How Much Does Whoop Advanced Labs Cost?
Published on | Prices Last Reviewed for Freshness: November 2025
Written by Alec Pow - Economic & Pricing Investigator | Medical Review by Sarah Nguyen, MD
Educational content; not medical advice. Prices are typical estimates and may exclude insurance benefits; confirm with a licensed clinician and your insurer.
WHOOP Advanced Labs sits inside the WHOOP ecosystem as an optional labs add-on that pairs 65 blood biomarkers with your 24/7 sensor stream and a clinician-reviewed plan, with blood draws handled at Quest locations nationwide. It is for members who want more than HRV and sleep staging, namely a formal health panel that links to recovery and training insights in the app.
Advanced Labs is offered in bundles tied to yearly frequency. As of October 2025, pricing is $199 for one annual test, $349 for two, $599 for four, and $899 for six, with the lowest effective per-test price at $150 on the four and six test packs. Results typically land in 7 to 10 business days in the app, and members can upload past lab results at no extra charge to build trends.
You still need a WHOOP membership. Current tiers run roughly $199 per year for One, $239 for Peak, and $359 for Life, which aligns with a recent Wired review of the plan lineup. The membership includes the device and software features by tier, then Advanced Labs adds the Quest-draw panel and in-app report.
WHOOP announced broader access for Advanced Labs on September 30, 2025, as reported by TechCrunch and detailed on the WHOOP Press Center, with additional coverage from TechBuzz. It is rolling out in waves and is limited to the United States, excluding a handful of states, with plans to expand.
Article Insights
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- Advanced Labs is an add-on, not included, priced at $199, $349, $599, or $899 per year for 1, 2, 4, or 6 tests.
- Membership runs roughly $199–$359 per year depending on tier, which aligns with recent reviews.
- Draws occur at Quest sites, so there is no kit shipping line item.
- InsideTracker’s member price for the Ultimate panel is $340, a useful benchmark (InsideTracker Ultimate (member)).
- Many FSAs and HSAs can reimburse qualified lab fees, subject to plan rules (IRS Publication 969).
- Uploading past labs is free for members who have access, which can trim retest spending.
How Much Does Whoop Advanced Labs Cost?
The costs for Whoop Advanced Labs start from $199 up to $899 per year.
Think of the bill in two layers, the base membership plus the labs pricing plan. Membership unlocks the device and app features, including sleep, strain, HRV trends, Healthspan metrics, and AI coaching. The labs plan then adds clinical testing, biomarker analysis, and a clinician-reviewed report integrated into the app, a structure also outlined in The Verge’s review.
Headline Advanced Labs prices are simple. $199 covers one test per year, $349 covers two, $599 covers four, and $899 covers six, with per-test math of $199, $175, $150, and $150, respectively. There is no at-home kit shipping since draws occur at Quest sites, which also means no separate shipping fees for most users.
Membership pricing sits around $199 to $359 per year depending on tier, and several reviews detail the current structure and what features each tier gates. If you buy the Peak or Life hardware bundle with a free trial, the terms describe when the yearly membership kicks in if you keep the device.
WHOOP Advanced Labs plans at a glance
| Tests per year | Billed annually | Effective per-test | Approx. monthly equivalent |
| 1 | $199 | $199 | $16.58 |
| 2 | $349 | $175 | $29.08 |
| 4 | $599 | $150 | $49.92 |
| 6 | $899 | $150 | $74.92 |
These figures align with the launch coverage from TechCrunch.
The Advanced Labs service enhances the WHOOP wearable experience, linking blood biomarker results with real-time data on activity, sleep, and recovery. The WHOOP device membership itself is separate, costing between $200 and $350 annually depending on the model and features. By combining wearable data with laboratory results, WHOOP provides users with tailored health guidance and early detection of potential risks. The service is currently available in most US states, excluding a few, with tests facilitated through Quest Diagnostics, according to TechBuzz.
WHOOP Advanced Labs also lets eligible members upload prior blood test results at no additional cost and compare these alongside continuous monitoring data. The service is intended for adults 18 and older who are not pregnant at the time of testing, with privacy and data security emphasized by both PCMag and the WHOOP blog.
