VERY LIMITED ELITE TIER OPENINGS CURRENTLY AVAILABLE
April 29, 2026

Longevity Supplements:

What Works, What Doesn’t, and What’s Mostly Just Marketing

The big picture:

Supplements can support longevity only when they address a real physiological need. They do not replace the actual pillars of aging well - listed below:

The supplements below have human clinical data, supporting targeted benefits when used appropriately.

What tends to work (evidence-supported & clinically useful)

1) Omega-3 Fatty Acids (EPA + DHA)

Omega-3s are among the most consistently supported supplements for cardiovascular, inflammation, and brain health.What they help with

Large meta-analyses and randomized trials continue to show benefit - particularly when baseline omega-3 intake is low.

Best candidates for Omega-3s:

Typical dosage:

4-6 g/day of combined EPA + DHA2) Methylated B-Complex (B12, B6, Folate)B vitamins are essential for:

Methylated forms (methyl-B12, methylfolate) are especially useful in patients with MTHFR variants, aging-related absorption decline, or elevated homocysteine.Who benefits most? People who have:

Clinical note:

Excessive dosing is unnecessary - this is a precision supplement, not a “more is better” category.

3) Vitamin D3 + K2 (together, not alone)Vitamin D supports:

Vitamin K2 (MK-7) helps direct calcium into bone and away from arteries, making the combination preferable to vitamin D alone.Meta-analyses show vitamin D does not universally prevent fractures or falls, but correcting deficiency is essential for musculoskeletal and longevity health.

Best approach:

Typical dosing:

4) Probiotics (strain-specific, goal-directed)

Gut health plays a role in:

Systematic reviews show probiotics can be helpful for specific indications, including IBS symptoms, antibiotic-associated diarrhea, and gut barrier function - but effects are strain-specific.

Who benefits most? People who have:

Key rule:

Not all probiotics are equal. Choose products with identified strains and clinical dosing, not generic “50 billion CFU” labels. Keeping probiotics in the fridge or freezer will also help to keep the bacteria “alive” and active.

Supplements that sound promising - but lack strong human longevity data

These may have interesting mechanisms but limited evidence for meaningful clinical outcomes in humans.

How we use supplements in a longevity practice

We prioritize supplements that:·

Address a measurable deficiency· Improve a tracked biomarker· Support function (strength, cognition, bone, metabolism)

We monitor:

Bottom line

Longevity supplements work best when they are:

For many patients, the highest-value stack includes:

References

  1. USPSTF. Vitamin, Mineral, and Multivitamin Supplementation to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer. JAMA, 2022.
  2. Abdelhamid AS, et al. Omega-3 fatty acids for cardiovascular disease prevention. Cochrane Database, 2020 (updated analyses continue to support triglyceride and inflammatory benefits).
  3. Obeid R, et al. Homocysteine, B-vitamins, and cardiovascular risk. Nutrients, 2022.
  4. Gupta A, et al. Probiotics and gut health: systematic review of randomized trials. Nutrients, 2023.