Quick answer: Function Health includes more than 100 biomarkers drawn in a single blood and urine collection, organized into roughly a dozen clinical categories: cardiovascular (including advanced lipid particles), thyroid, metabolic and blood sugar, liver, kidney, hormones (sex and adrenal), complete blood count, nutrients and vitamins, inflammation, and heavy metals. The base membership covers all of these in one annual or semi-annual draw. Certain specialty panels, such as food sensitivity, gut microbiome, and genetic testing, are available as paid add-ons. For a complete picture of what the membership covers and how how Function Health works, read on.

The Core Function Health Test List by Category

Function Health does not publish a single exhaustive checklist on its marketing pages, which frustrates people trying to compare panels before signing up. Based on what members consistently report and what the company has disclosed in its materials, here is the category-by-category breakdown of what the standard membership includes.

Cardiovascular and Lipids

This is one of the more detailed sections in the Function Health panel. Rather than a standard lipid panel (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides), the cardiovascular section goes into particle-level detail:

  • Standard lipid panel: total cholesterol, LDL-C, HDL-C, triglycerides, non-HDL cholesterol
  • LDL particle number and small dense LDL (sdLDL)
  • ApoB and ApoA-1 (the proteins that carry bad and good cholesterol particles)
  • Lipoprotein(a), abbreviated Lp(a), a genetically determined risk factor most people have never had checked
  • Oxidized LDL
  • Homocysteine
  • High-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP)

ApoB and Lp(a) are the two markers cardiologists most want on patients who seem fine by standard lipid panels but still have events. Getting both in a membership panel is genuinely useful. Talk to a clinician about what your specific Lp(a) result means for your long-term risk strategy.

Thyroid Function

The thyroid section goes beyond the TSH that most primary care panels run. Function Health typically includes:

  • TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone)
  • Free T3 and Free T4 (the active and storage forms of thyroid hormone)
  • Reverse T3
  • Thyroid antibodies: TPO (thyroid peroxidase) and anti-thyroglobulin

Running antibodies matters because Hashimoto’s thyroiditis can cause symptoms for years while TSH still sits in the normal range. Most annual physicals miss it entirely.

Metabolic and Blood Sugar

  • Fasting glucose
  • Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c)
  • Fasting insulin
  • HOMA-IR (a calculated insulin resistance index derived from glucose and insulin)
  • Uric acid

Fasting insulin is the marker most missed by routine labs. A person can have normal fasting glucose and even normal A1c while insulin is already running three or four times higher than optimal, which shows up years before glucose dysregulation becomes visible. This is the metabolic category where Function Health adds real clinical value over what a typical employer health screening captures.

Liver Function

  • AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, GGT (liver enzymes)
  • Total and direct bilirubin
  • Albumin and total protein
  • LDH (lactate dehydrogenase)

GGT in particular is a sensitive early marker of alcohol-related liver stress and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), well before structural damage shows on imaging.

Kidney Function

  • BMP or CMP panel: creatinine, BUN, eGFR
  • Cystatin C (a more sensitive eGFR marker than creatinine alone)
  • Urine microalbumin and microalbumin-to-creatinine ratio
  • Uric acid (bridges both metabolic and kidney categories)

Cystatin C is particularly valuable for people who are very muscular (where creatinine-based eGFR overestimates kidney function) or very thin. Most labs skip it because it costs more. Function Health including it by default is a meaningful differentiator.

Complete Blood Count and Hematology

  • CBC with differential: red blood cells, white blood cells (with differential breakdown), hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelets, MCV, MCH, MCHC, RDW
  • Ferritin
  • Serum iron and TIBC (total iron-binding capacity)
  • Transferrin saturation

Including ferritin alongside the CBC matters because you can have iron-deficiency symptoms (fatigue, cold intolerance, brain fog) with a perfectly normal hemoglobin if your ferritin stores are depleted. Women of reproductive age, especially, often do not get ferritin checked at their annual visit.

Sex Hormones

Both the male and female panels cover:

  • Total testosterone
  • Free testosterone (calculated or measured)
  • SHBG (sex hormone-binding globulin)
  • DHEA-S
  • Estradiol (E2)

Women’s panels also include FSH, LH, progesterone (timing-dependent), and prolactin. Men’s panels include PSA (prostate-specific antigen) for members above a certain age threshold. For context on how the sex hormone section differs by sex, see the deeper breakdowns in function health for men and the women’s equivalent.

Adrenal and Stress Hormones

  • Cortisol (morning serum)
  • DHEA-S (also overlaps with sex hormone category)

A single morning cortisol is a screening tool, not a full adrenal axis workup. It catches frank adrenal insufficiency and very elevated cortisol but will not diagnose subclinical dysregulation. Functional medicine providers often want a four-point salivary cortisol curve for that, which is not included here.

