Celebrity-backed digital health platform Function’s latest deal makes it easier than ever to know what’s happening inside your body without ever setting foot in a lab
You can order groceries, an Uber or a burrito to your door in minutes. Now, Function Health wants to add a phlebotomist to that list.
The longevity-focused health platform has acquired Getlabs, a mobile healthcare company that sends licensed specialists to wherever members are — home, office or anywhere in between. Financial terms of the transaction weren’t disclosed.
Function, which raised an oversubscribed $298 million Series B at a $2.5 billion valuation last year, says members will soon be able to choose between scheduling a visit to any of the 2,000-plus Quest Diagnostics locations nationwide or booking an at-home or in-office blood draw through Getlabs.
“Bringing testing directly to people isn’t just convenience – it’s access,” Function co-founder and CEO Jonathan Swerdlin said. “Function is on a mission to enable eight billion people to live 100 healthy years, and that is only possible when you scale the ability to make health data accessible to wherever people are.”
The deal follows Function’s 2025 acquisition of AI imaging startup Ezra, which offers a 22-minute full-body MRI.

Function isn’t alone in the at-home blood testing push. Hims & Hers acquired Trybe Labs in early 2025 to bring at-home blood testing to its platform, while SiPhox Health, a Massachusetts-based startup founded by two MIT scientists, has launched its own at-home blood testing platform.
And in another sign that the lab visit is becoming optional, Rhythm Health, co-founded by Devon Lévesque, offers a monthly at-home blood test tracking 20-plus biomarkers for $79. The startup has attracted endorsements from athletes, including Odell Beckham Jr. Users regularly take to social media to show off how easy and pain-free the experience is, and the brand made a splash at Runningman last fall with an activation that had visitors get their blood drawn while riding a Rythm-branded Ferris wheel.