Real-Life Cost Examples
Entry add-on for an existing member. A WHOOP One subscriber pays $199 for the annual membership, then adds $199 for a single Advanced Labs panel for the year, bringing the health tracking total to $398 before taxes. The draw is done at a Quest site and populates results in app with a clinician summary.
Annual plan with two panels. A Peak member at $239 per year adds the two-test bundle for $349, retesting at roughly six months. The combined yearly outlay is $588 plus any local taxes, with no kit shipping because collection is in person at Quest. Results typically arrive within 7 to 10 business days.
Coach or club buying multiple tests. You would not buy Advanced Labs once for many athletes under one account, but you can benchmark pricing against alternatives that sell multi-packs. InsideTracker sells a membership for $149 per year and Ultimate tests for $340 each for members (InsideTracker member pricing).
Heavy user stacking quarterly labs. A Life member at $359 per year adds the four-test pack at $599, landing at $958 for a full year of WHOOP with quarterly labs, a cadence mirrored in TechCrunch’s coverage.
Cost Breakdown
Membership. WHOOP’s plan tiers are widely reviewed at $199, $239, and $359 per year for One, Peak, and Life—context expanded in The Verge.
Advanced Labs add-on. The add-on is priced by annual cadence, from $199 for one panel up to $899 for six, with per-test costs falling at higher frequency. WHOOP lists 65 biomarkers, a clinician-reviewed report, and clear timing for results, and notes that uploads of past labs are free for members.
Logistics and lab fees. WHOOP uses Quest for draws at 2,000+ sites, which simplifies shipping and handling since there is no home kit to mail. Comparable direct-to-lab pricing at Quest Health shows comprehensive profiles around $335 to $385, framing how WHOOP’s bundle sits versus a mix-and-match panel.
Optional services. Some competitors charge for mobile phlebotomy or concierge draws, and InsideTracker Ultimate notes extra fees for mobile blood draws and add-ons like InnerAge.
Factors Influencing the Cost
Panel scope and tier choice matter most. If you plan to retest quarterly, the $599 four-test pack brings the per-test price down to $150, while the single test is $199, so cadence sets the effective monthly spend.
Location and taxes can affect the final bill, and WHOOP currently restricts Advanced Labs availability to the United States with several excluded states, though you can test in a neighboring state. Choosing a higher membership tier also changes total spend if you want the MG hardware or ECG features tied to Life.
Bundling and promos shape value too—see A Year of InsideTracker for how annual commitments can reduce per-panel charges.
Alternative Products or Services
If you want a biomarker panel without tying it to WHOOP, InsideTracker sells a $149 annual platform and $340 Ultimate tests for members, with optional mobile draws and add-ons like biological age; their membership FAQ covers details.
Direct-to-lab options fit tighter budgets. Labcorp OnDemand lists a Men’s Health Test at $219, and Quest Health shows comprehensive profiles in the $335–$385 range, which you can pair with WHOOP’s free past-labs upload if you only need integration, not the WHOOP-ordered draw and report.
Thorne’s at-home tests span from double-digit vitamins to an Advanced Health Panel around $830 that attempts to mimic broad clinic panels—useful as a benchmark when weighing depth versus price.
Ways to Spend Less
Buy the right cadence. If you only need a baseline and a six-month follow-up, the two-test bundle at $349 is cheaper than buying a single test twice, and it locks in the $175 per-test rate for the year.
Use free uploads when you can. WHOOP lets eligible members upload past lab reports at no additional charge, which means you can run a Quest or Labcorp panel out of pocket and still centralize your trendlines with your sleep and strain metrics in the app.
Compare against à la carte labs. Labcorp’s comprehensive screen at $169–$219 and Quest Health’s comprehensive profiles near $335–$385 show how a one-off panel stacks up, especially if you do not need the WHOOP report layer for every retest.
Time purchases around promos on competitors. InsideTracker publicly advertises member pricing and occasional bundles, which can lower effective per-test costs for athletes who prefer a quarterly schedule with nutrition-heavy reports.
