How does it work?
A full-body scan captures a three-dimensional image, then compares your baseline and follow-up results to show changes over time.
3D visual body model
Baseline and comparison view across scans
Body composition measurements
Progress tracking over scans

What is 3D Body Scan?

The 3D Body Scan
is a body composition assessment that shows your progress in two ways: a detailed 3D visual of your body, and measurable data to support it. It captures a full-body model so you can see changes in shape and composition with greater clarity over time.
Your first scan is stored as a baseline. Future scans can then be viewed side by side against it, making progress easy to understand at a glance, both visually and through key body composition metrics.
What does the scan measure?
The scan provides measurable data including:
1
Body Fat Percentage
Shows the proportion of your body made up of fat, helping you understand overall body composition.
2
Weight
Records total body weight and tracks how it changes across different scans.
3
Fat Mass
Measures the total amount of fat in the body, giving a clearer picture beyond weight alone.
4
Lean Mass
Represents the weight of muscle, organs, and other non-fat tissues, useful for monitoring strength and conditioning progress.

Results are displayed in a structured format showing baseline values, current values, and the difference between the two. A progress chart visually tracks changes over time for body fat percentage, weight, fat mass and lean mass
How it fits into a broader assessment approach

The 3D Body Scan adds a clear, visual layer to your overall health picture. While biomarker testing and DNA analysis focus on internal indicators, the scan focuses on what you can measure externally, such as body shape and composition.
Together, they offer a more complete view of progress, linking how you feel and function on the inside with visible, trackable changes over time.
Who is the 3D Body Scan for?
This is for anyone who wants a structured, easy way to monitor body composition changes across time. It is especially useful if you are tracking weight, reducing fat mass, building or maintaining lean mass, or simply wanting a clearer view of your physical progress through both data and side-by-side visual comparison.

