Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Women’s health is finally getting the attention it deserves. At CES 2026, our team Spotted several devices Designed for people who menstruate, menopause and perimenopause. Recently, the Oura Ring was also launched Its own artificial intelligence model Created to answer women’s health questions.
Now, human performance company Whoop, the inventor of the displays Whoop 5.0 Wristband (CNET’s favorite Performance fitness tracker), announced two new initiatives for women, increasing their share of company membership by 150% year-on-year. Along with adding an in-app update to hormonal symptom insights and predictions, Whoop has launched a blood biomarker panel specializing in women’s health.
“What makes this powerful is not just a single data point, but how the system is put together,” Emily Capodilupo, senior vice president of research, algorithms and data at Whoop, said in a press release. “Women don’t experience their physiology in silos. Hormones affect sleep, sleep affects recovery, and recovery shapes the training response.”
Exclusively for Whoop wearable users, by combining blood test results with data collected by wearables (sleep, skin temperature, stress, recovery, heart rate and more), Whoop aims to show not just a snapshot of a woman’s health but the entire system.
Whoop already has menstrual cycle insights and pregnancy insights in its app, but the Hormonal Symptom Insights and Predictions update expands these features.
Using data collected using the wearable, such as skin temperature, resting heart rate, and heart rate variability, along with cycle histories and symptoms it records, this update will show Whoop members who menstruate a personalized model of their cycle that will adjust based on their health metrics and patterns over time.
Whoop’s new update allows members to see a calendar view of their expected menstrual cycle.
Specifically, members will be able to see a date window for their next menstrual cycle, information about symptom patterns to predict when they are most likely to occur, and trends in period length, cycle length and variation. This is intended to give them the ability to adjust their routines based on what is expected.
This feature will now also work with Whoop’s Advanced Labs blood panel, which tests 65 biomarkers that a doctor reviews to create a health improvement plan. By combining blood test results with data collected by the wearable device, Whoop members can see if their biomarker ranges are “ideal,” “adequate,” or “out of range” based on where they are in their cycle.
With these expanded insights and predictions, members can better detect irregularities, leading to important and informed conversations with their doctors.
Launching in April in the U.S. only, the Women’s Health Specialty Panels are based on advanced laboratories and focus on 11 biomarkers that provide insight into a woman’s hormones, hormonal transitions such as perimenopause, the menstrual cycle, metabolic bone elasticity, nutrient adequacy, and thyroid function.
The 11 blood biomarkers are:
With Whoop’s new Women’s Health blood test, members can see if their vital signs are ideal, adequate or out of range.
When it is released in April, this panel can be purchased through the Whoop app, where you can also schedule a blood test at the Quest Diagnostics website. It will cost $299, separate from Advanced Labs’ base board, which is priced as follows:
Although it is not covered by health insurance, Advanced Labs is HSA- and FSA-eligible. However, you will need to make sure your HSA or FSA provider covers it before purchasing.
Note that advanced tests can only be used by participants who are 18 years of age or older and are not pregnant. Testing is not available in Arizona, Hawaii, Wyoming, North Dakota, or South Dakota, but testing can be done out of state.
As of now, there are three Whoop memberships:
one: Whoop One membership normally costs $199 per year, but is currently discounted to $149. It comes with Whoop 4.0 with up to five days of battery life, and insights into sleep, stress, and recovery; personal training; Women’s hormonal insights. And both heart rate and VO2 max zones.
summit: With the peak of $239 per year, you get the Whoop 5.0 with at least 14 days of battery life, instead of the 4.0. You also get everything included in the One membership, plus insights into health and aging, a real-time stress monitor, and a health monitor with health alerts.
life: At $359 per year, Life offers the Whoop MG (which also has at least 14 days of battery life). In addition to all of Peak’s features, the Life app includes daily blood pressure insights (currently in beta), on-demand atrial fibrillation (AFib) detection, and a heart monitor with electrocardiogram (ECG) readings.
The Whoop MG differs from the current 5.0 model by offering medical insights, such as ECG-based heart screening and blood pressure readings.
Women have historically been underrepresented in scientific research, so seeing health tech companies innovate products and initiatives focused on women’s health gives us hope that things are starting to turn around. While wearable devices such as Smart watches and Smart rings They are not used for medical diagnosis or treatment, but they can still stimulate necessary conversations between women and their doctors.
We hope this light on women’s health spreads from the technology we use to monitor our health at home to actual doctors’ offices.