
Hone Health aims to democratize longevity with affordable biomarker testing, data-driven clinical care and an inclusive mission. Lopez has also recently partnered with brands including Pilates Addiction and protein-shake franchise Fresh Monkee
Mario Lopez has joined Hone Health, a longevity-focused telehealth company that recently raised $30 million, as both a partner and ambassador.
Lopez, a lifelong athlete and long-time television fixture, says his priorities have shifted in recent years. After decades of boxing, jiu-jitsu and high-intensity training, his focus is now on longevity, mobility and recovery, not just performance.
“I’m not trying to just live longer,” Lopez told Athletech News. “I want to live better. I want the energy to keep up with my kids and stay sharp as I get older.”
Lopez is also involved with Pilates Addiction, where Pilates plays a central role in his routine to support core strength, posture and injury prevention. He has also partnered with Fresh Monkee, a protein-forward smoothie and bowl brand that reflects his emphasis on consistent, accessible nutrition rather than restrictive diet trends.
Hone Health‘s platform begins with at-home biomarker testing that measures 45 lab values, followed by a 30 to 45-minute consultation with a licensed physician. Founder and CEO Saad Alam says the goal is to lower the barriers that have historically kept hormone and longevity care out of reach for most consumers. With more than 600,000 patients tested and treated, Hone has built one of the largest hormone datasets in the industry.
“Longevity shouldn’t be a privilege,” Alam has told ATN. “It should be accessible, actionable and rooted in science. Our healthcare system waits for something to break. We want to shift people into a model of prevention and optimization.”
“Every patient benefits from the collective learning of the entire Hone community,” he said. “This is what modern, patient-driven medicine should look like.”
The company’s 2026 priorities reflect that ambition. Alam highlighted three focus areas: expanding access so more people can test and treat conveniently, advancing clinical protocols with the latest science and refining the tech platform so the patient experience feels seamless from the first biomarker test to ongoing optimization.
“If longevity is going to be democratized, it has to be easy,” he said. “People should be able to start their journey from their couch, not a specialty clinic.”
Hone is also investing in research partnerships to bridge the gap between telemedicine and in-person preventive care, an approach Alam sees as essential to scale.
“We need to bring the lab, the clinic and the data science together,” he said. “That’s how longevity moves from elite to everyday.”
Lopez also hosted the brand’s Dream Chasers Run event in New York City, a preview of Hone’s upcoming launches.

For Lopez, the appeal of Hone Health is its ability to make optimization something the average person can understand and act on. He says most people feel overwhelmed by the sheer volume of information, programs and wellness trends.
“People get intimidated because they think they have to do everything at once,” Lopez said. “I try to show that it’s about small habits. Move your body, eat balanced meals, pay attention to how you feel. With tools like Hone, you don’t have to guess.”