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Today, Whoop furthered its quest to become a comprehensive, one-stop health platform. Since last fall, Whoop members have had access to the Advanced Labs blood testing service—now, the performance wearable company is rolling out “Specialized Panels,” a new line of targeted blood tests that let users drill down into even more insights about their body.

How Whoop’s “Specialized Panels” work

To understand the significance of today’s Specialized Panels announcement, a little backstory helps. Last September, Whoop launched Advanced Labs, an add-on service that combined in-person blood draws—powered by Quest Diagnostics—with the company’s existing 24/7 wearable data. The original Advanced Labs panel tests 65 biomarkers, delivers a clinician-reviewed report, and generates an action plan integrated directly into the app.

Whoop isn’t the first wearable company to head in this direction. For instance, Ultrahuman, the maker of the Ring AIR smart ring, launched its Blood Vision feature last year. Still, expanding into blood tests is pretty notable for a wearable that built its reputation on heart rate variability and sleep tracking.

Today, Specialized Panels are the next evolution. For a one-time fee of $299, users can get a blood draw through Quest Diagnostics covering between 75 and 89 biomarkers, spread across one of five panels: heart health, performance, metabolic function, women’s health, and men’s health. Unlike the subscription-based Comprehensive Panel that came before, these are standalone offerings that members can purchase individually, whether or not they subscribe to Advanced Labs.

Whoop describes this as a move “from broad, comprehensive testing toward more focused, goal-based insights.” In theory, you can zero in on what actually concerns you—say, your cardiovascular risk markers if you’re a runner, or hormonal health if you’re a woman navigating perimenopause.

The mechanics look straightforward enough. Whoop members select a panel through the Whoop app, schedule a blood draw at a Quest Diagnostics location, and wait for results to sync back into the app automatically. From there, Whoop’s AI takes over, “delivering clinician-reviewed insights” that explain where you stand and how you can actively improve each metric over time, integrating the results with the continuous data on sleep, recovery, training, and whatever else you were already tracking with Whoop.

What do you think so far?

The biggest part of Whoop’s pitch here is the word “specialized.” For instance, the women’s health panel, which Whoop previewed in March, shows how targeted these tests can get. It includes 11 blood biomarkers covering cycle regulation and hormonal transitions, among them Anti-Müllerian Hormone, Progesterone, Prolactin, thyroid markers, and several nutrient indicators. Whoop says measuring these will help users understand perimenopause, thyroid function, nutrient sufficiency, and bone metabolic resilience when paired with data on activity, sleep, and recovery. That’s a lot of ground for a single panel—and, frankly, a lot to unpack without a doctor in the room.

What to keep in mind

At $299 a pop—on top of Whoop’s membership fee, which can run up to $359 per year—these panels are a real expense. And while Whoop positions these tests as empowering, a review like this is not the same as a conversation with your doctor, and “actionable insights” delivered by an AI do not come with the contextual nuance of an actual doctor visit.

And of course, we all have to ask: What happens to your blood data? Whoop says that the company uses end-to-end encryption, strict access controls, and does not train its AI on personally identifiable data. That’s potentially reassuring, but Whoop isn’t processing your blood itself. Quest Diagnostics handles the actual draws, and Quest’s own privacy policy notes that personal health information—including health data and genetic information—can be shared with third parties for operational, analytics, marketing, and promotional purposes. As always, consider the risks before handing over your sensitive health data. The line between a fitness tracker and a quasi-medical device keeps moving, and Whoop is just one of many companies that keeps pushing it.