
Bryan Johnson, a tech entrepreneur known for spending $2 million a year to try and reverse aging, is now planning to shut down or sell his health startup, Blueprint, because of financial losses and a change in his personal goals.
From Tech Success to Longevity Experiment
Bryan Johnson became famous not just for creating tech companies, but also for trying to stop aging. He started Blueprint, a company that sold supplements and was based on his personal health routine. Johnson’s intense lifestyle included a strict vegan diet, daily workouts, over 100 pills a day, regular medical tests, and even blood transfusions from his teenage son. He believed this helped slow down his aging, claiming to have the body of an 18-year-old in his 40s.

Despite getting media attention and fans from the wellness world, Johnson now says running Blueprint has become a distraction. He’s stepping away from the business to focus on a bigger mission he calls “Don’t Die”—a movement that treats life as the most important thing.
Bryan Johnson’s Background
- Born in 1977 in Utah, Bryan grew up on a farm and later went to Brigham Young University and then earned an MBA from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
- In 2007, he started Braintree, a payment company that supported companies like Uber and Airbnb. He later bought Venmo and sold Braintree to PayPal for $800 million, earning $300 million himself.
He used this money to support big scientific projects. He launched the OS Fund to support future science and started Kernel, a company building brain-scanning technology.
But it was Project Blueprint—his personal health experiment—that made him well-known in the anti-aging world.
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Why He’s Leaving Blueprint
Johnson called Blueprint a “pain in the a business” and said it’s not helping his new mission. He thinks selling products for profit takes away from his message about the importance of human life. Though money loss may have played a role, Johnson says his reason is more about philosophy and purpose than profit.
The New Mission: Don’t Die
In March 2025, he introduced “Don’t Die”, which he calls a philosophical or spiritual movement. He wants people to rethink their relationship with death and focus on living as long as possible. He hopes “Don’t Die” becomes a new kind of religion or way of life, especially in an age where AI and life extension are real possibilities.
What’s Next?
Johnson is about to decide whether to sell or completely close Blueprint. His future focus is clear: building “Don’t Die” into something bigger—maybe even a global movement or belief system.
Love him or question him, Bryan Johnson is now known not just as a rich entrepreneur, but as a man on a mission to beat death itself.