Kate Tolo: The Female Bryan Johnson Redefining Biohacking for Women
Kate Tolo: Female Bryan Johnson in Biohacking

For a while now, the internet has been obsessed and slightly freaked out by the world of biohackers — those folks trying to outsmart aging with science, data, and a lot of money. If you know the scene, you know Bryan Johnson: the guy who tracks every biomarker, spends a fortune on stem cell injections, and tries to turn his body into a statistic-defying science experiment. However, until now, the scene has been largely dominated by male biohackers, with female representation significantly low. Not anymore. Enter Kate Tolo, Bryan Johnson’s partner — both in business and romance — who is taking the internet by storm with her enthusiastic participation in the longevity game. Kate Tolo’s face has been lighting up the longevity forums on social media platforms of late, and what’s more interesting is how she has been renamed as the “female Bryan Johnson.”

Who is Kate Tolo?

In case you missed it, Kate Tolo is not just riding his coattails. Kate has moved into the spotlight ever since Johnson revealed she would be the first woman to run through his crazy-detailed Blueprint protocol — only this time, tailored specifically for women. The news sent the internet into a frenzy, and people quickly started wondering if humanity is really slowly morphing into its own science fiction series. But who really is this woman? How did she get mixed up with Johnson’s experiments, and what is making everyone think she is about to change female biohacking?

People may love a fascinating story about finding love while seeking longevity, but Kate Tolo’s story is more than that — she is not just Bryan Johnson’s partner. According to her own website, she is also in the mix as co-founder and chief marketing officer of ‘Blueprint’ (that is the anti-aging company itself), ‘Don’t Die’, and ‘Immortals’ — all the projects fueling Johnson’s public campaign against aging. Reportedly, she is the reason Johnson’s private mission became an internet movement with millions of followers. And this feather in her hat matters, because Blueprint is not some wellness fad now. It is an online movement, complete with strict routines, sleep trackers, experimental supplements, and science that falls somewhere between promising and sci-fi. And Kate Tolo is the one who shaped how the world sees it.

Wide Pickt banner — collaborative shopping lists app for Telegram, phone mockup with grocery list

Before she dove into biohacking, Tolo worked in the fashion world: think ‘The North Face’, ‘Proenza Schouler’, and ‘R13’. Eventually, she jumped into tech, first by working at Kernel (one of Johnson’s brain-computer interface startups) after emailing him about shared interests in AI and neuroscience. It makes sense now that this was not some random influencer cameo; their connection grew from years working together on wild futuristic projects.

Building ‘Blueprint’ together: The Johnson-Tolo connection

Kate Tolo is Johnson’s longtime collaborator. She is also his girlfriend, yes — but what is fascinating is that they did not meet on a dating app. According to them, it started with emails about tech, then time together at Kernel, and then a full-on partnership in the Blueprint world. Johnson only went public about them in 2025, telling everyone online that Kate is “his favorite person” and they had been together for three years already. Since then, they are basically internet-famous as a couple who will share anything: sleep data, hormone levels, gut bacteria, even fertility stats. In one viral moment, Johnson even posted about Tolo’s vaginal microbiome test, something that left social media platforms divided.

Rise of the ‘Female Bryan Johnson’

Tolo got the label “female Bryan Johnson” and her partner’s seal of approval after they announced she would undergo her own Blueprint protocol — only this time, engineered for female biology. She is set to track everything: cycles, biomarkers, blood work, stool tests, hormones, microbiome changes, sleep, and fertility. The goal? To build an insanely detailed longevity dataset for women, which is something medicine has traditionally skipped over, focusing way more on male data. Tolo has been open about the project’s tough side, too: it is exhausting, time-consuming, and honestly, pretty restrictive. But she hopes it will finally bring real science and insight into women’s health challenges: PMS, hormonal shifts, fertility, endometriosis, and the mystery of perimenopause.

Pickt after-article banner — collaborative shopping lists app with family illustration

So why all the hype? It is because she is not just watching from the sidelines; she is doing to her own body what Bryan did to his, only now it is a female-biology-first science experiment. According to Johnson, Kate will likely “become the most measured female in history.” She will spend three months just mapping her baseline, while men finish in a week or two. Once that is nailed down, she moves on to the interventions. Johnson said in his X post, “Kate has suspected endometriosis. 10% of all women do. We will try to tackle this too. I am excited for all of the surprising things we will hopefully uncover.”

Johnson admits she is not wired like he is: “Unlike me, Kate does not have the innate desire to wake up at 4:30am and do six hours of longevity therapies,” he wrote, “She is the cofounder of Blueprint, building in the trenches with me since day one. She understands the game and how hard it is.” Per Johnson, “In many ways, this is a sacrifice for her. She is a creative person, going from a life of freedom and spontaneity to a rigid protocol.”

Who was Kate Tolo before all this?

Per her website, Kate grew up in Mackay, Australia, as the daughter of Bosnian immigrants. She studied fashion design, snagged a Chancellor’s Scholarship, and her sister, Marianna Tolo, is an Olympic basketball player who medaled in Paris. Her life used to be all about fashion ops and creative management, until she switched gears, got fascinated with longevity, and stepped away from runways into the world of neuroscience, AI, and experimental anti-aging research. People love this storyline: the dramatic pivot, the total lifestyle change, the immersion in tech. Now, Tolo hits pretty much every trend the internet is obsessed with: wellness, aging science, luxury routines, influencer culture, high-tech Silicon Valley dreams, women’s health advocacy, and biohacking as a status symbol.

As Johnson put it, “Our intentions are to be a sturdy, reliable force in your life. To care for your best interest as we’d care for our own,” adding, “We want what’s best for you and our loyalty is to your existence.” In his words, “It’s pretty cool to be living in a time when we may be the first generation to not die. I’m not suggesting immortality, but lifespans so long that we stop thinking about lifespans.” Johnson, as well as Kate, knows it is not easy. But he is “proud of Kate for taking on this responsibility” because “it’s painful, exhausting, and costly.” And yet, it feels like the start of a new chapter for both longevity science and the public’s appetite for the wild side of self-experimentation, because “at the end of the day, the one thing we each care about more than anything else is one more breath.”