Vitamins and Nutrients

  • 25-OH Vitamin D (the storage form most labs measure)
  • Vitamin B12
  • Folate (serum)
  • Magnesium (serum)
  • Zinc
  • Selenium
  • Omega-3 index (EPA and DHA as a percentage of total fatty acids in red blood cell membranes)

Serum magnesium is notoriously poor at detecting intracellular magnesium deficiency, but it catches the severe cases. The omega-3 index is a meaningful inclusion because it reflects dietary fat quality over months, not just a recent fish oil dose.

Inflammation and Immune Markers

  • hs-CRP (also listed under cardiovascular, since it bridges both)
  • ESR (erythrocyte sedimentation rate)
  • ANA screen (antinuclear antibodies, a screen for autoimmune conditions)

Heavy Metals and Environmental Toxins

Function Health includes a blood heavy metals panel covering:

  • Lead
  • Mercury
  • Arsenic
  • Cadmium

This is not common in standard medical practice and is one of the distinguishing features of the Function Health test list compared to what most primary care offices order. High mercury from frequent fish consumption and elevated lead from old housing are real, actionable findings in US adults and rarely get checked unprompted.

How Many Total Biomarkers Does the Function Health Panel Run?

Function Health markets its panel as covering more than 100 biomarkers, and based on what members receive, the number typically lands in the 110 to 130 range depending on the member’s age, sex, and which specific tests are run in a given draw cycle. For a precise breakdown of the count by category, the article on how many biomarkers does Function Health test goes deeper on this.

The number is large enough to feel overwhelming at first. Function Health addresses this by grouping results by system and flagging anything outside the optimal range (not just the standard lab reference range), with explanatory context for each result in the app.

What Are the Function Health Add-On Tests?

Beyond the base panel, Function Health offers optional add-on tests purchased separately. These are not included in the base membership price. Common add-ons members have reported include:

Add-On Category Examples Typical Price Range
Food sensitivity IgG food antibody panel (100+ foods) $100 to $300
Gut microbiome Stool DNA analysis (Genova, Vibrant, or similar) $200 to $400
Genetics APOE genotype, MTHFR, pharmacogenomics $50 to $200
Advanced hormones Dutch urine hormone metabolites, cortisol curve $150 to $350
Cancer screening Galleri multi-cancer early detection $200 to $600
Continuous glucose CGM (Levels or similar) integration Varies

Add-on pricing shifts over time and is best confirmed directly in the Function Health app or at checkout. See the dedicated breakdown of function health add-on test prices for current figures.

How Does the Function Health Panel Compare to What a Regular Doctor Orders?

A standard annual physical in the US typically generates a metabolic panel (CMP or BMP), a lipid panel, CBC, and maybe TSH if you ask. That is roughly 20 to 30 individual data points, and several important values are either missing or not offered unless you specifically request them.

Marker Standard Annual Physical Function Health Base Panel
ApoB Rarely ordered Included
Lp(a) Almost never ordered Included
Fasting insulin Not standard Included
Cystatin C Specialist only Included
Free T3, reverse T3 Not standard Included
Thyroid antibodies Only if symptoms Included
Heavy metals Only if occupational exposure suspected Included
Ferritin Sometimes, if anemia flagged Included
Omega-3 index Almost never Included
SHBG Only if hormone symptoms Included

The difference is not about whether your doctor is thorough. Most of these markers simply are not part of standard-of-care guidelines for asymptomatic adults, which means insurance will not cover them and most clinicians will not order them unprompted.

What Does Function Health NOT Test?

Worth knowing before signing up: the base Function Health panel does not include everything a proactive health workup might cover.

  • Imaging: no coronary artery calcium (CAC) score, no DEXA scan, no whole-body MRI. These require separate referrals.
  • Gut microbiome: not in the base panel, add-on only.
  • Comprehensive stool testing: not included.
  • Continuous glucose monitoring: not included, available as an add-on integration.
  • DUTCH urine hormone metabolites: serum hormones are in the base panel, but the full urinary metabolite picture is add-on only.
  • IGF-1 (growth hormone proxy): not consistently included in base panel disclosures.
  • Comprehensive autoimmune panel: ANA screen is included, but specific autoantibodies (anti-dsDNA, anti-CCP, etc.) require add-ons or a rheumatology referral.
  • Cancer biomarkers: PSA is included for eligible men. Multi-cancer liquid biopsy (Galleri) is an add-on.

The simplest way to actually get this done

Superpower is a full-body lab membership that runs 100+ biomarkers, has each result reviewed by a doctor, and tracks your numbers year over year (about $199/year). It is what we point readers to when they would rather get one clean, complete draw than chase single tests one at a time. Here is superpower blood test reviewed in full.

Check current Superpower pricing →

How Function Health Organizes and Displays Its Results

Knowing what tests does Function Health include is one thing. How those results reach you is a separate question that affects whether the data is actually useful. Function Health delivers results through its app (iOS and Android) and web dashboard, typically within five to seven business days of the blood draw.

