Walk through a serious wellness facility today and you’ll notice something that wasn’t there five years ago. Tucked into private rooms — between the sauna and the cryo chamber, or sometimes occupying their own dedicated suite — sit sculpted, cocoon-shaped capsules with reclined wooden seating, salt mist drifting through the air, red light pulsing in slow waves, and a soft voice guiding the client’s breath. These are longevity capsules. And they’re rapidly becoming the centerpiece of the most profitable rooms in the wellness business.
VACUACTIVUS builds longevity and recovery equipment for B2B operators who want to stop selling individual treatments and start selling transformative experiences. Our flagship is the Revique HaloX™ Longevity Capsule — a fully integrated longevity environment that combines salt therapy, red-light bio-stimulation, herbal oxygen breathing, AI-guided neuro-relaxation and 3D multi-sensory regeneration inside one engineered space. This page is for the operators considering whether a longevity capsule belongs in their facility. Short version: if you’re serving premium clients and you don’t have one yet, you’re leaving the highest-margin service in modern wellness on the table.
A longevity capsule — sometimes called a longevity pod, wellness capsule, recovery chamber, recovery pod, biohacking capsule or biohacking pod depending on who’s marketing it — is an enclosed wellness environment that combines several recovery and regeneration therapies into a single session. You’ll also see it indexed as a “wellness pod”, “salt chamber” or simply “Revique HaloX” or “Revique Halo X” depending on which spec sheet the buyer is reading. The point isn’t any one technology in isolation. The point is integration. A client books one appointment, sits in one space for thirty to sixty minutes, and walks out having received the equivalent of four to six separate treatments. From an operator’s perspective that’s one room, one staffing slot, one cleaning cycle and four to six revenue lines collapsed into one premium price point.
The technologies vary across manufacturers, but the serious longevity capsules on the market today combine some version of: dry salt therapy (halotherapy), red and near-infrared light therapy, oxygen-enriched breathing or herbal aromatherapy, controlled temperature or contrast therapy, vibrational or sound therapy, and a zero-gravity reclined seat. ELEVE’s E-Salt Cabin sells at $74,995 with halotherapy, red light, oxygen and aromatherapy in one capsule. Wellness USA’s Cocoon Pod combines red light with vibroacoustic and infrared at the $10,000 tier. The Hollywood Reporter’s biohacking gadget roundup last year listed several pod-class devices in the same conceptual category. The category is real, the spend is real, and the buyer pool is growing fast.
What separates the Revique HaloX from most of these is the breadth of integration. Most longevity pods deliver two or three therapies. The HaloX delivers six in one capsule and adds an AI-driven virtual health coach with live voice interaction on top.
The Revique HaloX™ was engineered as a complete cellular regeneration environment, not a single-modality device with marketing wrapped around it. The technologies inside aren’t bolted on — they’re integrated to work as a sequenced 30-to-60-minute protocol. Here’s what’s actually running while the client reclines.
Dual-mode salt therapy. Most halotherapy products dispense one form of dry salt. The HaloX runs two — micronized pharmaceutical-grade dry salt particles (the classic halotherapy approach, supporting respiratory function and lung clearance) and a wet salt mist Thalasso mode for deep skin hydration and detox. The two modes can run sequentially within a single session, which is why this capsule outperforms standalone salt cabins like the Touch America Salt Capsule or Halotherapy Solutions’ HaloSTAR in terms of what’s actually delivered per visit.
360° red and near-infrared light matrix. Medical-grade photobiomodulation distributed around the capsule interior, not pointed at a single body region the way most red light beds do it. ATP production, collagen synthesis, inflammation reduction, accelerated tissue repair — the standard PBM benefits, delivered as ambient exposure rather than a directional bed.
Herbal oxygen breathing therapy. A built-in inhalation module delivers oxygen-enriched airflow combined with aromatherapeutic herbal blends. The capsule synchronizes the client’s breath pattern using AI-guided rhythms calibrated to measured stress levels. This is the piece most closely connected to the longevity-and-healthspan claim: respiratory function, cognitive clarity, parasympathetic activation. It’s also the technology most aggressively marketed by competitors like ELEVE Health.
AI-driven virtual health coach with live voice interaction. This is the differentiator most US competitors don’t have. A conversational AI guides the session in real time — breath rhythm, attention cues, transitions between modalities. Clients describe it as having a wellness coach inside the capsule with them. Operationally, it removes the need for a human therapist to facilitate every session, which transforms the unit economics.
Zero-gravity hand-crafted natural wood couch. Aesthetic and ergonomic. The reclined zero gravity wood seat reduces compressive load on the spine, lets the body settle into parasympathetic mode quickly, and gives the capsule a premium tactile quality that synthetic loungers can’t match. It also reframes what most people think a longevity treatment looks like — closer to a sculpted lounge chair than a cryo chamber, cryo bed or cold chamber, which is the visual language most clients still associate with recovery technology.
