Preservation Pre-sales
Nectome’s preservation services employ a new method for whole-body, whole-brain, human end-of-life preservation for the purpose of future revival.
Our protocol is capable of preserving every synapse and every cell in the body with enough detail that current neuroscience says long-term memories are preserved. It’s compatible with traditional funerals at room temperature and stable for hundreds of years at cold temperatures.
Nectome has a very straightforward “buy a preservation, get a preservation” model. We don’t do memberships, insurance, or lots of red tape. You sign one document, you send us money, and you’re entitled to one preservation. You can use it for yourself or a loved one, and you don’t need to decide at the time of purchase. If the person ends up not being eligible, use it for someone else or resell it.
This pre-sale offer is good through the end of April, 2026
As we prepare to open our first preservation center, we are offering a limited time deal for early supporters. We expect to begin offering preservation services at the full market price of $250,000 by mid-2026.
Pre-sale Options
We have two presale options: a $100k full pre-sale and a $20k cumulative discount card.
Full Preservation Pre-Sale: $100k
Transferable to anyone who qualifies at time of use
One-time payment
Full purchase of Preservation Services
Purchaser designates a person to be preserved
Nectome performs qualifying interview and develops a Master Service Agreement with designated person
If preservation is not performed, purchaser can designate someone else
Cumulative Discount Card: $20k
Transferable to anyone who qualifies at time of use
One-time payment
Discount increases every year starting at 10%
100% discount in 10 years
Purchase a full preservation pre-sale with this discount schedule based on the market price (initially $250k) at any time
$20k Cumulative Discount Card Schedule
How to buy
Reach out to us at hello@nectome.com to discuss purchasing for yourself or a loved one.


The discount schedule seems too good to be true. Do you expect that cost (to the company) of preservation will drop so quickly that 20K + 10y accumulated returns is significantly higher than that cost?