Their insights point to seven predictions shaping the Longevity Outlook 2026. From how care is delivered and supported to how institutions, workplaces, and communities are shifting to respond to demographic change. Together, they reflect where the New Longevity is heading, informed by those building it every day. 

 

1. Longevity leadership becomes a new executive and academic priority. 

As organizations adapt to longer lives and multidecade careers, more companies will appoint dedicated longevity leaders - often Chief Longevity Officers - to guide strategy, culture, and workforce design. Longevity will increasingly be treated as a core business, innovation, and growth opportunity. In parallel, universities - including business schools and medical schools - will begin developing dedicated programs to prepare leaders for these roles. Longevity leadership will emerge as a distinct field, combining strategy, health, workforce design, markets, and systems thinking, shaping how organizations and institutions adapt and benefit from aging societies. 

Health systems will reach an inflection point, moving from treating illness to supporting long-term health and vitality. Behavioral and environmental data, wearables and sensors, and signals such as heart-rate variability, voice, gait, sleep, and mood - increasingly integrated through multimodal AI - will make it possible to identify risks before symptoms appear. This shift will improve outcomes, reduce costs, and, most importantly, protect autonomy. Health will become more continuous and preventative, helping people live longer and healthier lives. While public action remains uneven and underfunded, both public and private actors are beginning to align around prevention as the foundation for healthy aging. 

 

Pharmacies, community centers, and other trusted local spaces will become the new “front door” for longer healthy lives. Many of the capabilities are already in place - vaccines, rapid tests, chronic-care management, tele-consultations, triage, and advanced pharmacy care. What changes now is scale, interoperability, and user trust. For older adults and their families, care will increasingly begin wherever friction is lowest, often outside the hospital. At population level, this shift will reduce avoidable emergency visits, lower hospitalization rates, and strengthen continuity of care. 

 

Care is recognized as the work that supports society. Family and professional caregivers will step into their roles with greater confidence, skill, and financial support, as health systems increasingly recognize them as essential partners. We will see the expansion of high-touch, high-tech programs that equip caregivers with practical, evidence-based, and culturally grounded skills. These programs will help reduce preventable complications, strengthen support for chronic illness and long-term care, and enable older adults to age at home with comfort, dignity, and security.  

 

Health systems, employers, and communities will increasingly recognize that many health and well-being challenges should not be solved through clinical care only. Social prescribing, which connects people to non-clinical supports such as physical activity, learning, culture, volunteering, nature, and community life, will expand as a powerful and scalable approach to improving health outcomes, strengthening prevention, and supporting long-term well-being. By integrating healthcare with community infrastructure and everyday social life, leading institutions will move beyond narrow, medicalized responses and invest in whole-person solutions that reduce costs and embed healthcare in everyday life.  

 

Experience and insight accumulated over a lifetime will be increasingly recognized as economic, social, and learning capital. Senior expertise will translate into new forms of work - from mentorship and advisory roles to flexible, late-career pathways - supported by lifelong learning ecosystems that enable reskilling and reinvention at every age. Employers will redesign work around flexibility, age-inclusive career paths, and continuous learning. Governments will increasingly support this shift through policies that encourage lifelong retraining and extended participation in the labor market. Older adults will be valued not only as workers and contributors, but as “changemaker-makers", playing a key role in supporting all generations in navigating complexity, building skills, and making better decisions. 

 

Leading organizations will move beyond age-based silos and intentionally activate intergenerational teams as a source of learning, innovation, and better decision-making. Productivity will no longer be divided by age but strengthened through collaboration across generations. Human skills such as empathy, communication, and creativity will become even more valuable and are best developed through intergenerational exchange. Companies, investors, and education systems will increasingly view age-diverse teams, mentorship, and experience-sharing as essential to performance, employability, and long-term resilience. 



These predictions reflect what Ashoka Fellows are already seeing and building across regions and fields as societies adapt to longer, healthier lives. They point to both the opportunities ahead and the systems that must evolve to ensure the New Longevity strengthens communities, economies, and well-being. 

What shifts are you seeing in your own context? What do you believe will most shape how we live longer, healthier lives? We invite you to share your reflections and continue the conversation.