Last month, I walked past three different wellness studios on my way to grab coffee in Silver Lake. One promised biohacking, another cryotherapy, the third just had a neon sign that said “Glow.” I didn’t go into any of them. It’s not that I don’t care about my health. It’s that I have no idea where to start, and I definitely don’t have time to build a wellness routine from scratch across five different memberships.
That’s exactly the friction Justin Hibbert wants to eliminate with Everhaus, a private health and lifestyle club opening this fall in Las Vegas. It’s not a gym with a sauna tacked on. It’s not a medical clinic with a treadmill in the corner. Everhaus is designed as an integrated system where diagnostics, training, recovery, and preventative care all live under one roof. And honestly, that kind of simplicity feels radical right now.
Hibbert is a Las Vegas native and endurance athlete who saw a gap in his own city. Vegas has always been known for spectacle and indulgence, not exactly a wellness mecca. But he’s betting that’s changing. “Everhaus was built for individuals who hold themselves to a higher standard,” Hibbert said. “By integrating proactive care, movement and restorative practices into one intentional environment, we’ve created a new benchmark for how health can be experienced in Las Vegas.”
The membership starts with a full clinical assessment through Aerwell, the club’s medical division. Blood work, metabolic testing, body composition, the works. Then a physician uses that data to build your plan. Not a cookie-cutter fitness template. A real, evolving roadmap based on what’s happening inside your body. Every quarter, members get retested so the programming can shift as they do.
The experience is organized around eight pillars: assessment, movement, light, oxygen, infusion, contrast, touch, and society. That last one stood out to me. Society. It’s rare to see social connection listed as a core health pillar alongside red light therapy or hyperbaric oxygen. But research increasingly supports it. A 2023 study in the journal Nature Human Behaviour found that loneliness can be as harmful to health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Everhaus isn’t just treating your body. It’s treating your life.
Inside, members will have access to semi-private strength and conditioning sessions. There’s also infusion therapy, cellular light therapy, thermal contrast baths, hyperbaric oxygen chambers, and autonomous bodywork tech. I had to look that last one up. Turns out it’s advanced massage and recovery equipment you can use on your own schedule. No need to book weeks out or wait for a therapist.
Everything runs through a proprietary platform that manages your appointments, protocols, and even concierge requests. Hibbert said the goal was to remove the logistical mess that derails most people’s health habits. I felt that. I’ve abandoned routines not because I didn’t want results, but because coordinating four apps and three locations every week felt like a part-time job.
Everhaus joins a growing wave of longevity-focused clubs spreading across the U.S. New York has Continuum Club, which costs around $10,000 a month. Los Angeles has Hume, closer to $450 monthly. Everhaus hasn’t released pricing yet, but Hibbert did say one thing that caught my attention. “We intentionally offer one membership tier at Everhaus. We take the guesswork out of complex membership structures and pricing confusion.”
That means no platinum versus gold tiers, no hidden add-ons. You’re either in or you’re not. And if you’re in, you get everything. I appreciate that transparency, especially in an industry notorious for upsells and fine print.
Las Vegas might seem like an unlikely home for a concept this focused on restraint and routine. But maybe that’s the point. The city is evolving. It’s not just bachelor parties and buffets anymore. There’s a growing population of entrepreneurs, creatives, and professionals who live there full-time. They want longevity, not just a wild weekend. Everhaus is designed for them.
Hibbert framed it simply. “Vitality is built through small daily acts practiced over time. Everhaus exists to support that commitment.” I think about that a lot. We’re surrounded by quick fixes and 30-day transformations. But real health doesn’t work that way. It’s the unglamorous stuff. Showing up consistently. Tracking what works. Adjusting when it doesn’t.
What struck me most about Everhaus isn’t the fancy tech or the clinical oversight. It’s the removal of decision fatigue. You don’t have to figure out whether you need a functional medicine doctor or a personal trainer or a recovery specialist. You don’t have to bounce between providers who never talk to each other. It’s all there, coordinated, evolving with you.
I’m curious how this model will scale. If it works in Vegas, will we see versions pop up in Phoenix, Austin, Nashville? Cities that are growing fast but don’t yet have the wellness infrastructure of LA or New York? I think there’s real demand for it. People are tired of cobbling together their own health systems from Instagram ads and Google searches.
The fall launch is approaching, and more details on membership will come soon. For now, Everhaus represents something bigger than one club. It’s a shift toward treating health as a long-term investment, not a quick sprint. It’s the acknowledgment that vitality requires structure, support, and a little bit of luxury to make it sustainable.
So here’s my question for you: if someone handed you a fully personalized, medically supervised health plan tomorrow, would you actually follow it?