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Best Longevity Podcasts: Where Scientists and Doctors Actually Talk Science

Skip the hype. These podcasts are where the best longevity researchers and physicians break down the real science — with citations, nuance, and honest uncertainty.

LongevityLab Editors6 min read
Medically reviewed by Dr. Sarah Chen, MD, Internal Medicine
Every claim cross-checked against peer-reviewed literature. Our process
podcastslongevitylearningPeter AttiaAndrew HubermanRhonda Patrick
Best Longevity Podcasts: Where Scientists and Doctors Actually Talk Science

Quick Verdict

91/100

Peter Attia's The Drive is the gold standard — 3+ hour deep dives with the world's best scientists. Huberman Lab is the best entry point. Rhonda Patrick's FoundMyFitness is the most rigorous for specific interventions. Start with all three.

Why Podcasts Are the Best Longevity Education Medium

Books take a year to write and another year to publish. Peer-reviewed papers are written for specialists and take years to reach clinical practice. Podcasts let researchers and physicians share what they know — and what they are currently testing — in real time.

The best longevity podcasts are not entertainment. They are 2–4 hour lectures by world-class scientists that would cost thousands of dollars to access in a CME (continuing medical education) context. And they are free.

Here is the definitive ranked list — organised by depth, scientific rigour, and practical utility.


Tier 1: Essential (Start Here)

1. The Drive — Peter Attia

Frequency: Weekly | Episode length: 2–4+ hours | Episodes: 300+

The gold standard in longevity podcasting. Peter Attia is a Stanford-trained surgeon with a master's in nutritional biochemistry who spent years at the National Cancer Institute before pivoting to longevity medicine.

What makes it exceptional:

  • Guests are consistently world-leading researchers (David Sinclair, Valter Longo, Matt Walker, Rick Johnson, Satchin Panda, dozens more)
  • Attia pushes back and asks hard questions — not a platform for unchallenged claims
  • Deep technical dives: individual episodes cover a single topic (e.g., "Everything you need to know about apolipoprotein B") at a depth that rivals academic lectures
  • Honest uncertainty: Attia regularly says "we don't know" and distinguishes high-evidence from low-evidence claims

Best episodes to start:

  • "The science of longevity" (introduction episodes)
  • Any episode on cardiovascular disease prevention
  • Episodes with Rhonda Patrick, David Sinclair, Matthew Walker

Subscriber content (Peter Attia MD): Some episodes and detailed show notes are behind a paywall ($20/month) — worth it for serious learners.


2. Huberman Lab — Andrew Huberman

Frequency: Weekly + "Guest Series" | Episode length: 2–3 hours | Episodes: 200+

Andrew Huberman is a neuroscience professor at Stanford whose podcast has become the most listened-to science podcast in the world. His ability to translate neuroscience into actionable protocols is unmatched.

What makes it valuable:

  • Premium production quality — structured, clearly explained, easy to follow
  • Actionable protocols in every episode (specific light exposure timing, cold exposure protocols, supplement stacks)
  • Covers sleep, exercise, nutrition, stress, cognitive enhancement, relationships — the full scope of healthspan
  • Guest series with world-class researchers

What to be aware of:

  • Huberman's enthusiasm occasionally outpaces the evidence — he sometimes presents emerging research as more established than peer review consensus supports
  • Some specific claims (e.g., specific supplements) have been critiqued by other scientists
  • Cross-check his specific recommendations against the primary literature for high-stakes decisions

Best episodes:

  • Sleep mastery series
  • Exercise and VO2 max episodes
  • Cold exposure and hot exposure episodes
  • Any episode on nutrition timing

3. FoundMyFitness — Rhonda Patrick

Frequency: Irregular (monthly-ish) | Episode length: 1–2 hours | Episodes: 150+

Rhonda Patrick has a PhD in biomedical science and publishes one of the most rigorously cited resources in longevity science at FoundMyFitness.com. Her podcast features deep dives with leading researchers and meticulous attention to the specific study evidence.

What makes it exceptional:

  • More rigorous citation practice than almost any other podcast — she links directly to primary literature
  • Topics often go where other podcasts don't: sauna science, sulforaphane (broccoli sprouts), vitamin D, omega-3s at a mechanistic depth
  • She frequently interviews researchers about their own work — getting the scientist's interpretation of their data

Best episodes:

  • Dr. Satchin Panda on circadian rhythms and time-restricted eating
  • Dr. Ruth Patterson on intermittent fasting in cancer survivors
  • Sauna and heat shock protein episodes
  • Sulforaphane and cancer prevention episodes

4. Lifespan with David Sinclair

Frequency: Irregular | Episode length: 45–90 minutes

David Sinclair (Harvard professor, Lifespan book author) and his co-host Matthew LaPlante discuss current longevity research with a particular focus on the epigenetic theory of ageing.

Strength: Direct access to Sinclair's current thinking, including what he personally takes and does — rare for an active researcher to be this transparent Limitation: Sinclair's optimism about near-term interventions is sometimes ahead of the data


5. Longevity by Design — Gil Blander

Frequency: Bi-weekly | Episode length: 45–75 minutes

Produced by InsideTracker, featuring interviews with researchers across longevity, nutrition, and metabolic health.

Strength: Strong focus on biomarker science and personalised health — complements the InsideTracker platform well Best for: Understanding how to interpret your blood biomarkers and what specific interventions are supported by the research


6. The Longevity Podcast — Behzad Aghazadeh

Frequency: Bi-weekly | Episode length: 60–90 minutes

Features interviews with longevity researchers, physicians, and technology innovators building longevity tools.

Best for: Keeping up with the frontier — clinical trials, emerging technologies, and the commercial longevity sector


7. Optimising Nutrition — Mike Mutzel

Frequency: Weekly | Episode length: 30–60 minutes

Deep dives into nutrition science, metabolic health, and fasting — particularly strong on the intersection of nutrition and the microbiome.

Best for: Nutrition science enthusiasts who want more depth than Huberman on dietary topics


Tier 3: Specialist Interest

8. Brain Science with Ginger Campbell

For anyone interested in neuroscience, cognitive health, and neurodegeneration prevention. Academic, rigorous, slow pace — excellent for building understanding of the underlying brain biology.

9. The Obesity Code Podcast

Based on Dr. Jason Fung's work on insulin resistance, metabolic health, and fasting. Strong mechanistic explanations of why standard dietary advice fails — useful contrarian perspective.

10. Sigma Nutrition Radio — Danny Lennon

Probably the most critically rigorous nutrition science podcast available. Danny Lennon (MSc, evidence-based nutrition) regularly challenges popular nutrition claims and grades the evidence quality honestly. Essential for anyone who wants to cut through nutrition dogma.


How to Use These Effectively

The 1-hour commute protocol:

  • Huberman Lab weekly episode: 2–3 hours → split across 2 commutes
  • Drive episode monthly (one topic deep dive): 3–4 hours → a full week of commutes

Topic-based listening: When you have a specific question (sleep, cardiovascular risk, supplements), search within these podcasts for relevant episodes rather than listening chronologically.

Note-taking: Most platforms allow speed playback at 1.25–1.5x. Take notes on specific claims with episode timestamps — allows easy return for citation verification.

Cross-reference claims: When any podcast (even these) makes a specific health claim that influences your behaviour, search the primary literature (PubMed) or check examine.com for the evidence grade before acting.

About the Author

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LongevityLab Editors

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Collaborative pieces researched and written by the LongevityLab editorial team, then fact-checked against primary literature and reviewed by our medical reviewer before publication.

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