Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Mortal describes itself as a “longevity practitioners marketplace” — a curated marketplace for longevity and health practitioners, as well as people interested in the field. It aims to connect users with relevant practitioners, help users track their protocols, sync wearable device data, and share that data with practitioners who can interpret the relevant metrics.
Based on the available content, Mortal’s core capabilities include personal protocol tracking, wearable device syncing, data sharing with practitioners, and viewing what other users report on the same protocols. The page specifically emphasizes “never what we claim,” suggesting the platform prefers to present user-reported outcomes rather than official efficacy claims. The current page also offers location options such as Hong Kong, Bali, Singapore, and Elsewhere, along with a “Reserve your spot” waitlist sign-up, indicating that the product may still be in early recruitment or closed beta.
The public materials do not disclose plans, pricing, who pays, payment methods, or whether there is a free version or trial. Although the site mentions “Sync your wearables,” it does not list support for Apple Watch, Garmin, Oura, or other devices, nor does it explain API access or data import/export capabilities. From a SaaS or enterprise software evaluation perspective, information on team collaboration, permission management, audit logs, security compliance, deployment models, and self-hosting is also missing, making it difficult for now to judge whether it is suitable for institutional procurement.
The main strength is its clear positioning: it focuses on longevity health and practitioner relationship management, combining user protocol tracking, wearable data, and peer feedback on the same protocols. This gives it potential as a vertical community and data network. The downside is that the information currently available is very limited. Product maturity, compliance capabilities, data privacy protections, integration scope, and business model are all unclear. Since the product involves health and wearable data, security compliance and the boundaries of data use are especially important, but the page does not provide details.
Mortal is best suited for individual users interested in longevity practices who want to record their personal protocols and share data with professional practitioners, as well as longevity practitioners who want to serve followers or clients. For enterprises, clinics, or health management organizations, the currently available public information is not sufficient to support a formal vendor selection process. Access from China is not addressed in the available text, and network connectivity, payment methods, and local alternatives cannot be confirmed.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on mort.al official site.
mort.al is an Hong Kong Health provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach mort.al directly.