The bloodwork tracker that tells you what to do next.
Most apps store your labs. A PDF in a folder is not tracking. Mallet maps every biomarker to its optimal range, draws the trend across every panel, and connects the moving markers to your food and training, so a lab result becomes a next step instead of a number.
Storing your labs is not tracking them.
A pile of lab PDFs is a filing cabinet. It does not tell you whether a marker is improving or sliding, whether normal is actually good, or what to change. That is the gap between holding your results and using them.
Tracking means three things a folder cannot do: a trend for every biomarker, an optimal range instead of just the lab's normal flag, and a line from the number back to your food, training, and supplements. Get those three and a panel stops being paperwork and starts being a plan.
Optimal range mapping
Every biomarker is scored against optimal ranges, not just the lab's normal band, with a four-tier status so you can tell good from merely not flagged at a glance.
Trends over time
Each marker gets a trend line across every panel you upload. You see direction and momentum, so a value drifting the wrong way is obvious long before it gets flagged.
Biological age from your panel
Mallet estimates your biological age from your bloodwork, so you have one number that moves as your markers improve and tells you whether the work is paying off.
Connected to food and training
Your labs sit next to your nutrition, training, and supplement stack, so a moving marker is tied to what you are eating and doing instead of stranded on its own chart.
Go deeper
Guides on getting more out of your bloodwork:
What is a bloodwork tracker app?
A bloodwork tracker app stores your lab results over time and turns them into something usable: trends for each biomarker across panels, a status against optimal ranges instead of just the lab's normal flags, and a clear next step. The point is not to file PDFs. The point is to see where a marker is heading and what to do about it before it becomes a problem.
How is an optimal range different from a normal range?
A normal range is the band a lab uses to flag disease, usually built from the broad population, so a result can sit inside normal and still be far from where you want it for longevity. An optimal range is the tighter band associated with the best long-term outcomes. Mallet maps each biomarker to a four-tier status so you can tell the difference between not flagged and actually good.
Can I upload a PDF or photo of my labs?
Yes. You can upload a lab PDF or take a photo of your results, and Mallet reads the biomarkers, plots them against optimal ranges, and adds them to your trend lines. You do not type values into a spreadsheet. Each new panel stacks onto the last so your history builds automatically.
How often should I retest my bloodwork?
It depends on the marker and what you are working on. Many people retest a full panel every three to six months, and sooner when they are actively changing something, like a new supplement, a medication, or a body composition push. Mallet tracks the gap since your last draw and the direction each marker is moving, so you can time a retest around what you actually want to confirm. This is education, not medical advice; your clinician sets the cadence.
Does it connect to my diet and training?
Yes, and that is the part most lab apps miss. Mallet reads your bloodwork alongside your nutrition, training, and supplement stack, so a moving marker like fasting glucose or ApoB is connected to what you are eating and doing, not stranded on its own chart. That is how a lab result becomes an action instead of a number.
Turn your next panel into a plan.
Join the waitlist for early access to the bloodwork tracker that maps your labs to optimal ranges and tells you what to do next.