MEMBERSHIPUnited States · Dubai · franchise-style locations vary
Next Health
Next Health is the accessible membership version of the longevity clinic: biomarker testing and provider consults at the Medicine 4.0 layer, with IV therapy, vitamin shots, cryotherapy, infrared and hyperbaric credits in higher tiers. The price is legible; the buyer caveat is that wellness-tech access and medical optimization are not the same thing.
Editorial clinic imagery. Not a photo from the clinic.
From public sources – not a visit
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.
Our read – Accessible, therapy caveat
“A useful entry-level membership if you want quarterly labs and a provider-reviewed plan at a low monthly price. Be much more skeptical when the conversation moves from testing and lifestyle to peptides, hormones, stem cells, exosomes or other add-on therapeutics.”
Type
MEMBERSHIP
Pricing
$99/mo Medicine 4.0 · $199/mo Optimize · $299/mo Premier · $299-$399/mo 4.0 bundles; services vary by location
Model
Monthly wellness and Medicine 4.0 membership
Core offer
Quarterly biomarker testing, consults, IV therapy, vitamin shots and wellness-tech credits by tier
Current footprint
Multi-location private wellness clinic model
Agewell basis
Official membership pages and regulatory caveats
Best fit
You want a low-friction lab-and-consult cadence rather than a $20,000 annual clinic product.
You already use IV, cryotherapy, infrared or HBOT services and know what those sessions cost à la carte.
You will take abnormal biomarkers to a clinician instead of treating an app plan as medical care.
Ask before booking
Which biomarkers are included quarterly, and who reviews abnormal results?
Which services vary by location, and which credits expire each month?
Are peptides, hormones, metabolic programs or regenerative therapies prescribed by a named clinician?
What is included in the membership versus separately billed services?
Red flags
You are mainly buying IV therapy, peptides or hormones without a clear diagnosis and monitoring plan.
The location you use does not offer the services assumed by the national membership page.
A membership discount makes you add therapies you would not otherwise choose.
What Next Health sells
Next Health’s public membership page now separates conventional wellness memberships from Medicine 4.0. Medicine 4.0 is the more relevant Agewell lane: quarterly biomarker and functional medicine testing, quarterly one-to-one consults, personal wellness plans and access to provider-prescribed peptides, hormone optimization and metabolic programs.
The wellness tiers add services: Optimize includes vitamin shots and tech credits, Premier adds monthly IV therapy, and the 4.0 bundles combine Medicine 4.0 with those service credits. The public prices are unusually legible for the category.
Why it can make sense
At $99/month for Medicine 4.0, the product can be rational if it genuinely gives you repeat labs, provider time and a plan that changes over time. That is a different spend profile from an executive-health day or a resort retreat.
The value is not the IV drip. The value is whether quarterly testing finds a specific, fixable issue and whether the provider relationship is strong enough to avoid self-directed overreaction.
Where to be careful
Next Health also markets therapies that sit closer to medical decision-making: peptides, hormone optimization, metabolic programs, and on some pages stem cells, exosomes or therapeutic plasma exchange. Those require a higher bar than “member pricing.”
Before any add-on, ask for diagnosis, indication, medication or product source, monitoring labs, stop criteria, adverse-event plan and whether your primary physician should be involved.
Who it is for
Best fit: someone who wants a recurring private lab cadence, can stick to one provider-led plan, and will use the membership to simplify follow-up rather than collect wellness treatments.
It is also a reasonable first step for buyers who are not ready for an $8,000-$50,000 clinic product but want more structure than an annual physical.
Who should skip
Skip if the actual draw is a menu of drips and optimization therapies. A subscription can make optional treatments feel routine, which is exactly the wrong incentive when evidence varies by intervention.
Also skip if your local branch does not offer the services you are pricing into the membership. Next Health explicitly notes that tech services vary by location.
Questions people ask
How much does Next Health cost?
Next Health lists Medicine 4.0 at $99/month, Optimize at $199/month, Premier at $299/month, Optimize 4.0 at $299/month and Premier 4.0 at $399/month. Services and tech credits vary by location, so price the branch you will actually use.
Is Next Health a longevity clinic or a wellness membership?
It is both, depending on tier and behavior. Medicine 4.0 is the more clinical testing-and-consult layer; the IV, vitamin shot and wellness-tech tiers are closer to a wellness-services membership.
Is Next Health worth it?
It can be worth it if you want quarterly biomarkers and provider review at a relatively low monthly cost. It is weaker if you mainly use it to justify add-on drips, peptides or hormones without a diagnosis and monitoring plan.
What should I ask before joining Next Health?
Ask which tests are included, who reviews abnormal results, which services your local branch offers, whether credits expire, and how any peptide, hormone or regenerative therapy is prescribed and monitored.