Are Biohacking Communities the New Book Clubs?

From bookworms to biohacking, explore how some performance-driven communities are replacing traditional social clubs. 

biohacking communities

Alongside supper clubs and running groups, they created structure, conversation, and connection. Increasingly, those rituals are being replaced by a different kind of gathering – one centered on biomarkers, sleep scores, and longevity – rather than literature.

Biohacking, once a niche interest confined to online forums and Silicon Valley experiments, now sits firmly within the mainstream of high-end wellness culture. At its core, it refers to the use of science-led tools and behavioral interventions to influence health, performance, and aging – from tech wearables and nutritional timing, recovery technologies and supplementation. Some of these practices overlap with established medical advice; others occupy a more experimental space where evidence continues to evolve.

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As interest in preventative health and lifespan extension grows, so too does the desire to share the process. Biohacking communities have emerged as places where people compare data, attend talks, test new ideas, and build social identity around health literacy. In cities like London, this has translated into meetups with thousands of members, alongside private clubs and medical-wellness centers that position optimization as both a personal pursuit and a social one.

What’s taking shape is not simply another wellness trend, but a shift in how people are wanting to connect – with biohacking clubs beginning to resemble the modern equivalent of book clubs, designed for a performance-minded generation.

What is biohacking?

 Lanserhof Arts Club biohacking
©Instagram / Lanserhof Arts Club

At its simplest, biohacking is the practice of measuring and modifying biological inputs to improve health outcomes. Unlike traditional wellness, biohacking places strong emphasis on quantification: biomarkers, wearables, lab testing, and longitudinal tracking.

Approaches range from evidence-supported strategies – such as improving sleep duration or strength training – to experimental protocols involving supplements, peptides or advanced recovery technologies. Medical professionals caution that not all biohacking practices are supported by robust evidence, and outcomes depend heavily on context and individual health status.

For many participants, biohacking is less about extremes and more about informed self-experimentation within perceived safe boundaries on how to live a healthier, longer life.

See also: How to Biohack Your Home for Supercharged Health

What is a biohacking community?

Lanserhof Arts Club
©Instagram / Lanserhof Arts Club

Biohacking communities turn what is often a solitary pursuit into a shared one. These are not support groups in the traditional sense, nor are they purely educational forums. They sit somewhere in between: part lecture series, part social club, part testing ground for new ideas about health, performance, and aging.

Members gather to compare sleep data, debate supplementation protocols, and listen to practitioners, researchers and emerging brands speak about everything from metabolic health to cognitive resilience. The structure mirrors older social rituals – regular events, familiar faces, a shared vocabulary – but the subject matter is distinctly modern.

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In the UK, the London Health Optimisation Biohacker Social Circle offers an example. The group initially emerged from the international biohacking conference circuit and has since grown into a community numbering several thousand across online and in-person platforms. Its events typically feature expert talks followed by open discussion and networking, with attendees ranging from first-time wearables users to seasoned self-experimenters.

Beyond physical meetups, these communities extend across digital spaces. Discord servers, WhatsApp groups, and online forums allow members to compare protocols, question new research, and refine their approaches in real time, reinforcing the idea that optimization is no longer a private endeavor, but a social one.

Where can you find a biohacking community?

Lanserhof Arts Club
©Instagram / Lanserhof Arts Club

London has become a focal point for biohacking culture in Europe. Alongside independent meetups, private members’ clubs and wellness centers are increasingly incorporating optimization programming into their offerings, positioning health performance as both a personal pursuit and a shared experience.

At Lanserhof at The Arts Club, biohacking sits alongside medical diagnostics and preventative health services, reflecting growing demand for longevity-focused care among affluent audiences. Here, expert-led discussions on metabolic health and performance optimization take place within a private club setting.

Boutique wellness spaces such as Repose in Kensington offer a more experiential entry point. Through modalities including cryotherapy, infrared sauna, hyperbaric oxygen, and contrast therapy, these centers invite members to engage with optimization practices in a shared environment that blends clinic, studio, and lifestyle hub.

See also: What Is A Longevity Pod – And Do You Need One?

For many, however, the draw of biohacking communities extends beyond technology. Nicola Cacioppo, a breathwork practitioner and community founder at Delphy Pool, sees contrast therapy as a gateway to something more elemental. “I teach hundreds of people now to embrace the elements,” she says. “Every session is about more than just contrast therapy. It’s a way to come back to yourself. It reminds me I’m capable of more than I think, and that returning to nature can be the most powerful kind of medicine.”

Internationally, similar models are taking shape in cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and Berlin, where longevity studios and performance clubs combine advanced technology with a strong sense of community.

Biohacking clubs reflect a broader shift in how people organize their social lives. Where book clubs once centered on shared reading, biohacking communities revolve around shared metrics, experiments and goals. For some, they offer better structure, belonging and conversation – with performance replacing prose as the common thread.

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