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The Longevity Biomarkers That Actually Matter

Longevity6 min read Jul 4, 2026Updated Jul 3, 2026
Ranked bars showing the predictive signal of key longevity biomarkers, led by VO2 max and strength.

We live in the golden age of measuring yourself, which has quietly become the golden age of drowning in numbers. Rings, patches, panels, and apps will happily hand you hundreds of data points, most of which change nothing about what you should do tomorrow. The skill now isn't collecting metrics — it's knowing the small handful that actually predict how well and how long you'll live, and ignoring the rest with a clear conscience.

More data isn't more insight

A biomarker is only worth your attention if it's predictive (it tracks something that matters), actionable (you can change it), and reliable (it's not mostly noise). A surprising amount of what gets marketed to the health-conscious fails at least one of those tests — it's precise, expensive, and useless for deciding anything. So rather than a longer list, what follows is a shorter one, sorted by how much signal you get for the effort. The goal is to measure enough to correct your assumptions, and then stop — to use numbers to check the story you tell yourself, not to replace living inside your own body.

Tier 1: the high-signal basics you can track

The most predictive markers are, happily, among the most accessible — and several are things you can track yourself:

  • VO₂ max / cardiorespiratory fitness — one of the strongest predictors of long-term health there is. If you track one thing, track this.
  • Strength — grip strength and overall muscle are robust markers of healthy aging.
  • Resting heart rate and HRV — cheap daily windows onto fitness and recovery.
  • Blood pressure — a foundational number; a cheap home cuff is one of the best-value health tools you can own.
  • Waist and body composition — waist circumference tells you more about metabolic risk than weight alone.
  • Sleep — duration and consistency, tracked as a trend.

Measure what moves the needle

Three tiers of biomarkers

Tier 1 · Track yourself, mostly free
VO₂ max / fitness, strength (incl. grip), resting heart rate, HRV, blood pressure, waist, and sleep trends. The highest signal for the least cost — and the ones a wearable and a home cuff already give you.
Tier 2 · Ask your doctor for these
Standard bloodwork: a lipid panel (ideally including ApoB), fasting glucose and HbA1c, and an inflammation marker (hs-CRP). Cheap, evidence-based, and interpreted properly by a clinician — not a consumer app.
Tier 3 · Interesting, optional, often oversold
Continuous glucose monitors for healthy people, "biological age" tests, and elaborate microbiome or genetic panels. Occasionally illuminating, frequently premature or noisy — fine to explore, unwise to build your life around.
Tap each tier. Spend your attention top-down: master Tier 1, get Tier 2 checked periodically, and treat Tier 3 as curiosity rather than obligation.

Tier 2: bloodwork worth knowing (with your doctor)

Beyond what a wearable sees, a small set of standard blood tests carries a lot of signal — and these belong in a conversation with a clinician, not a self-diagnosis app. A lipid panel, ideally including ApoB (a count of the atherogenic particles that lipid science increasingly emphasises), tells you about cardiovascular risk. Fasting glucose and HbA1c describe how you're handling blood sugar over time. An inflammation marker such as hs-CRP adds another dimension. None of these is something to interpret alone or panic over; they're periodic checks that let you and a doctor catch drift early and act on it. That's the whole value — early, actionable, professionally interpreted.

Tier 3: interesting, optional, oversold

Then there's the frontier the marketing loves: "biological age" clocks, consumer microbiome kits, continuous glucose monitors for the metabolically healthy, sprawling genetic panels. Some of this is genuinely fascinating and a little of it will mature into everyday tools. But today, much of it is either not reliable enough to act on, or measures normal variation you'll mistake for a problem. There's no harm in curiosity if you can hold the results lightly. The harm comes when a shaky Tier 3 number overrides the boring Tier 1 fundamentals that actually determine your trajectory.

The measuring-instead-of-doing trap

There's a failure mode I've watched claim a lot of smart, driven people: measurement becomes a substitute for action. It feels productive — you buy the ring, order the panel, build the spreadsheet — and none of it changes a single habit. Tracking your VO₂ max is not the same as raising it; the number is a mirror, not a workout. If you're honest, most people already know the two or three things that would move their Tier 1 markers most, and they aren't measurement problems — they're a walk after dinner, a strength session, an earlier bedtime. Measure enough to point yourself in the right direction, then spend the bulk of your energy on the doing. The dashboard is there to serve the life, not the other way around.

How to actually use them

Pick a few Tier 1 markers and watch their trends, not their daily wobble — the same discipline that makes HRV useful. Get Tier 2 bloodwork periodically with your doctor. Let curiosity, not anxiety, govern Tier 3. And remember what the numbers are for: they're a rear-view mirror on habits, a way to catch drift and to see whether a change is working — not a scoreboard for your worth, and not a replacement for how you actually feel and function. The Agen Band and app exist to make the Tier 1 trends effortless so you can spend your attention on acting, not tracking.

The bottom line

The biomarkers that matter are fewer than the market implies: cardiorespiratory fitness, strength, resting heart rate and HRV, blood pressure, waist, and sleep you can track yourself; a handful of blood tests (lipids/ApoB, glucose/HbA1c, hs-CRP) to review with a doctor; and a frontier tier best treated as optional. Watch trends, act on the fundamentals, and don't let precise noise crowd out the signal. This is the measurement half of the story — the doing half comes together in building a longevity protocol. Educational only, not medical advice.