Each biomarker shows the numeric result, the conventional lab reference range, and a tighter “optimal” range that Function Health applies based on research literature rather than population percentiles. A result can be technically within the normal range but flagged as suboptimal, which is either valuable signal or a source of unnecessary anxiety depending on how you approach it.

There is no live physician consultation built into the base membership. Results come with explanatory text and trend graphs if you have prior draws. If you need a clinician to walk through results with you, that is an add-on service or requires going outside Function Health to your own doctor. For more on what happens after the blood draw, see the function health review.

Who Gets the Most Value from the Function Health Panel Coverage?

The Function Health test list is designed for a specific type of person: someone without acute symptoms, who wants a comprehensive baseline of their physiology, and who is willing to interpret detailed quantitative data. It delivers the most value for:

  • Adults 30 to 60 who have never had an advanced lipid panel and do not know their ApoB or Lp(a)
  • Anyone with a family history of early cardiovascular disease, where the standard lipid panel may be falsely reassuring
  • Women in perimenopause who want to track hormone levels alongside metabolic markers over time
  • People with persistent fatigue, weight gain, or brain fog who have been told their labs are normal (because those labs usually do not include thyroid antibodies, fasting insulin, or ferritin)
  • High performers optimizing sleep, recovery, and body composition who want actual data on inflammation and nutrient status

It is less useful for someone who needs urgent diagnosis, treatment management, or specialist interpretation. The panel screens broadly but does not replace a cardiology workup, an endocrinology consult, or a gynecology visit.

Function Health vs Superpower: Panel Coverage Side by Side

The two most-compared comprehensive lab memberships right now are Function Health and Superpower. Both run 100+ biomarkers and both use established national labs (Quest and Labcorp network) for the draw. The key differences in panel design:

Feature Function Health Superpower
Biomarker count 100+ 100+
Advanced lipids (ApoB, Lp(a)) Yes Yes
Heavy metals Yes Yes
Doctor review of results No (add-on only) Yes (included)
Physician consult Add-on Included
Annual price $499/year (two draws) About $199/year
HSA/FSA eligible Partially Yes

The panel breadth is comparable. The meaningful difference is that Superpower includes a physician review of your results in the base price, while Function Health charges extra for any live clinician interaction. For people who want someone to actually explain what their numbers mean, that distinction matters more than which specific biomarkers appear on the list. The superpower blood test review goes through that tradeoff in detail, and how much does Superpower cost breaks down pricing.

FAQ

What does Function Health test for exactly?

Function Health tests for cardiovascular risk (including particle-level lipids and ApoB), thyroid function, metabolic health and insulin resistance, liver and kidney function, complete blood count, sex and adrenal hormones, vitamins and nutrients, inflammation, and heavy metals. The base panel covers more than 100 individual biomarkers drawn from blood and urine in a single appointment.

Does Function Health include a thyroid panel?

Yes. Function Health includes TSH, Free T3, Free T4, reverse T3, and thyroid antibodies (TPO and anti-thyroglobulin). This is considerably more thorough than the TSH-only check that most primary care annual labs run.

Does Function Health test hormones?

Yes. The base panel includes testosterone (total and free), SHBG, DHEA-S, estradiol, and for women: FSH, LH, and progesterone. Men above a certain age threshold also receive PSA. More detailed urinary hormone metabolites (DUTCH panel) are available as an add-on.

What add-on tests does Function Health offer?

Function Health add-on tests include food sensitivity panels, gut microbiome analysis, genetic testing (APOE, MTHFR), advanced urine hormone metabolites, and multi-cancer early detection (Galleri). These are purchased separately and are not part of the base membership price.

Does Function Health include a cholesterol test?

Yes, and it goes well beyond basic cholesterol. The Function Health panel includes total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides, ApoB, ApoA-1, Lp(a), small dense LDL, and oxidized LDL. This is the cardiovascular section where the panel most clearly surpasses what a standard doctor’s office runs.

Does Function Health test for vitamin D and B12?

Yes. Both 25-OH Vitamin D and Vitamin B12 are included in the base panel, along with folate, magnesium, zinc, selenium, and the omega-3 index.

Is a heavy metals test included in Function Health?

Yes. Lead, mercury, arsenic, and cadmium are included in the base panel. This is uncommon in standard medical practice and represents one of the more distinctive parts of the Function Health test list.

Does Function Health test for cancer?

The base panel includes PSA (prostate-specific antigen) for eligible male members. It does not include a general multi-cancer liquid biopsy by default. Galleri, a multi-cancer early detection test, is available as a separate add-on.

How often does Function Health run the full panel?

The standard membership includes two comprehensive draws per year (every six months). Some biomarkers are only run once annually. The schedule is set by Function Health based on clinical guidance for monitoring frequency.

Can I see the full Function Health test list before signing up?

Function Health does not publish a single exhaustive biomarker list on its public marketing pages, which is a common complaint. The most complete picture comes from member-reported disclosures and from the company’s own app after enrollment. The function health review and the breakdown of function health cost include as much detail as is publicly available.