How Much Does a Hair Tissue Mineral Analysis (HTMA) Cost?

A complete guide to pricing and value. Hair Tissue Mineral Analysis (HTMA) is one of the most comprehensive and cost-effective diagnostic tools available in preventive health. It allows you to assess mineral balance, heavy-metal burden, and metabolic patterns — insights that standard blood tests cannot provide.

Compared to blood, urine or imaging tests, HTMA is: more affordable, non-invasive, more informative regarding long-term biochemistry. Below is a full, transparent breakdown of costs and what you receive within the price.

1. PRICE OF LIFELINE DIAG HAIR MINERAL ANALYSIS

Price in Poland: 119 EUR – includes the sampling kit, ICP-OES laboratory analysis, and a full PDF report.

What does the price include?

  • analysis of 29 elements using ICP-OES,
  • assessment of heavy-metal burden,
  • metabolic biochemistry profile,
  • analysis of key mineral ratios (Ca/Mg, Zn/Cu, Na/K, etc.)
  • full health interpretation

Optional: expert consultation (not included).

2. WHAT INFLUENCES THE TOTAL DIAGNOSTIC COST?

2.1. Cost of the test itself (119 EUR)

This is a one-time fee, comparable or lower than:

  • advanced blood panels (from 150 EUR),
  • functional medicine tests (from 200 EUR),
  • imaging diagnostics (from 350 EUR).
  • HTMA is therefore the most economical long-term biochemistry test.

2.2. Cost of supplementation & lifestyle changes

After receiving your report, you may choose to implement recommendations:

  • supplements (optional)
  • mineral-rich foods
  • lifestyle optimisation
  • Average monthly supplementation costs may vary from 30 to 120 EUR, depending on your goals and health status.

2.3. Follow-up tests

Recommended every 3–6 months.

The price of a repeat test is the same (119 EUR), though partner clients often receive discounts.

Why are follow-ups important?

  • they show whether biochemistry is improving,
  • they allow precise supplementation adjustments,
  • they provide a full picture of metabolic dynamics.

3.WHY IS HTMA COST-EFFECTIVE?

3.1. It saves money on supplements

Instead of buying supplements blindly:

  • magnesium
  • zinc
  • potassium
  • adaptogens
  • HTMA identifies exact deficiencies and precise needs, significantly lowering monthly supplement spending.

3.2. It saves money long-term.

Mineral imbalances may contribute to:

  • fatigue
  • metabolic issues
  • problemów hormonalnych
  • hormonal dysregulation
  • inflammation
  • weakened immunity
  • digestive problems
  • HTMA detects these patterns early—before they develop into conditions requiring expensive medical treatment.

4. KEY ADVANTAGES OF HTMA — WHY IS THIS TEST SO POPULAR?

4.1. Non-invasive sampling

No needles, no pain — ideal for children and adults.

4.2. Stable biological material

Hair is not regulated by homeostasis and reflects around 3 months of metabolic history.

4.3. Reliable heavy-metal detection

ICP-OES is a reference method in toxicology, used in environmental testing, occupational medicine, and material analysis.


5. HTMA VS. OTHER TESTS — COST & SCOPE COMPARISON

Test Average cost What it shows What it does NOT show
HTMA 119 EUR long-term biochemistry, heavy metals, metabolism no vitamin levels
Blood tests from 150 EUR current status no long-term data
Functional tests from 200 EUR specific systems high cost
Imaging tests from 350 EUR anatomical structures no metabolic information

Conclusion:

HTMA = the widest scope of information at the lowest price.

6.SUMMARY: IS HTMA WORTH IT?

HTMA is:

  • economical
  • precise
  • non-invasive
  • scientifically grounded
  • actionable

Choose HTMA if you want to:

  • improve energy
  • stabilise hormones
  • balance stress
  • optimise supplementation
  • assess heavy-metal load

It is one of the most cost-effective diagnostic tools available today.

Scientific References :

  • 1. Kempson, I.M. & Lombi, E. (2011). Hair analysis as a biomonitor for toxicology, disease and health status. Chemical Society Reviews
  • 2. Chojnacka, K. et al. (2002). Inter-element interactions in human hair. Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology
  • 3. Park, S. et al. (2016). Analysis of trace elements in scalp hair as indicators of nutrition and health status. Ann Occup Environ Med
  • 4. Srogi, K. (2001). Hair analysis in environmental monitoring. Polish J Environ Stud.