Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach Resort & Spa has added body composition scans at its Pacific Waters Spa, giving guests a 60-second reading of key health metrics during a luxury stay.
The service comes through a new partnership with Evolt Health, which provides the Evolt 360 Body Composition Analyzer. The device is used in wellness clinics and gyms, and Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach is among the first resorts to offer it in a spa setting, according to the companies.
Guests can pay from $40 for the scan, which is available to both hotel guests and day spa visitors. The technology captures more than 40 metrics, including skeletal muscle mass, visceral fat, metabolic rate, biological age, hydration and inflammation markers.
The move reflects a wider shift in wellness tourism, where travellers are increasingly looking for experiences that measure and improve health rather than simply relax. Body-scanning tools have gained attention as consumers focus on longevity, muscle health and the effects of GLP-1 medications, which can raise concerns about muscle loss.
After the scan, spa staff can recommend treatments from the Pacific Waters Spa menu, including infrared sauna, red light therapy and PEMF. The suggestions can be combined with massages, facials and body therapies to create a more tailored wellness visit.
The results are saved in the Evolt Active app, allowing users to track changes over time and receive personalised nutrition guidance. The resort says this makes the spa experience more measurable and more connected to broader wellness goals.
“By integrating Evolt’s health technology into Pacific Waters Spa, we’re able to move beyond traditional wellness and offer a level of personalization and measurable insight that simply doesn’t exist elsewhere in the destination,” said Adam Estrella, spa director at Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach Resort & Spa.
The partnership also shows how hotels are widening the role of the spa, turning it into a place for diagnostics as well as treatment. Evolt Health co-founder and chief operating officer Kelly Weideman said the hotel is one of the first to bring the clinical-grade device into a luxury resort environment.
That places the Huntington Beach property among a growing number of travel brands that are adopting health technology to appeal to guests who want more data about their bodies during their stay. The development is part of a broader trend in which wellness travel is moving closer to fitness, recovery and preventative health.
For Hyatt, the addition gives Pacific Waters Spa a differentiating feature in a competitive Southern California leisure market. For Evolt, it extends the reach of its device beyond gyms and clinics into hospitality, where guests may be more open to combining leisure with health checks.
The scan takes place while the guest stands on the analyzer fully clothed. In practical terms, that means visitors can complete the process quickly without disrupting their spa schedule, making it easier to fit into a standard day of relaxation or a short resort visit.
Wellness tourism has become a major part of the travel sector as hotels, resorts and destinations seek to attract visitors with fitness, recovery and longevity services. The Hyatt-Evolt partnership shows how far that trend has moved, from simple spa treatments to more personalised and data-led experiences.









