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Labs comparison · Reviewed for 2026

Is Ezra worth it for full-body MRI imaging screening in 2026? An honest review.

This comparison reflects publicly available information about Ezra as of July 2026 and may have changed since.

Ezra sells one thing well, a fast whole-body MRI that looks for structural problems a blood test cannot see. It is imaging and reporting only. Board certified radiologists read your scan, then you take the findings to your own doctor. Sipra is the opposite shape, one $99/mo membership that puts a physician who can actually treat you, plus discounted labs, in your corner every month. If you want a picture, Ezra takes a good one. If you want ongoing care that acts on what it finds, that is a different purchase.

At a glance

 SipraEzra
ModelCare membership, a physician who treatsOne-time imaging scan, report only
Regular price$199/year all-in per monthAbout $999 per base MRI, plus $365/yr membership
Treats what it findsYes, physician can prescribe and follow upNo, refers you to your own doctor
Labs and monitoringQuarterly protocol labs at $29/mo, thyroid and hormone panels with careMRI imaging, plus blood biomarkers via Function membership
Medication accessEvery medication across weight loss, men's, women'sNone, Ezra does not prescribe

Based on publicly available information as of 2026-07-13. Confirm current details on each company's own site.

What Ezra is, and who it is for

Ezra is a whole-body MRI screening service. Its base scan images the head, neck, abdomen, and pelvis in roughly 22 minutes and uses FDA cleared AI to help board certified radiologists flag potential issues, from tumors and aneurysms to fatty liver and signs of prior stroke. In May 2025 Ezra was acquired by Function Health and now operates as a subsidiary, pairing the imaging with Function's blood biomarker platform under one membership.

It is built for a specific person, someone healthy and proactive who wants a structural look inside their body that lab work cannot provide, and who already has a doctor to take the results to. Individual results vary. For that use case the imaging is genuinely capable. What Ezra is not is a care relationship. It screens, it reports, and then it hands off.

An MRI can show you a shadow. It cannot write the prescription or check back next quarter to see whether it changed.

Ezra's pricing in 2026

As of July 2026 Ezra's base full-body MRI lists at about $999, or roughly $899 with a Function membership. A version that adds the spine runs higher, and a full skeletal and neurological assessment is priced at several thousand dollars. Scans are generally HSA and FSA eligible. The Function membership itself is about $365 per year and includes 160 plus biomarker lab tests.

You may see a $499 figure quoted from Function's launch announcement. Treat that as a promotional and introductory price, not the standing rate. For budgeting, plan around the regular per-scan cost plus the annual membership, and remember that a second or third scan later is billed again each time.

The membership, and what is actually included

Ezra's membership buys you access and blood biomarkers, not treatment. Everything the scan surfaces becomes your job to route to a provider who can act on it, which usually means another appointment, another bill, and sometimes a cascade of follow up imaging for incidental findings that turn out to be nothing. That anxiety and cost is a known feature of screening MRIs.

Sipra runs the other direction. One $99/mo membership covers unlimited physician visits, ongoing 24/7 care, and access to every medication across weight loss, men's, and women's health, plus discounted labs. Quarterly protocol labs at $29/mo let a physician monitor everything you take, and thyroid and hormone panels come with men's and women's care. Many companies bundle a membership into each medication or charge one per condition, so a second medication means paying again. Sipra's single membership covers all of it, and the medication price is fixed by plan length, not dose, so it does not climb as your dose does.

Where Ezra falls short

The core gap is treatment. Ezra is testing and imaging only. No physician on the platform can prescribe, adjust, or manage a condition, so the moment a scan finds something the relationship ends and your search for care begins. For a labs and screening decision, the sharpest question is not who takes the prettier picture, it is who can do something about what the picture shows.

There is also cost and cadence. A near thousand dollar scan is a one-time snapshot, not a monitored trend line. Sipra is testing plus treatment under one roof, a physician who can act on findings, quarterly labs to track them, and the Sipra Promise, which refunds unshipped medication on longer plans if you are not satisfied. Sipra is LegitScript certified (50053943), with no hidden fees and no charge until a physician approves.

