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HomeWorldBryan Johnson says he did not biologically age for a year. Here is what that really means

Bryan Johnson says he did not biologically age for a year. Here is what that really means

He says his tests show his body did not get older over the past year, as he pursues an “immortality by 2039” target. Researchers caution that today’s biological-age tools can be useful for trends, but noisy for definitive individual claims.

December 18, 2025 / 13:11 IST
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Bryan Johnson says he did not biologically age for a year. Here is what that really means

Bryan Johnson, the tech entrepreneur behind the anti-ageing “Blueprint” regimen, says he did not biologically age over a 12-month period and frames it as evidence that aggressive lifestyle, supplement and monitoring routines can slow ageing. He has also publicly linked his broader project to an “immortality by 2039” ambition, a line that circulates widely in coverage and his own social posts.

How these “ageing” scores are typically produced

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Most widely used “biological age” numbers are not a birthday-style age. They are statistical estimates built from biomarkers, commonly DNA methylation (often called epigenetic clocks) or other composite measures, intended to approximate either biological age or the pace of ageing. Tools in the DunedinPACE family, for example, are designed to estimate the rate of ageing rather than simply output a single age number.

Why experts are cautious about reading them as a personal verdict