A High-End Clinic for Longer Lives: Geisler, Brecka and Lifeforce Open the ‘Ultimate Longevity Center’ in Newport Beach

This article was written by the Augury Times
Private clinic opens in Newport Beach with a big promise and wealthy customers in mind
The Ultimate Longevity Center, a private clinic billed as a one-stop shop for anti-aging care, has opened in Newport Beach. The venture is led by entrepreneur Anthony Geisler, longevity specialist Gary Brecka, and Lifeforce, the wellness company associated with Tony Robbins. They say the center blends advanced tests, IV therapies, tailored supplements and coaching to help clients “optimize” health and delay age-related decline.
The partners are positioning the clinic as aimed at wealthy, time-pressed customers who want fast access to the newest longevity tools. In media statements the group framed the move as tapping into a global longevity opportunity worth trillions of dollars. For shoppers and patients, that claim signals both promise — more services and choices — and a need to sort serious medicine from trend-driven treatments.
Why these founders and partners matter for customers and branding
Anthony Geisler is known for launching consumer brands and running boutique health businesses. He brings marketing reach, customer programs and experience building appointment-based services. Gary Brecka rose to prominence as a clinician and speaker focused on biomarkers, hormone care and personalized plans; he often promotes data-driven approaches to extend “healthspan” — the years people stay healthy. Lifeforce, a company that markets supplements and coaching and is associated with Tony Robbins, provides a broad platform and a big audience.
Put together, the three names offer different strengths: product and consumer know-how from Geisler, clinical framing and lab-driven tests from Brecka, and distribution and media power from Lifeforce. That mix helps explain why the partners expect early uptake among local wealthy residents and the wellness-minded. It also shapes how the center will present itself — less like a hospital and more like a high-end concierge clinic that sells memberships, packages and fast appointments.
What clients will actually find inside the center
Inside the facility clients can expect a mix of lab work, treatments and coaching. The center advertises advanced blood panels and genetic screens, hormone testing, IV nutrient and peptide infusions, and protocols billed as metabolic or mitochondrial support. It also mentions on-site scans for body composition, sleep coaching, and personalized supplement stacks. Some services will be sold a la carte; others as membership tiers with faster booking, follow-up coaching and packaged treatments.
The messaging is aimed at people who want measurable changes: frequent lab checks, dashboards that track markers over time, and care plans adjusted on each visit. Pricing was not fully detailed at launch, but the setup and the target customer imply top-end fees and membership costs rather than low-cost primary care. Appointments are likely by booking only, with a mix of single sessions and multi-week programs designed for short stays or weekend visits.
How the launch fits into a massive, mixed-up longevity market
The partners point to a very large market for longevity and wellness. When companies or advisors say an $8 trillion opportunity, they mean a broad pile of spending that covers medical care for older people, vitamins and supplements, fitness, beauty, home health, and new technologies such as gene tests and biotech therapies. In other words, the number is vast because it bundles a lot of different industries together.
For consumers this means more choices and more marketing aimed at staying younger and healthy longer. It also means higher price tiers for personalized care. For the industry it signals more clinics, more product launches and more venture capital chasing novel treatments. That environment can speed innovation, but it also creates noise: not every shiny new test or infusion will move the needle on long-term health. The likely outcome in the near term is growth in boutique clinics and a steady push to convert wealthy customers into recurring-paying members.
Real science vs. the sales pitch: what clinicians and regulators say
Not all longevity tools are equal. Some steps that clearly help — regular exercise, good sleep, controlling blood pressure and cholesterol, and certain vaccines — have strong evidence. Many newer offerings sold in clinics, from NAD+ infusions and peptide mixes to off-label hormone tweaks, sit in a greyer zone. Small studies or lab work may look promising, but large, long-term trials showing clear benefits for lifespan or major disease risk are often missing.
Regulation varies. Supplements face looser rules than prescription drugs, while clinics offering IVs or injections must meet state medical standards. Safety questions include infection risks from infusions, interactions between supplements and medicines, and the quality and sourcing of products. Clinical oversight and clear medical records matter; so do honest claims about what a treatment can realistically deliver.
Practical next steps: bookings, costs and what to watch
The Newport Beach location opens this month with bookings already available online and by phone, the partners say. Consumers interested in a visit should expect a consultation, a set of baseline tests, and then a plan that may combine in-clinic treatments with at-home products. Insurance is unlikely to cover most services; costs will probably be out-of-pocket.
Watch next for clearer price lists, any published clinical data or research partnerships, and whether the group expands beyond this single clinic. Local reporters and curious consumers will want to see how claims hold up in practice.
Photo: Karola G / Pexels
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