New health platform converts labs, wearables and records into personalized plans designed to close the gap between insight and action.
Health tech company Hundred Health has officially launched its integrated health platform and mobile app, positioning itself at the intersection of preventive care, clinical rigor and consumer health technology.Â
The company says it is the first to bring together a user’s complete health history, advanced lab testing, wearable data and lifestyle inputs into a structured, evidence-based 100-day action plan aimed at producing measurable health gains.
The launch comes as investors and operators across health tech grapple with a persistent problem: while data collection has exploded, outcomes have not followed at the same pace. Most platforms deliver dashboards and metrics, but few translate those numbers into clear, sustained behavior change. Hundred Health is betting that execution is the missing layer.
For decades, healthcare has operated mainly on a reactive model, intervening only after symptoms appear. Even newer longevity and wellness platforms often stop at risk scoring or insight generation. According to Hundred, that leaves individuals informed but directionless.

“I founded Hundred after discovering that my body was aging faster than expected. That wake-up call sent me down a path of advanced testing, elite medical guidance and deep research to better understand how insights, behavior, and health span actually connect,” said Tyler Smith, Founder and CEO of Hundred.Â
“Through all of it, one thing became obvious: even though we have access to more data than ever before, most people – myself included – were still running blind,” he emphasized.
Smith added that there’s a huge difference between knowing your numbers and knowing how to act on them.
Hundred’s response is a system built around 100-day protocols, long enough to drive physiological change, short enough to feel achievable. Each cycle is designed to compound over time, allowing members to make incremental adjustments that stick.

At the core of the platform is deep integration. Hundred connects with more than 300 electronic medical record systems, pulling in historical labs, prescriptions, diagnoses and procedures. That data is combined with 160-plus advanced lab tests conducted annually, lifestyle assessments and real-time inputs from popular wearables such as Apple Fitness, Oura and WHOOP.
The result is a consolidated health baseline that reflects how someone actually lives, not just what shows up during an annual checkup. Instead of presenting raw biomarkers in isolation, the platform contextualizes them within daily habits, sleep patterns and movement [1].
Hundred emphasizes that all recommendations are grounded in current scientific research and reviewed by experienced clinicians. This layer of clinical oversight is intended to separate the platform from consumer wellness products that rely heavily on trend-driven advice.
Still, the company is careful not to overwhelm users. Rather than flooding members with charts and reference ranges, Hundred distills insights into simple, lifestyle-ready steps. Progress is tracked continually within the app.

“Your health shouldn’t be a fragmented puzzle of information that you only try to solve once something has gone wrong,” said Sonny Mayugba, Chief Commercial Officer at Hundred.Â
“Most people simply want to feel good and maintain a level of well-being that allows them to live the life they want, with the people they love, for as long as possible. Hundred is making that possible,” he added.
Importantly, Hundred positions itself as a bridge between doctor visits, not a substitute for medical care. By organizing data and clarifying priorities, the platform aims to help members arrive at appointments better informed and more engaged in shared decision-making.
Each 100-day protocol includes guidance across nutrition, exercise and supplementation. Members also receive access to vetted, third-party tested supplements from established brands such as Thorne and Momentous, with discounts of up to 20% off retail pricing. Recommendations focus on a short list of supplements, with clear instructions on timing and dosage.

Priced at $499 annually, Hundred includes two rounds of advanced lab testing per year, either at one of 5,000 partner facilities or via in-home phlebotomy for an added fee. The company argues this level of personalization was previously accessible only through concierge medicine or elite performance clinics.
By packaging clinical depth, behavioral structure and digital delivery into a single subscription, Hundred is targeting a growing market of consumers willing to invest in prevention and investors watching for platforms that can translate longevity science into scalable models.
“Historically, access to meaningful, connected care was reserved for a few,” Mayugba said. “We’re changing that.”