3D multi-sensory neuro-relaxation environment. Ambient sound, programmable light cycles, controlled airflow, vibrational support in the seat. The point is to remove all the small environmental friction that prevents real nervous-system downregulation and create something most clients have never experienced — actual rest.
The honest answer is the math. A longevity capsule retails per-session anywhere from $80 to $250 in the US depending on the city and the positioning. A ten-session package runs $700 to $2,000. Monthly unlimited memberships at premium longevity studios sit at $300 to $600. Compare that to a single salt-room session at $35 to $50 or a red light bed at $40 to $75, and you can see why operators who used to sell individual modalities are converting their square footage to integrated capsules.
It’s not just price per session — it’s everything around the price. A single capsule serves between fifteen and twenty-five sessions a week in well-positioned facilities. The cleaning protocol between clients runs ten minutes. There’s no therapist labor cost during the session itself (the AI coach handles guidance). The consumables are minimal — pharmaceutical salt, herbal blends, occasional filter changes. The capsule plugs into standard commercial power, takes up roughly the floor space of a small SUV, and runs for years with minimal service.
Operators we work with consistently report payback on a HaloX capsule in twelve to twenty-four months at moderate utilization, faster at premium-positioned facilities. After that, the unit prints money for the remaining six to eight years of its commercial life. Compare that to the alternative — building a sealed salt room with HVAC isolation, a separate red light therapy room, an oxygen bar and an aromatherapy lounge as four discrete services — and the integrated capsule wins on capital cost, floor space, staffing and revenue per square foot.
The buyer profiles are surprisingly specific.
Longevity studios and biohacking clinics. The most obvious buyer. These facilities exist specifically to sell health-span optimization and they need flagship equipment that signals “this is what longevity looks like” the moment a client walks in. The HaloX is the centerpiece of that room. Once a longevity studio has the capsule, every other service — cryotherapy chamber, vacu-infrared training, red light therapy, IV drips — becomes a supporting modality positioned around it.
Premium medspas and aesthetic clinics. Clients booking botox and laser facials are already paying for cellular-level results. A longevity capsule fits naturally next to those services and lets the clinic capture wellness spend that used to leak out to specialty studios. Most medspas we ship to add the capsule about eighteen months after opening, once the core aesthetic services are profitable.
Wellness hotels and luxury resorts. The Four Seasons, Six Senses and Aman tier of hospitality. Guests at this price point expect signature wellness offerings, and a longevity capsule in the hotel spa is exactly that. ROI here isn’t measured per-session — it’s measured in stay length, repeat bookings and brand differentiation.
High-end private homes. A growing share of HaloX shipments go into residential installations. Tech founders, professional athletes, private wealth clients who built primary residences around health optimization. Same equipment, residential delivery and installation.
Rehabilitation and recovery centers. The category bridges into clinical rehab because the underlying therapies — salt, light, oxygen, breath, vibration — support recovery from injury, chronic inflammation, post-surgical fatigue and the kind of physiological depletion that’s hard to address with traditional rehab equipment alone. This is where the “rehab-equipment” framing of the page URL lines up with clinical buyers.
Corporate wellness suites. Increasingly common — large employers building on-site executive wellness facilities with one anchor longevity capsule as the signature amenity. The HaloX in particular suits this use because the AI-guided protocols remove the need for full-time staffing.
The longevity-pod market has a clear price stratification, and it’s worth being honest about where everything sits. Here’s the landscape in current US B2B pricing:
| Equipment Tier | Indicative B2B Price (USD) |
|---|---|
| Entry-level wellness pod (red light + vibroacoustic) | $8,000 – $15,000 |
| Mid-tier halotherapy capsule (salt only, single client) | $18,000 – $35,000 |
| Multi-modality longevity pod (3-4 therapies integrated) | $40,000 – $75,000 |
| Revique HaloX™ — full 6-modality longevity capsule with AI coach | $65,000 – $95,000 |
| Top-tier branded competitor (ELEVE E-Salt Cabin, etc.) | $74,995 – $120,000 |
Indicative B2B ranges. Real pricing depends on configuration, custom finish options, OEM branding and shipping. The HaloX delivers more integrated modalities at a lower price than its direct US competitor (ELEVE), which is part of the reason most operators we talk to converge on the HaloX once they’ve finished comparison shopping. Contact us for a configured quote on your specific installation.
A typical Revique HaloX session is 45 minutes. The client arrives, removes shoes, settles into the wood zero-gravity couch. The capsule closes, ambient light fades from white to warm amber. The AI coach introduces the session — three or four sentences, calibrated to whether the client is a first-timer or a regular.
