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Biohacking isn’t just a Silicon Valley side project anymore. It’s at the strip mall, the wellness chain down the block and the concierge clinic charging five figures a year and the bills don’t even look like they’re from the same industry.
A single visit can run anywhere from under $100 to thousands a year, depending on which version of “biohacking” you’re actually shopping for.
Three clinics tracked in May 2026 reporting tell the whole story:
Different services, different sticker shock.
Biohacking is basically the do-it-yourself approach to optimizing how your body works. Sleep, energy, focus, recovery, the works. A biohacking clinic packages that idea into a service menu. Think wellness center meets longevity practice meets med spa. Inside, you’ll usually find IV drips and vitamin injections, recovery tech like cryotherapy and red light therapy, trendy add-ons like NAD+ and peptides and, at higher-end clinics, advanced testing and imaging. Worth’s May 2026 reporting calls it a whole new consumer health industry being built outside the traditional insurance system, which is exactly why prices vary so wildly.
Most menus are built around the same handful of buckets. Looking at Next Health’s published service categories alongside Restore’s published offerings gives you a clear picture of what’s typical across the industry:
Same buzzword, but very different bills.
At the entry level, Restore Hyper Wellness calls itself the largest direct-to-consumer wellness provider in the country. Its May 2026 NAD+ Month promo bundled an NAD+ shot with one recovery service for $79. (Restore notes prices vary by studio, so that’s an example, not a promise.)
At the mid-tier, Next Health puts its full menu online. Here’s the quick math for their IV category:
Next Health’s wellness technology menu also shows a similar range applies to non-IV services. A few examples from the same page:
For context, Next Health says its most popular IV membership at $299 a month bundles two IV drips, two vitamin shots and monthly access to cryotherapy, infrared LED, hyperbaric oxygen and a couple of body scans.
At the top of the market, Fountain Life sells annual diagnostics-heavy memberships from roughly $6,500 to $21,500 depending on tier, according to a May 2026 cross-check of the company’s own pricing pages. You’re not buying a single drip at that level. You’re buying full-body MRIs, advanced blood panels, genetic screening and a care team.
Here’s the catch with biohacking pricing: almost no one sells single visits as the main offer anymore. Everything funnels you toward a membership.
A Next Health membership at $99 to $400 a month works out to between $1,200 and $4,800 a year. That’s not pocket change, but it puts heavy users within reach of a Fountain Life entry tier.
If you’re just scanning prices, the most expensive single item at most biohacking clinics is a high-dose NAD+ infusion. At Next Health, that’s $1,000 a session. Peptides, hormone optimization and longevity-branded IV stacks cluster around the same band.
The science and regulation behind NAD+ and peptides are still evolving, and none of that shows up on the price card.
A few things are worth keeping in mind before booking. “Biohacking” is a marketing term, not a clinical one, so a $79 promo and a $21,500 membership have almost nothing in common beyond the label. Claims like “largest provider” come from company press materials, not independent rankings. And pricing varies a lot by location, which means online prices may not match what you actually pay. Read the full menu, do the membership math against how often you’ll actually go, and treat any single quoted price as a jumping-off point.