> At a Glance
> – NuraLogix unveiled its Longevity Mirror at CES 2026, delivering health forecasts from a 30-second selfie
> – The $899 device scores cardiovascular, metabolic and stress markers on a 0-100 scale
> – Why it matters: Families can now track multi-year disease risk at home without needles or labs
A bathroom mirror that doubles as a medical time machine is heading to consumer shelves. NuraLogix says its new Longevity Mirror uses a quick selfie video to estimate health risks up to two decades in advance.

How the Mirror Reads Your Future
The device relies on Transdermal Optical Imaging, a patented tech that maps facial blood-flow patterns. In half a minute it crunches:
- Cardiovascular-disease risk
- Metabolic health
- Heart health
- Physiological age
- Mental-stress load
Each metric gets a Longevity Index score from 0 to 100.
From Show-Floor Curiosity to Buyable Gadget
Last year’s Anura Magic Mirror never reached shoppers. This year’s model will. Early-2026 deliveries start at $899, covering a one-year subscription. After year one, the service costs $99 annually.
Built-In Help and Family Sharing
An AI assistant translates the numbers into plain language and suggests tweaks for sleep, activity, stress and nutrition. Optional One-Touch Health Concierge links users to wellness coaches or nutrition experts for $399 a year, network permitting.
Up to six profiles fit under one mirror, letting households monitor everyone’s trajectory.
CEO Marzio Pozzuoli commented:
> “People often think about longevity as something driven by genetics or fate. In reality, everyday decisions around sleep, stress and cardiovascular and metabolic health shape how well we age.”
Key Takeaways
- The Longevity Mirror launches early 2026 for $899 plus a $99 annual fee
- AI models trained on hundreds of thousands of records predict risks up to 20 years ahead
- Families can track six profiles and tap live experts for an extra $399 yearly
One selfie may soon replace a waiting-room visit for anyone curious about the long road ahead.