Ezra pros and cons

What is good

  • Delivers a real whole-body MRI that can flag structural problems, tumors, aneurysms, spinal issues, that blood labs simply cannot see. Individual results vary.
  • Fast and modern, roughly a 22 minute base scan with FDA cleared AI assistance and reads by board certified radiologists.
  • HSA and FSA eligible, and now paired with Function's 160 plus biomarker blood panel under one membership.

What to weigh

  • Imaging and reporting only. No physician treats, prescribes, or manages what the scan finds. You take results elsewhere.
  • Expensive per scan, about $999 for the base MRI plus a $365 per year membership, and each future scan is billed again.
  • Screening MRIs commonly surface incidental findings that trigger follow up appointments, further imaging, cost, and anxiety.
  • Not a care relationship or a monitoring plan. A single scan is a snapshot, not an ongoing trend a clinician acts on.

sipra vs Ezra, side by side

 SipraEzra
Core modelCare membership, physician who treatsOne-time imaging and report
Regular price$199/year all-in per monthAbout $999 per base MRI ($899 member)
Membership feeOne $99/mo, covers everything$365/yr, plus per-scan fees
Treats findingsYes, can prescribe and follow upNo, screening and report only
Testing typeBlood labs plus clinical careWhole-body MRI, optional CT
Labs includedQuarterly protocol labs at $29/mo, thyroid and hormone with care160+ blood biomarkers via Function
Medication accessEvery med, weight loss, men's, women'sNone, no prescribing
Second condition costSame one membership covers allSeparate scan billed each time
Physician on next stepsIncluded, ongoing 24/7Not included, refer to your own doctor
Certification and trustLegitScript certified (50053943)Verify their current Trustpilot/BBB standing

As of 2026-07-13. Scope note, this compares whole-body MRI imaging (Ezra) against blood labs plus physician care (Sipra), two different modalities, not identical products.

Who should choose which

Choose Ezra if

  • You specifically want a whole-body MRI to screen for structural issues bloodwork cannot see.
  • You already have a physician to interpret findings and manage next steps.
  • You have budget for a roughly $999 scan plus an annual membership.

Choose sipra if

  • You want a physician who can actually treat and prescribe, not just hand you a report.
  • You want one $99/mo membership covering every medication plus discounted labs.
  • You want ongoing care and quarterly monitoring, not a one-time snapshot.

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Frequently asked questions

Is Ezra worth it in 2026?

If you want a whole-body MRI snapshot and already have a doctor to interpret it, yes, the imaging is capable. Individual results vary. If you wanted care that treats what it finds, Ezra does not prescribe or manage conditions, so it is the wrong fit.

Does Ezra require a membership?

Scans are accessed primarily through a Function Health membership, about $365 per year, which also unlocks member pricing and 160 plus blood biomarkers. Direct booking is possible, but member pricing will not apply.

Does Ezra treat what the scan finds?

No. Ezra is screening and imaging only. Board certified radiologists read your scan and report findings, then you are advised to consult your own medical provider on next steps. There is no prescribing or ongoing treatment.

How much does an Ezra full-body MRI cost in 2026?

As of July 2026 the base full-body MRI lists at about $999, or roughly $899 with a Function membership, plus the $365 per year membership. A $499 figure seen online was a promotional launch price, not the standing rate.

How is Sipra different from Ezra?

Sipra is testing plus treatment under one $99/mo membership, a physician who can prescribe and follow up, every medication across weight loss, men's, and women's health, and quarterly labs at $29/mo. Ezra images and reports, then hands off.

Your bloodwork, finally explained

  • 130+ biomarkers, drawn at a lab near you
  • We connect the dots across all your markers
  • A personalized action plan, with you every step
  • FSA & HSA eligible with all plans
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