Wellness tech abounds at CES. As PCMag reports, at this year’s tech convention, there were myriad devices that promise to combat loneliness, detect life-threatening food allergens, prevent hip fractures, track perimenopause symptoms, smooth wrinkles, and more.
Read on for PCMag’s picks of the top Wellness Tech from CES 2026.
Peri
Winner of the official Best Wellness Tech category at CES, Peri is a small wearable that sticks to your torso and tracks perimenopause symptoms, including anxiety, hot flashes, menstrual changes, night sweats, and sleep disturbances. Peri’s companion app offers personalized AI-powered insights to help you understand your symptoms and make informed decisions about how to manage them—whether that’s through conservative measures alone, such as diet, exercise, and vitamins, or pharmaceutical treatments like antidepressants or hormone therapy. Peri is available for preorder now for $449 and is expected to start shipping after CES.
Tombot Jennie
Designed for seniors with dementia, Tombot’s Jennie is a realistic emotional support robot puppy that responds to your affection. It’s packed with sensors and motors, allowing it to turn its head to meet your gaze with its expressive puppy dog eyes, bark when you ask if it wants a treat, and wag its tail when you pet it. Show attendees, including myself, were charmed, and seniors at a memory care facility my colleagues visited also loved Jennie, securing the robot dog a win in PCMag’s Best Age Tech category at CES. Tombot first introduced Jennie as a concept in 2017, but it’s finally slated to launch this year, priced at $1,500.
Allergen Alert
Winner of Best Startup at CES, the Allergen Alert is a portable device that detects the presence of the most common food allergens, including eggs, fish, gluten, milk, peanuts, sesame, shellfish, soy, tree nuts, and wheat. You place a sample of your food into a plastic test pouch, insert it into the machine, and the results will be displayed within two minutes via a built-in display and a companion app. The Allergen Alert is expected to launch this fall for $200. A subscription for six single-use test pouches will cost $25 per month.
Dephy Sidekick
Exoskeletons are a big trend at CES this year, and the best one I tried is the Dephy (pronounced “defy”) Sidekick. It’s a pair of proprietary sneakers featuring removable robotic calf muscles that strap around your legs, lifting your heels with every step to make walking easier. PCMag’s pick for top assistive tech at CES, the Sidekick analyzes your gait for the first few steps before the battery assistance kicks on with a slight jolt.
It doesn’t help with standing, just walking, but this could be very useful for sightseeing tours and trips to Disney, for instance, where you can log upwards of 20,000 steps or more in a single day. Meanwhile, those with mobility limitations may find it helpful for everyday activities, such as walking the dog or going to the grocery store. The Sidekick has just gone on sale for $4,500 and is expected to start shipping on January 25.
Smart Hip Guardian
Some 350,000 hip fractures occur in the US every year, and typically result in a significant loss of mobility, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine. The Smart Hip Guardian is a belt for seniors that uses sensor data and software algorithms to detect falls and automatically deploy airbags to mitigate the impact. It promises to inflate 0.2 seconds before impact, providing protective padding around the midsection to prevent hip fractures. People who tried on a prototype at CES, state that it was surprisingly comfortable. The Smart Hip Guardian is expected to launch this year, priced at $799.90 for a pack of two.
SunBooster
If you spend long hours behind a computer screen, the SunBooster promises to help you keep your mood in check. About the size of an external webcam, the SunBooster attaches to the top of your laptop screen or monitor and emits near-infrared (NIR) light, offering similar health benefits as natural sunlight, but indoors. “Near-infrared light stimulates energy production in the cells, so it really energizes the body, and it has all kinds of health benefits—both physical and mental,” says Anne Berends, CEO, CTO, and cofounder of Amsterdam-based SunLED Life Science, the company behind the device.
It’s different than red light, which doesn’t penetrate as deep, and is more of a cosmetic and anti-aging solution. NIR is invisible to the human eye, so the SunBooster won’t distract you, and the device automatically turns off once you’ve received your daily dose. The SunBooster is expected to launch in the US in April for $249.
Petal
Petal is a health tracker that is designed for women, and sits inside your bra. It uses bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA), similar to a smart scale, to measure body mass index (BMI), breathing, heart rate, heart rate variability (HRV, an indicator of stress), and even promises to assess your breast tissue. Users who tried it on at CES found it extremely comfortable, even more so than a smartwatch or smart ring. It feels the same as any removable bra pad insert.
Because it sits right over your heart, it purports to be more accurate than wrist- or finger-based trackers. Anand Janefalkar, founder and CEO of JanoLife, the company behind Petal, says the product’s foundational AI is based on breast MRIs. “The goal of the company is to do early anomaly detection for the heart, as well as breast cancer,” Janefalkar said.
Petal is available for preorder now and is expected to start shipping on May 1 in honor of Women’s Health Month. It costs $199, or $149 if you preorder. Like smart scales that use BIA, Petal is not recommended for those who are pregnant or have implanted medical devices.
Sensate
A non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation device, Sensate sits on your chest and offers gentle, soothing vibrations to reduce anxiety and stress. It emits infrasonic (low-frequency) sound waves via bone conduction and purports to improve digestion, heart health, and breathing rate by calming the nervous system. The device is paired with a companion app, which offers a library of relaxing sounds for your Sensate sessions. Sensate is designed to help you enter a meditative state, regardless of what chaos may be going on around you. It’s available now, starting at $369.
Tonino Lamborghini SuperBrain Edition
The Frenz Brainband is a wearable that tracks your brainwaves and uses AI-powered audio to lull you to sleep. People have been raving about it for years, calling it a cure for insomnia, but the design wasn’t that appealing. But now Earable Neuroscience, the company behind Frenz, has teamed up with Italy’s Tonino Lamborghini for a new design, which is still being finalized. We know it will be black, with a 3D geometric design and gold accents. It’s a lot more stylish than the gray Frenz Brainband; something you wouldn’t be embarrassed to wear in public.
The SuperBrain Edition features the same core technology as the Frenz Brainband and offers exclusive access to a new Focus mode for assessing daytime cognition. A companion app tracks your real-time Focus score, which increases when you’re alert and decreases when you’re relaxed. Doan says the device can help you train your brain to focus or relax on command, and alternate between these two states as fast as possible, improving the elasticity of your mind.
The Frenz Braindband sleep wearable is available now for $680. The SuperBrain Edition, featuring a new design and insights into both sleep and focus, is expected to be unveiled in March and launched in June for $1,999.
L’Oréal LED Face Mask
Skin care enthusiasts are going wild over the new LED Face Mask prototype L’Oréal debuted at CES. The super-thin silicone device sits directly on your skin like a sheet mask, delivering targeted red and NIR light to target fine lines, sagging, and uneven tone. It promises to “visibly firm and smooth skin while evening skin tone,” according to a press release. L’Oréal hasn’t yet shared pricing information, and doesn’t expect to launch the mask until next year.
—
Photo Credit: RYO Alexandre / Shutterstock.com