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Ultrahuman Blood Vision lands in the US with over 100 biomarkers

Published 11 hours ago4 minute read

Ultrahuman’s Blood Vision service has finally arrived in the US after debuting in India late last year. The platform offers a broad set of lab markers tied to your wearable data, and it’s now available across 48 states.


At its core, Blood Vision is a wide-ranging lab panel. Think of it like a regular blood test, only more detailed.

You’re looking at over 100 biomarkers covering cardiovascular, metabolic, hormonal, inflammatory, and longevity-related categories. Think ApoB, fasting insulin, TSH, hs-CRP, even biological age estimates. But this isn’t just about numbers in a PDF.

What makes this platform different is how it links those biomarkers to real-world data. The system pulls in insights from Ultrahuman’s Ring and M1 CGM, layering glucose curves, sleep quality, and activity levels over your lab values. This is done through something Ultrahuman calls UltraTrace, a feature meant to surface trends between lifestyle choices and physiological response.

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The idea is simple. If a marker like A1C creeps up, you can actually go back and see the movement and food logs that correlate. That linkage becomes the foundation for both understanding and change. The more data you feed into the system, the more the platform learns and adapts.

Ultrahuman Blood Vision

Ordering the test is done through the Ultrahuman app. From there, you’re sent to a nearby lab for the blood draw. This means going to a Quest Diagnostics location where 12 vials of blood were collected. Yes, twelve! There’s also a urine test.

The instructions leading up to the appointment are clear. Users are told to fast, avoid supplements and hydrate the day before. early reports are that the test itself, despite the volume of vials, is handled professionally. Most results start arriving in the app within a few days, though some can take up to a month to process.

Results are displayed visually with color coding. Green for normal, yellow to red for out-of-range. There’s contextual info for many of the markers, which helps if you’re not familiar with something like SHBG or HOMA-IR. But not every biomarker includes an explanation, and that’s one area where the app could do more.

Still, the level of data is impressive. The full list spans everything from insulin resistance scores to trace metals like zinc and lead, plus hormone panels, autoimmune markers, liver and kidney function and advanced lipid profiles. Users can scroll through the data and see real-time recommendations linked to each outlier.


The app doesn’t leave you on your own with the results. It offers a follow-up test 3 to 6 months later, though this second round covers a reduced set of about 60 key markers. These are selected based on your original results and focus on areas where meaningful trends are expected. Which means, the follow-up panel doesn’t re-test all the same markers. So you’ll need to keep that in mind if you want to track specific metrics over time.

Between tests, the app delivers tailored suggestions that include supplements, dosage plans, and links to supporting medical literature. You can choose to buy those recommendations directly through the platform, but that part is optional.

There’s also AI-generated summaries and access to performance coaching for those who want help turning insight into action. Everything is integrated into the Ultrahuman app, so you’re not switching between services or platforms.


The all important question – what is the price tag? Well, the initial Blood Vision panel comes in at $499 – check it out on the Ultrahuman website.

That price includes the full biomarker set, app access and lifestyle tracking integrations. It’s not cheap, but for those deep into bio-tracking or personal health optimisation, it offers a pretty unique combination of data and guidance. And keep in mind, this is much more detailed than a typical blood test.

The feature is essentially designed to complement the Ring Air and M1 glucose tracking system. You can check out my reviews on both of them. For users already wearing Ultrahuman hardware, this test fills in a major gap by connecting what’s happening inside the body with what’s visible on the surface.

The product has now landed in the US, with more countries likely to follow. As someone based in the UK, I’ll be looking forward to testing it out. It is the country slated to receive the feature next.

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