Bio-hacking has officially gone mainstream in 2026, and it’s changing more than just our internal metrics—it’s completely breaking our retirement math. When the average lifespan starts creeping toward 100 or 120, the old ways of saving and spending simply don't hold up.

The Cost of High-Performance Health

From daily continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) to quarterly personalized nutritional mapping and stem cell therapy, staying young isn't cheap. These longevity protocols can easily cost $2,000 to $5,000 a month. While they offer a massive boost in cognitive and physical performance today, they also represent a significant long-term overhead that your financial plan must account for.

The 4% Rule is Dead

If you're actually going to live to 110 or 120, that old '4% rule'—where you withdraw 4% of your portfolio each year—is completely dead. You can't just save for a 20-year retirement if you've got 50 or 60 years left in the tank after you stop working 'traditionally.' We’re seeing a shift toward the 'Perpetual Endowment' model, where the goal is to live off only 2% or 3% of your portfolio's growth, ensuring the principal remains untouched for decades.

Funding the Extended Lifespan

This extended runway requires a more aggressive approach to long-term equities and alternative investments. You need your money to keep growing well into your 80s and 90s. We’re diving into how the new generation of long-lived investors are structuring their wealth to ensure they never, ever run out of runway, while still enjoying the benefits of modern medicine today. It's about balancing 'healthspan' with 'wealthspan.'