Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Dan Bracaglia

I let the Longevity Mirror scan my face at CES 2026 — and it predicted my long-term health outlook in just 30 seconds

A close-up demo of the Nuraxlogix Longevity Mirror at CES 2026.

At-home preventative healthcare was a hot topic at CES 2026. In addition to the Withings BodyScan 2 smart scale that can tell your approximate heart, metabolic, and cellular health age, I also tried out the Nuraxlogix Longevity Mirror, which similarly seeks to live in your bathroom and help you keep tabs on the aging process.

While the Body Scan 2 involves standing on the scale and gripping hand sensors for 90 seconds, the Longevity Mirror completes its measurements via a 30-second ‘selfie’ video. From it, the device offers loads of insights into your long-term health outlook.

I tried the Longevity Mirror

Here’s everything you need to know about the Nuralugix Longevity Mirror, based on my CES 2026 show floor demo.

Nuralogix Longevity Mirror: Price and availability

(Image credit: NuraLogix)

The Nuralogix Longevity Mirror is predicted to start shipping in early 2026 for $899. In addition to that cost, the Mirror also comes with an annual subscription cost of $99, though it’s waived for the first year.

Intended for use by the whole family, you can save up to six user profiles per Longevity Mirror.

Nuralogix Longevity Mirror: Loads of longevity insights in just 30 seconds

(Image credit: Dan Bracaglia/Tom's Guide)

In just 30 seconds, using Nuralogix’s patented transdermal optical imaging process to observe blood flow patterns just beneath a user’s facial skin, the Longavity Mirror provides insights into your 'cardiovascular resilience, metabolic balance, stress and recovery, physiological age, and lifestyle-linked risks.'

To generate these insights, all of the data from the scan gets processed through Nuralogix’s AI engine. Once complete, the star of the show is the overall longevity score — on a scale from one to 100 — that’s meant to clue you in to how you might age over the next twenty years.

This score is further broken down into all sorts of individual categories with their own scores, including a general health score, metabolic health score, heart health index score, physiological age score, and mental health index score.

Like the Withings Body Scan 2, the Longevity Mirror also offers details on how well you’re aging versus the average person your age. From my scan, the Longevity Mirror noted a facial skin age akin to a 39-year-old, a little over a year older than my actual age (I blame the Vegas sun). My physiological age, or the average age of my vital organs, meanwhile, came in at 42-years-old (again, I blame Vegas).

The Longevity Mirror can also tell you your potential risk for chronic conditions based on the 30-second scan, including Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and fatty liver.

The Longevity Mirror can additionally tell you your potential risk for chronic conditions based on the 30-second scan, including Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and fatty liver. This, of course, is not a diagnosis but more a way to keep an eye on long-term trends and seek further medical assessment if troubling signs prevail.

Other insights include your average pulse, heart workout, vascular capacity, and warnings for irregular heartbeats. But that’s not all! The Longevity Mirror also scores your sleep quality, anxiety levels, and overall mental stress levels using a combination of heart rate variability and other metrics.

As if that wasn’t enough, Nuralogix has submitted three of the core Longevity Mirror measurements for approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. If approved, this would mean they are as accurate and reliable as an actual medical device. The measurements include pulse rate, breath rate, and blood pressure.

Nuralogix Longevity Mirror: Outlook

(Image credit: Dan Bracaglia/Tom's Guide)

The Nuralogix Longevity Mirror could very well prove to be the smart mirror of the future. In addition to all of the health benefits, it also doubles as, you guessed it, a plain old mirror with LED strip lights built into the side.

Of course, $900 it a lot to spend on a bathroom mirror, and no one likes an annual subscription-free. However, the benefits of using this device daily, assuming the measurements are indeed mostly accurate, could pay dividends down the road when it comes to your long-term health.

Stay tuned, as we hope to get a Longevity Mirror in for further testing once review units become available.

Follow Tom's Guide on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds.

More from Tom's Guide

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.