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Vol. IV · Issue III · 08 May 2026 N 40°42′47″ · W 74°00′21″ Cal. 2026-05-07 14:32 UTC · σ 0.61 ● Lab in session
PLATE XXIII Best at-home blood tests N 30°16′ · W 97°44′ SCALE Buyer's guide · at-home-blood-tests · N · NEARCTIC
Plate XXIII · Buyer's guide

Best At-Home Blood Tests (2026)

BY · Biohacker Atlas Editorial Team UPDATED ·

"At-home blood test" covers two very different products: comprehensive health panels that measure 40–110+ biomarkers in one sitting (often with clinician review and an ongoing membership), and single-purpose kits that test one thing — a thyroid panel, an STI screen, a food-sensitivity test. This guide ranks the comprehensive panels first, since that is where the money and the decision usually sit, then shows where the single-kit brands fit.

One honesty note up front: our hands-on membership testing is still rolling out — every service here is currently evaluated from published panel specs, pricing, clinician model and regulatory framing rather than our own end-to-end sign-up (each review is marked not-yet-tested for the collection-and-results experience). And a health note: these are wellness and screening tools run as lab-developed tests in CLIA-certified labs, not FDA-cleared diagnostics — abnormal results should be confirmed with a clinician. Prices and panels change often; tap through to check current terms.

The picks — comprehensive panels

Best all-in-one concierge — Lifeforce

$349/mo membership

The closed-loop model: 40+ biomarker quarterly testing, physician and health-coach consultations, and prescription optimization pathways (HRT, GLP-1, peptides) all under one membership — not upsold separately. It scores highest in the category (8.5/10) on integration, but at $349/month it is also the most expensive serious platform here, so it fits buyers who want the full diagnostics-to-treatment loop and can commit to it.

Check price → Read the full review

Best longevity depth under $1k/yr — Mito Health

$680–$949/yr

A 100+ biomarker core panel with a licensed 1:1 clinician consultation included — the same clinician-integration Lifeforce offers, at a fraction of the annual cost. It splits the difference between Function Health’s breadth-without-clinician and Lifeforce’s clinician-at-$349/mo, landing comprehensive breadth plus clinician access under $1,000 a year. 8.4/10.

Check price → Read the full review

Best science-backed personalization — InsideTracker

from $99 (Ultimate ~$340/yr)

The strongest academic advisory board in the category drives a science-first personalization engine — its Ultimate panel covers 43 biomarkers across 10 healthspan categories with specific, cited recommendations. The $99 entry mini-panels make it the most accessible way in without a longevity-membership commitment; ongoing per-test retests get pricey without the Pro membership (~$589/yr). 8.3/10.

Check price → Read the full review

Best for frequent at-home tracking — SiPhox Health

$124–$245 per panel

The only player with proprietary silicon-photonics hardware that enables genuine at-home testing — an upper-arm EasyDraw collection device and 2–5 day turnaround (the fastest in the category). Panels run 18 to 60+ biomarkers, and the per-panel pricing is what makes monthly or quarterly trend monitoring financially defensible where annual-membership models don’t. 8.2/10.

Check price → Read the full review

Best diagnostic breadth for the price — Function Health

$365–$499/yr

The widest diagnostic breadth at a consumer price: 100+ lab tests spanning every major organ system on enrollment, plus a 60+ test mid-year follow-up, all drawn at Quest Diagnostics’ CLIA-certified, CAP-accredited patient service centers. No clinician consult is included and add-ons (Galleri, APOE) cost extra — but for raw biomarker coverage per dollar it is the benchmark. 8.0/10.

Check price → Read the full review

Single-purpose kits — a different job

If you want one specific test rather than a full-body panel, the comprehensive memberships above are overkill. Everlywell ($49–$299) sells 30+ discrete kits — STI, thyroid, hormones, food sensitivity — with the widest retail footprint (Target, CVS, Walgreens); note our review flags documented complaints about unauthorized recurring charges, so decline any subscription at checkout. LetsGetChecked (~$49–$249) runs a similar single-kit model but owns its labs. Both are convenient for a targeted question and poor value if what you actually want is comprehensive tracking.

One caution on white-label kits: the Dr. Miltie panel is a finger-prick test run on SiPhox Health’s CLIA-certified lab — the underlying testing is the same infrastructure as SiPhox above, sold under a different name.

Comparison

At-home blood tests compared by price, biomarker count, pricing model, and standout feature.
ServicePriceBiomarkersModelStandout
Lifeforce $349/mo 40+ Membership + clinician + Rx Closed-loop concierge
Mito Health $680–$949/yr 100+ Membership + clinician Longevity depth under $1k/yr
InsideTracker from $99 43 (Ultimate) Per-panel / Pro membership Science-first advisory board
SiPhox Health $124–$245 18–60+ Per-panel (home hardware) Fastest turnaround, frequent testing
Function Health $365–$499/yr 100+ Annual membership (Quest draw) Widest breadth per dollar
Thorne HealthTest $100–$830 63–89 Per-panel + supplement funnel NSF-credible supplement integration
Superpower $16–$199 ~55 measured / 100+ advertised Low-cost, AI-first Price leader — read the caveats

Head-to-head comparisons

Deciding between two specific services? We compare them directly: Function Health vs InsideTracker, Function Health vs Lifeforce, Function Health vs Mito Health, Function Health vs Superpower, and Everlywell vs LetsGetChecked.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best at-home blood test in 2026?

For a full diagnostics-plus-clinician model, Lifeforce ranks highest in our comparison (8.5/10) but costs $349/month. Mito Health (8.4) delivers comparable clinician-integrated breadth under $1,000 a year, InsideTracker (8.3) is the most science-backed, and Function Health (8.0) offers the widest biomarker coverage per dollar. The right pick depends on whether you want a one-time panel, frequent tracking, or an ongoing membership with clinician access. Note our hands-on membership testing is still rolling out — rankings are based on published specs, pricing and panel breadth.

Are at-home blood tests FDA approved?

The tests themselves are generally laboratory-developed tests (LDTs) run in CLIA-certified, often CAP-accredited labs — the same regulatory framework your physician’s bloodwork uses — rather than FDA-cleared diagnostic devices. That is standard for the category. Results are a wellness and screening tool, not a diagnosis; abnormal results should be confirmed and discussed with a clinician.

How much does an at-home blood test cost?

It depends heavily on the model. Single-purpose kits (Everlywell, LetsGetChecked) run about $49–$299 per test. Comprehensive annual memberships run $365–$499 (Function Health) to $680–$949 (Mito Health). Per-panel comprehensive testing is $124–$245 (SiPhox) or from $99 (InsideTracker). Lifeforce is the outlier at $349/month for its full concierge model.

What is the difference between Everlywell and a longevity panel like Function Health?

Everlywell sells 30+ discrete single-purpose kits ($49–$299) for one thing at a time — an STI screen, a thyroid panel, a food-sensitivity test — with wide retail availability. Comprehensive services like Function Health, Lifeforce and Mito Health instead run a broad multi-organ panel (100+ biomarkers) in one sitting, often with clinician review. If you want one specific test, a single kit is cheaper; if you want a full-body baseline and tracking, a comprehensive panel is the better value.

How we picked: these rankings are based on published panel specifications, pricing model, biomarker breadth, clinician access and turnaround — not yet on our own end-to-end membership sign-up (every review is currently not-yet-tested for the collection-and-results experience). We will update this guide as hands-on data lands. These tests are wellness and screening tools, not a substitute for medical care. See our methodology. Links marked “Check price” are affiliate links; see our affiliate disclosure.

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