The blood testing platform is also set to launch in the UK and Australia
Ultrahuman has expanded its ‘Blood Vision’ platform to include a free analysis tool and a more accessible $99 blood test, while also announcing a major global rollout for its premium service.
The update arrives just as integrated clinical blood tests in wearable tech platforms are gaining momentum, amid the high-profile US launches of Whoop’s Advanced Labs and Oura’s Health Panels.
While Ultrahuman has offered its premium Blood Vision service in the US since July, this new multi-tiered offering and global expansion mark a major escalation.
The company’s lineup is now spearheaded by ‘Vision Cloud’, a powerful and free service that allows anyone—even non-Ultrahuman users—to upload existing bloodwork from any provider and receive AI-driven insights, trend analysis, and a Blood Age score.
For those who want to get tested, Ultrahuman has also introduced Blood Vision Essentials, a $99 test that covers over 60 key biomarkers, designed as an easy entry point into preventive health. This sits below its premium Blood Vision Annual Plan ($499), which is now expanding beyond the US and India to the UK, Australia, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia.
The core of the platform remains ‘UltraTrace’, which connects the dots between your blood chemistry and your daily lifestyle data from the Ultrahuman Ring Air.
The idea here, as the company highlights in its case studies, is to create a more powerful feedback loop. For example, one blood test uncovered hidden metabolic risks, which the smart ring then helped manage and monitor effectively.
And in another case, the Ring Air’s data flagged a subtle change in resting heart rate, prompting a blood test that diagnosed a previously unknown medical condition.
The Wareable take
This global expansion comes at a crucial time for Ultrahuman. While it’s competing aggressively on features and accessibility, it does so from a different position than its larger rivals, Whoop and Oura, who boast massive user bases in the US.
With its Ring Air hardware currently facing a US import ban following its patent infringement case with Oura, establishing and growing its advanced health services in other key markets, such as the UK, is a strategically vital move for the company.
With its unique free offering and its speedy global rollout, Ultrahuman is making a bold bet that the new war for a 360-degree view of health will be fought on a worldwide scale. Time will tell if it can compete.