Expert Insights & Tips
Coaches and dietitians often prioritize a core set of markers that move decisions, such as ApoB, LDL-C, HbA1c, ferritin, TSH, and hs-CRP, then retest on a set rhythm to confirm changes after interventions in training, sleep, or fueling. WHOOP’s biomarker list covers each of these.
Do not retest faster than your protocols can work. Most cardio-metabolic markers shift over months, not weeks, so a semiannual or quarterly cadence aligns with how long it takes targeted behaviors to register—matching the design of the two- and four-test bundles.
If you want more coaching-style detail, InsideTracker’s member write-ups and mobile draw add-on illustrate how some services price optional convenience and analysis, which can be useful if you prefer a nutrition-first action plan layered on top of raw lab values (see the InsideTracker membership FAQ).
Total Costs
A realistic one-year scenario looks like this: WHOOP Peak at $239 plus the two-test Advanced Labs bundle at $349 totals $588, with no shipping charges for draws at Quest and typical turnaround within 7 to 10 business days.
Accessories are optional. Power packs and bands are extras, and many retailers stock them if you want spares, though the membership includes the core device and charger; the WHOOP Warranty Policy covers approved failures during active membership.
Hidden & Unexpected Costs
Missed appointments or redraws can create friction. While WHOOP handles ordering and Quest handles collection, failed samples can add time and travel, and late changes to lab appointments may incur local fees set by the draw site. WHOOP notes results timing and the Quest workflow on its product page.
Refund windows for memberships are tight. The WHOOP terms of use describe a 30-day return policy for the device and trial returns and state that fees are typically non-refundable outside the initial window, which matters if you plan to test the service before committing to a full year.
App store billing works differently than direct. If you subscribe through Apple, Apple billing rules govern price-change notices and refund requests, which can complicate cancellations compared with buying direct on WHOOP’s site.
Warranty, Support & Insurance Costs
The membership includes a warranty on the device while you remain active, with support handling troubleshooting and replacements when eligible. WHOOP says Advanced Labs may be eligible for HSA or FSA reimbursement—save receipts and check your plan rules, using IRS Publication 969 as a guide.
Financing & Payment Options
WHOOP bills memberships annually by tier, and the Advanced Labs plans are billed annually as well, which simplifies the monthly equivalent but concentrates cash flow around renewal dates. If you trial hardware, the terms outline when the annual charges begin.
InsideTracker offers a modular approach that can be paid as one-off tests or as a membership plus discounted panels, and the store pages disclose optional charges for mobile phlebotomy—useful if you value in-home draws more than clinic visits.
Quest Health and Labcorp OnDemand both take card payments at the time of order for à la carte panels, which can be paired with WHOOP’s free uploads to keep trends in one place without buying the Advanced Labs add-on every time you test.
Seasonal & Market-Timing Factors
WHOOP and competitors often make pricing news around big launches or seasonal promotions like New Year and Black Friday; TechCrunch’s coverage shows how new features and releases can coincide with early-access rollouts.
If you periodize training across a competitive year, aim labs at pre-season and mid-cycle checkpoints, which maps neatly to the two-test plan, and save higher-frequency testing for blocks where you will change sleep, nutrition, or volume in ways that should move biomarkers.
Answers to Common Questions
Is Advanced Labs included in the base cost?
Advanced Labs is not included; it is an add-on billed annually on top of your membership, with one, two, four, or six tests per year.
What does a typical test panel cost in the United States?
WHOOP lists $199 for a single annual test and as low as $150 per test on the four or six test bundles, billed at $599 and $899 per year.
Do I need the annual plan to access labs?
You need an active WHOOP membership; reviewers outline the One, Peak, and Life tiers and their annual prices.
How long do results take and are retests discounted?
Results arrive in 7 to 10 business days, and per-test pricing drops to $175 on two tests and $150 on four or six.
Can I use HSA or FSA funds to pay?
WHOOP notes potential eligibility, and IRS guidance explains how HSA and FSA reimbursements cover qualified medical expenses—keep documentation and verify with your plan.

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