Best fit
- A buyer specifically seeking MRI screening with a portable report.
- Someone with a clinician who can review incidental findings and coordinate referrals.
- A patient who understands that screening can lead to further imaging or procedures.
Prenuvo is an MRI screening network, not a full-service longevity clinic. Its focused plan starts at $1,199, its whole-body plan is $2,499 and its Executive membership starts at $3,999. The scan is radiation-free, but that does not remove the core screening question: what happens when an asymptomatic person receives an incidental or uncertain finding.
What we checked
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
Prenuvo is best understood as convenient access to a structured MRI protocol. It can be reasonable for a buyer who understands the limits and has a clinician ready to manage the report. The focused scan and whole-body scan cover different anatomy, so compare scope carefully and do not treat a normal result as a replacement for established screening.
At a glance
Prenuvo’s lower-price Core plan uses a focused head-to-mid-thigh protocol. Its $2,499 Comprehensive plan includes whole-body MRI plus laboratory and review elements. Executive adds further brain, body-composition and selected cardiac components. Read the anatomical coverage, not just the product name, before comparing Prenuvo with another scan.
Current public US pricing starts at $1,199 for Core, $2,499 for Comprehensive and $3,999 for Executive. A standalone whole-body scan is also listed at $2,499. Prenuvo’s current page contains conflicting Executive figures for New York City, so request the local total in writing rather than relying on a national starting price.
The membership plans add review and repeat elements around the scan, but Prenuvo is not primary care. Ask who speaks with you about the radiology report, how urgent findings are escalated and whether confirmatory imaging or specialist consultation is included. A report without a follow-up owner can become an expensive handoff.
The American College of Radiology says evidence is insufficient to recommend total-body MRI screening for asymptomatic people without risk factors. The concern is not radiation, because MRI does not use ionizing radiation. It is the uncertain balance between useful detection, incidental findings, false reassurance and downstream testing.
Prenuvo is the most scan-centered offer. Biograph and Human Longevity combine imaging with broader onsite testing and physician interpretation at a higher total price. Choose Prenuvo when MRI access is the specific purchase; choose a fuller clinic only when the added examination and care coordination justify the difference.
Prenuvo lists a focused Core plan at $1,199, a whole-body Comprehensive plan at $2,499 and Executive from $3,999. Local pricing and inclusions can vary.
Prenuvo describes its whole-body MRI as taking about 50 minutes, with timing varying by plan and protocol.
MRI does not use ionizing radiation. The main screening concern is incidental or uncertain findings and the extra testing they can trigger.
No. Prenuvo itself describes the scan as an adjunct, and it does not replace established screening such as mammography, colon screening or other care based on age and risk.
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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