Wearables have been creeping into the clinical space for several years. With Health Panels, Oura is taking the leap of allowing ring owners to order lab blood tests, check results within their app, and use data from them to help make decisions day in and day out. It’s a relatively sudden transition from soft scores to hard biomarkers you can make decisions on.
The setup is simple: Schedule a blood draw at a Quest Diagnostics site, test around 50 biomarkers related to cardiometabolic, liver, and kidney health, then view your results along with sleep, activity, and readiness data from your Oura Ring. Oura’s Advisor, powered by AI, provides explanations and lifestyle recommendations based on these clinical values, turning them into guidance you can try putting into practice.
- What Oura Health Panels Measure and Why It Matters
- How Scheduling Works and How Your Results Are Determined
- Availability and Eligibility Across U.S. Locations
- How It Compares to the Competition in Wearables
- Why Blood Data Inside Wearables Matters for Health
- Privacy and Practical Caveats for Sharing Health Data

What Oura Health Panels Measure and Why It Matters
Health Panels concentrate on the risk areas most people care about but relatively few ever track with any regularity: lipids for heart health, A1C and fasting glucose for metabolic control, along with the common liver and kidney markers so familiar from our annual checkups.
The mix isn’t sexy — you’re looking at cholesterol fractions or glucose regulation, maybe organ function — but the key is combining that data with your longitudinal ring metrics.
Results appear in the app with reference ranges and clear explanations in plain language. If your LDL cholesterol is high or A1C edges up, the Advisor recommends science-backed habits — more fiber- and leafy green–filled meals, more steps, resistance training, or a bit more sleep discipline — and then lets you see how your ring data changes when you give those ideas a try. And you can find out from the Advisor what a certain biomarker signifies and why it’s important.
How Scheduling Works and How Your Results Are Determined
From the Oura app, you choose a panel, fill out necessary questionnaires and consent forms, and schedule a blood draw at a Quest Diagnostics location. There’s no at-home finger-prick; these are clinical venous draws sent to and analyzed in CLIA-certified labs. Results show up in the app with trends you can follow over time.
Software puts key biomarkers on top of familiar Oura signals — how long and when you sleep, your heart rate variability, resting heart rate, body temperature variation, and activity trends. That mashup is meant to address the question most people have after a lab report: What can I do tomorrow morning to shift these numbers in the right direction?
Availability and Eligibility Across U.S. Locations
Health Panels is currently open to adults ages 18 to 65, but it’s closed in Arizona, Hawaii, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island. It was created for proactive monitoring, not to replace urgent care, and should supplement — not substitute for — advice from your primary clinician, especially if you’re managing conditions, taking medications, or are pregnant or postpartum.
Like any lab test, it’s wise to follow up abnormal results with a clinician and retest when values are near the thresholds, since reference ranges may differ between labs and populations.

How It Compares to the Competition in Wearables
Oura is not the only company chasing blood data. One such plan comes from Whoop, which includes up to four tests a year, and another from Ultrahuman, offering thousand-point, twice-a-year, 100-biomarker panels as part of an annual subscription. Oura’s differentiator is the depth of ring context and its wider ecosystem, which includes a partnership with Dexcom.
Combining a Dexcom Stelo system with the Oura app permits users to record meals and view short-term glucose responses relative to sleep, stress, and activity. Add, on top of that CGM data, periodic checks for A1C and lipids, and you get both snapshots and movies — what your metabolism looks like now, and how it responds day by day.
Why Blood Data Inside Wearables Matters for Health
Numbers drive behavior. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in fact, says tens of millions of American adults have prediabetes — many without realizing it — while the American Heart Association lists cardiometabolic disease as a leading concern. The biomarkers that Oura singles out — A1C, fasting glucose, and cholesterol fractions — are the ones clinicians aim for first because lifestyle can move them meaningfully.
These markers are affected by sleep timing, physical activity, and diet. Studies, both randomized and observational, which have been referenced by major medical societies, find that improving sleep regularity, increasing moderate to vigorous exercise, and prioritizing whole foods can reduce LDL cholesterol levels and enhance insulin sensitivity. By placing lab results alongside nightly and daily behaviors, Oura is betting people will experiment more and wait less.
Privacy and Practical Caveats for Sharing Health Data
Clinical lab results are sensitive health information. Quest Diagnostics is an entity covered by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, but how your data is processed within a consumer app adheres to the app’s privacy policy. Review options for sharing data, research consent policies, and whether results could be included in de-identified analytics. And as always, pause before sharing screenshots with third parties — including employers or insurers.
Finally, remember what Health Panels is — and isn’t. It brings convenient home lab testing and coaching to a comfortable interface, but it is not a diagnostic engine. Consider the Advisor’s recommendations starting points, and always loop a clinician in for interpretation and care plans if you have symptoms or an existing condition.
Bottom line: With its Health Panels, Oura wants to make bloodwork as regular a part of your routine as looking up your sleep score. If the execution is anything like the ambition, there may be a gentle shove of wearables from passive tracking to truly proactive health management.
