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Biohacking Clinics Are Getting More Popular, So What's on the Menu and What Do Treatments Cost?

Biohacking has slipped out of Silicon Valley group chats and into strip malls, concierge offices and wellness chains with hundreds of locations. The word now stretches across a price range so wide it’s almost meaningless on its own.

A $79 intro shot at a national chain and a $21,500 annual diagnostics membership both get filed under the same buzzword, and shoppers walking in cold rarely know which version they’re looking at.

This guide breaks down what’s actually on a typical biohacking clinic menu, what each category of treatment costs and how pricing shifts depending on the tier of clinic you walk into.

What Is a Biohacking Clinic?

Biohacking is the broad practice of using science, data and technology to optimize how the body functions. A biohacking clinic is the brick-and-mortar version of that idea: a wellness center that packages treatments aimed at boosting energy, supporting recovery, slowing aging or improving sleep and focus, depending on the tier of clinic you walk into.

These clinics sit somewhere between a med spa, a longevity practice and a traditional doctor’s office. Most operate outside the insurance system, which is part of Worth’s May 2026 framing of the broader biohacking economy as a parallel consumer health industry. That out-of-pocket structure also helps explain why pricing varies so widely from clinic to clinic.

The Core Categories on Most Biohacking Menus

Most clinics organize their offerings around a handful of recurring buckets. Next Health’s published service categories offer a representative look at what’s typical across the industry:

  • Recovery and “tech” services: cryotherapy, infrared sauna, red light therapy, compression boots and mild hyperbaric oxygen
  • IV drips: a vitamin base with immune, hangover, energy or beauty stacks added on
  • Injections: NAD+, vitamin B12 and glutathione
  • Premium add-ons: high-dose NAD+ infusions, peptide protocols, hormone optimization and ozone or EBOO therapies
  • Diagnostics: biomarker blood panels, body composition scans, hormone testing and, at higher-end clinics, full-body MRI and genetic screening

The structural overlap across clinics is striking. Walk into a Restore Hyper Wellness studio, a Next Health location or a Fountain Life clinic and you’ll see many of the same core treatments. The big differences sit in price, surrounding services and how the menu is sold.

What These Treatments Actually Cost

At the mass-market end, Restore Hyper Wellness describes itself as the largest direct-to-consumer wellness provider in the country, with more than 200 studios nationwide as of May 2026.

Its May 2026 NAD+ Month promotion bundled an NAD+ injection with one recovery session for $79. Restore notes prices vary by studio and location, so treat that figure as an example, not a guarantee.

At the mid-tier, Next Health publishes its full menu online. Sample IV treatment pricing for non-members:

  • Standard IV drips (Hydration, Immune, Energy, Beauty): $99 to $199
  • NAD+ IV drip, 300mg: $500
  • NAD+ IV drip, 750mg: $1,000
  • Higher-concentration Niagen infusions: into the thousands
  • Monthly membership tiers: $99 to $400, per Worth’s May 2026 reporting

The same Next Health menu also publishes per-session pricing for its wellness technology services, which fills in the rest of what most mid-tier biohacking clinic visits look like:

  • Cryotherapy: $50
  • InBody Scan: $100
  • VISIA facial scan: $100
  • Infrared light sauna: $100
  • Infrared LED light bed: $150
  • Hyperbaric oxygen chamber: $350
  • Advanced IVs like Plaquex and high-dose vitamin C: $300 to $375 per session

Next Health’s 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 body composition scans, which is a useful benchmark for how the membership math actually works at a mid-tier clinic.

At the concierge tier, the model changes entirely. Fountain Life sells annual diagnostics-heavy memberships priced roughly $6,500 to $21,500 depending on tier, per a May 2026 cross-check of the company’s own pricing pages. At that level, you’re buying biomarker panels, full-body imaging, genetic screening and ongoing physician access, not a single drip.

Memberships vs. Single Visits

Single-visit pricing isn’t the industry default anymore. Restore sells recurring membership tiers that bring per-session costs down. Next Health’s plans bundle drips, injections and recovery services. Fountain Life skips walk-in pricing almost entirely.

For someone testing the category, the cheapest move is usually a promotional bundle or a single introductory drip. For anyone planning regular visits, a membership almost always wins on math. The trade-off is the obvious one: monthly fees keep flowing whether you show up or not.

The Most Expensive Items on the Biohacking Menu

The single line item that anchors the top of nearly every clinic menu is NAD+. At Next Health, the high-dose IV runs $1,000, dwarfing the standard $199 drip on the same page. Peptide protocols, hormone optimization and longevity-branded IV stacks tend to cluster in the same price band.

At the concierge tier, the most expensive items aren’t treatments at all, they’re diagnostics: imaging, genetic sequencing and physician access bundled into an annual fee.

What to Confirm Before You Book A Visit

A short checklist saves money and headaches:

  • Ask for the full price sheet, not just the headline figure
  • Confirm whether a membership requires a minimum commitment and how cancellation works
  • Check whether the entry-level perks you saw in marketing are actually included in your tier or sold as upgrades
  • Ask who supervises any IV, injection or peptide treatment, an MD or NP signing off is the baseline

Pricing across the industry is genuinely inconsistent, and self-reported claims like “largest provider” come from company press materials rather than independent rankings. Treat any one clinic’s menu as a sample of the spectrum, not the standard for the whole industry.

This article was created by content specialists using various tools, including AI.

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