Highlights
- Luna launches the Luna Band, a voice-first wearable powered by its AI engine, LifeOS
- Device converts real-time health signals into personalised daily plans and recommendations
- LifeOS combines biometric data with blood markers, nutrition, sleep, activity, and medical context
- Wearers receive haptic alerts suggesting actions such as caffeine timing, focus sessions, and recovery windows
- App opens to a “Today” interface focused on guidance instead of dashboards and raw data
- Voice-powered logging allows users to record meals, workouts, and habits naturally
Health intelligence company Luna has announced the launch of the Luna Band, a voice-first wearable device designed to convert real-time biometric signals into personalised daily action plans. The company also opened registrations for its invite-only waitlist, with shipping expected to begin by the end of July 2026.
Powered by Luna’s proprietary health intelligence engine, LifeOS, the wearable continuously tracks the body’s signals and combines them with additional health inputs such as blood markers, nutrition habits, sleep data, activity levels, and medical context. The platform then translates this information into simplified recommendations aimed at helping users optimise performance, recovery, and overall wellbeing.Unlike conventional fitness wearables that primarily focus on dashboards and raw health metrics, the Luna Band is built around a “Today” interface that prioritises guidance and decision-making. Users receive real-time suggestions through haptic alerts on the wristband, ranging from caffeine timing and workout scheduling to focus sessions and recovery windows.The company said the device is targeted at high-performing individuals managing demanding lifestyles, including entrepreneurs, athletes, and professionals balancing travel, work, and fitness routines.
A headline “Peak Score” feature aggregates wellness data over time to help users track long-term progress and identify patterns affecting productivity and health.Luna is also placing strong emphasis on voice-powered interaction. Users can log meals, workouts, and lifestyle habits simply by speaking into the app. According to the company, reducing the friction of manual tracking is key to improving long-term engagement with health technology platforms.
The Luna ecosystem combines multiple wellness functions into a single application, including stress monitoring, nutrition planning, supplements, training, productivity, and third-party integrations. Users can also build customised health modules tailored to their personal needs.In a statement, a Luna spokesperson said the future of health technology lies in helping people make better decisions in real time instead of overwhelming them with excessive data.
The spokesperson added that LifeOS is designed to provide contextual recommendations that adapt continuously to a user’s changing health conditions and routines.The Luna Band was first showcased at CES earlier this year, though the company said the latest version unveiled now includes significant upgrades in both design and functionality.The first batch of devices, called “Drop 1,” will be available on an invite-only basis, with the waitlist now live on the company’s website.









