical cost
Mayo does not publish a universal all-in price. The estimate varies by campus, age, sex, history and optional services. Request a written breakdown that separates the program fee, laboratory work, imaging, specialist consultations and any test offered during the visit. Without that, a comparison against a fixed-price private clinic is unreliable.
Physician time and continuing support
The program describes physician-led opening and closing conversations, a written summary and an annual relationship with year-round support. Mayo is explicit that this is not 24/7 concierge care and that participants need a primary-care physician. Ask what access remains after the visit and how the final plan is transferred.
Optional tests need separate decisions
A famous hospital name does not make every elective screening test necessary. Ask why each optional scan, genetic test or multi-cancer assay is being recommended for your risk profile, what a positive result triggers and whether established screening remains due.
Mayo vs Cleveland and Northwestern
All three offer hospital-based preventive care. Mayo has the broadest multi-campus executive brand, Cleveland publishes more detail about the full-day exam, and Northwestern’s Human Longevity Clinic has a defined six-month reassessment. Compare eligibility, total price and follow-up ownership rather than the institution alone.
Closest alternatives
Compare Mayo Clinic Executive Health with services built for a similar decision
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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