For the first ten minutes, dry salt halotherapy begins. The 360° red light matrix activates at a low gentle pulse. The AI coach guides initial breathwork — slow inhales, longer exhales, settling the nervous system into parasympathetic mode. Around minute twelve, the herbal oxygen module activates. Aromatherapy notes shift depending on the protocol the client selected — recovery, focus, sleep preparation, immune support. The wet salt Thalasso mode comes online around minute twenty for skin hydration.
The middle stretch of the session — minutes twenty through thirty-five — is where the actual neuro-relaxation happens. Light intensity rises into the therapeutic photobiomodulation range. Breathwork transitions to longer cycles. Sound and vibration enter quietly. The AI coach goes silent for stretches, then returns briefly to anchor attention. Clients commonly drift into a meditative state without ever consciously trying to.
The last ten minutes ramp down. Light cycles from amber to soft daylight. Salt particle dispersion stops. The capsule opens. Clients typically emerge feeling the way they feel after a long night of unusually good sleep — and that’s the experience that converts a single-visit client into a recurring membership.
“How does the HaloX compare to ELEVE’s E-Salt Cabin?” ELEVE pioneered the multi-modality longevity capsule category in the US and they did it well. The E-Salt Cabin combines halotherapy, red light, oxygen and aromatherapy at $74,995. The HaloX adds AI-guided coaching, dual-mode salt (dry + wet Thalasso), 3D neuro-relaxation environment and herbal breathing protocols on top of those four. We ship at the same price point or slightly below depending on configuration. Most operators evaluating both end up with the HaloX once they’ve compared spec sheets feature-by-feature.
“How is this different from a salt room?” A salt room is a sealed multi-client space with a halogenerator. It’s halotherapy only, requires HVAC isolation and architectural buildout, serves three to eight people simultaneously and prices sessions at $35 to $50. A longevity capsule is a single-client integrated environment with six modalities running together, prices sessions at $80 to $250, and requires no construction beyond placing the unit in a room. Different products, different business models. Some facilities run both.
“Do I need clinical staff to operate it?” No. The HaloX is designed for unstaffed operation — the AI coach guides the session, and a single front-desk staffer can manage check-in, cleaning between sessions and machine monitoring for an entire treatment day. This is one of the largest operational advantages over multi-room wellness layouts that require multiple practitioners.
“What’s the installation requirement?” Standard commercial power outlet, a room with approximately 9 feet by 6 feet of floor space and 8-foot ceiling clearance, mild ventilation (the salt and aromatherapy systems are self-contained but ambient airflow improves comfort), and a stable, level floor. We ship installation and operator training as part of every delivery in the US continental market.
“How long does the equipment last?” Eight to ten years of commercial use is realistic with proper maintenance — primarily filter changes, periodic salt-system service and software updates. The wood couch is replaceable as a service item if cosmetic wear becomes a concern at the five-to-seven-year mark. The capsule’s structural shell is rated for indefinite use.
“Is there an FDA or medical-device classification?” The HaloX is classified as wellness equipment in the US — the same regulatory category as commercial saunas, salt rooms and red light therapy beds. CE compliance is standard. We provide complete documentation for clients who need to confirm regulatory positioning in specific jurisdictions or use cases.
“Can I private-label this?” Yes. OEM and white-label production are available on minimum quantities — branded panel colors, custom control software theming and your logo on the chassis. A meaningful share of the US wellness market’s “longevity capsules” ship from our factory under other brand names.
We’ve been manufacturing wellness and recovery equipment since 2000 — cryotherapy chambers, vacu-infrared training, lymphatic massage rollers, localized cryo, and now longevity capsules. The reason that breadth matters: most facilities buying a HaloX are also buying or already operating other VACUACTIVUS equipment. Single supplier, single installation team, single service relationship, matched aesthetic across the facility.
Studios building out full longevity centers typically pair the HaloX with our cryotherapy chambers, a localized cryotherapy unit for face protocols, our vacu-infrared treadmills for active sessions, standalone red light therapy as a secondary modality, and a RollStar lymphatic massage roller for body work. Most of those facilities offer some version of a six-station longevity protocol as their flagship package.
If you’re building from scratch or upgrading an existing facility, the conversation we usually have isn’t “should you buy this one capsule” — it’s “what does the integrated longevity program look like across your floor space, and what equipment configuration delivers it”. That’s a more useful conversation than a brochure can replace.
If you’re seriously evaluating a longevity capsule for a wellness studio, biohacking facility, premium medspa, hotel spa or rehabilitation center, the next step is a real conversation about your space, your client profile and the program you’re trying to build. Tell us about the facility, the existing service menu and the gap you’re filling. We’ll come back with a configuration recommendation, transparent B2B pricing, leasing options for qualifying operators and complete installation planning. Worldwide shipping. OEM and private label available on minimum quantities.
Sales: sale@vacuactivus.com · +1 (310) 894-8799 · or use the contact form on this page.