Home/ Reviews/ InsideTracker
At-home test · Review

InsideTracker, reviewed.

Heme's editorial verdict on the AI-powered biomarker platform that pioneered the action-plan output layer. We scored InsideTracker on the same seven criteria — here's where it earns its 8.1, where it loses points, and which woman it actually fits.

Affiliate disclosure. Heme has an affiliate relationship with InsideTracker. Editorial rankings are never paid placement. Read our methodology.
Heme Score
8.1/10
Best for optimization
Price$189–$589
FormatSingle or repeat purchase
SampleVenous, mobile phlebotomy
Clinician layerAI + nutrition plan
AvailableAll 50 U.S. states

The best at-home test for the woman who wants a feedback loop, not a snapshot.

InsideTracker is the platform that built the action-plan output layer the rest of the at-home category has been quietly imitating ever since. The promise: take the panel, get an AI-derived set of nutrition, supplement and lifestyle recommendations, retest in 3–6 months, watch the numbers move.

For the woman already deep into wellness — who tracks sleep, who has opinions about creatine, who's comfortable being her own primary investigator — InsideTracker is the platform that meets her where she is. The 8.1 reflects strong execution on the action layer, deductions for cost and for the optimization framing that can over-promise.

Best for: women already deep into wellness who want measurable feedback loops on supplements, training and nutrition — and who'll actually retest in 90 days to see what changed.
Coverage8
Lab9
Reporting9
Clinician7
Sample9
Price7
Claims8

What we tested.

We ran InsideTracker's Ultimate Plan ($349, 48 biomarkers) in March 2026. Sample collection was the differentiator — InsideTracker partners with mobile phlebotomy networks (Getlabs, Sprinter Health), so a vetted phlebotomist drove to our kitchen and drew blood at 7:42am on a Tuesday. The whole visit took eighteen minutes. No drive to a patient service centre, no waiting room, no morning-fasted Quest queue.

Results landed in the InsideTracker dashboard 11 days later. The first view is the InnerAge calculation — an algorithm-derived number that compresses a handful of markers into a "biological age" figure. The marketing leans hard on this; the editorial value is more modest than the marketing implies. (More on that in the case-against section.)

The dashboard layer is where the brand earns its score. Each marker is plotted on its own page with reference ranges, an "optimised" range narrower than reference (this is editorial framing, not a clinical definition), and an "interventions" panel suggesting specific foods, supplements or training adjustments that may move the number. We logged it carefully: 73% of the interventions were food suggestions, 18% supplement, 9% training or sleep. The food suggestions read as researched. The supplement suggestions read as more commercially adjacent.

"InsideTracker is the platform that built the action-plan output layer the rest of the at-home category has been quietly imitating."

Where InsideTracker genuinely shines.

Where it loses points.

Who it's best for.

Who it's not for.

Price and what's included.

InsideTracker uses a tiered pricing model. The Essentials panel is the entry point; Ultimate is the middle tier most readers will land on; Pro and longevity options are the upper tier. What's actually inside each tier (subject to change):

InsideTracker tiers

Essentials — 43 biomarkers · $189
Ultimate — 48 biomarkers · $349
Pro — 100+ biomarkers · $589
Includes (all tiers) — dashboard, app, recommendation engine
Mobile phlebotomy — included in major U.S. metros
InnerAge — included in Ultimate and above
Wearable integrations — Whoop, Oura, Garmin, Fitbit, Apple Health
Retest reminders — built into the platform

For markers most relevant to women: Ultimate covers ferritin, vitamin D, vitamin B12, TSH, free T3, free T4, full lipid panel, HbA1c, hs-CRP, magnesium, cortisol, oestradiol and testosterone. Pro adds full hormone panel, advanced lipoproteins, additional inflammation markers and a fuller micronutrient panel.

How it compares to Function Health.

The natural comparison for InsideTracker at the upper tier is Function Health's annual subscription. Both target the same woman; both promise comprehensive insight. The structural difference is the model — InsideTracker is per-panel, Function is subscription with two annual draws.

ServiceMarkersModelClinicianAnnual costHeme Score
Function Health 100+ Subscription (2 draws/yr) MD review $499 9.4

The honest read: Function wins on marker count and the included physician layer at the same approximate price point. InsideTracker wins on the action-plan output layer and mobile phlebotomy convenience. For the woman whose primary value is feedback loops on interventions, InsideTracker is the right pick. For the woman whose primary value is comprehensive medical-grade review, Function is. See the broader comparison of at-home tests for women and the at-home vs traditional lab breakdown.

The case against.

Three honest critiques.

The "optimised range" framing creates an anchoring effect. InsideTracker shows you a clinical reference range and an "optimised" range that's narrower. The implication: aim for optimised, not just normal. For a handful of markers (vitamin D, ferritin, hs-CRP) this is well-supported in the literature. For others, the "optimised" range is editorial — defensible, but not the consensus medical position. Women who treat it as gospel may chase numbers that aren't worth chasing.

The InnerAge metric is more directional than absolute. InsideTracker's InnerAge can read as a definitive biological age. It's an algorithm-derived composite of selected markers. Useful for tracking whether your number is moving in the right direction over time. Less useful as a literal "you are 38 but biologically 42" claim.

The supplement recommendations are commercially adjacent. InsideTracker has affiliate relationships with supplement brands. The platform is transparent about this. But a supplement recommendation that drives revenue is a different thing from a clinical recommendation, and the dashboard tone can blur the two.

Should you actually buy it?

For the woman who's already running a wellness practice and wants a feedback loop on whether it's working — yes, InsideTracker is the best dedicated tool. The 90-day retest cycle, the action layer, the wearable integration: these all earn their place. For the woman who wants a single comprehensive look without a self-directed optimisation project attached, Function Health or LetsGetChecked are a cleaner fit.

The honest framing: don't buy InsideTracker if you won't retest. The single-panel value is reasonable but not exceptional. The value compounds when you run it twice or three times and see what moved.

Sources reviewed

Brand-reviewed materials, InsideTracker public methodology pages, sample kit and physical results dashboard (Heme review purchase, March 2026), CLIA/CAP accreditation public registry, published research from the InsideTracker scientific team on biomarker-driven interventions. Pricing reflects publicly listed figures as of May 2026 and may change without notice.

Important

Educational only. Not medical advice. Heme is an editorial publication. Test results and the information on this page are educational and may inform a conversation with a qualified healthcare provider — they are not a diagnosis or a treatment recommendation. Pricing reflects publicly listed 2026 figures and can change without notice.