Full-Time
Posted on 9/16/2025
Develops aging therapies for canine health.
$200k - $240k/yr
Remote in USA
Remote
Loyal focuses on extending dogs’ healthspan and lifespan by developing therapies that target the aging process in canines. Its work rests on veterinary geroscience research and technologies drawn from genetics, behavior genomics, and canine health studies. The company develops and commercializes therapeutic products designed to address underlying aging mechanisms, with revenue from product sales and potential licensing of its technologies to other veterinary and biotech partners. Loyal differentiates itself through deep scientific research into canine aging, substantial funding, and a patient-centric approach that emphasizes the quality of life for aging dogs, as well as community engagement through early access to studies and updates. The company’s goal is to improve the longevity and overall well-being of dogs by advancing therapies that slow aging and enhance healthspan for aging canine companions.
Company Size
201-500
Company Stage
Series C
Total Funding
$238M
Headquarters
San Francisco, California
Founded
2019
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Today we announced Loyal's $100M Series C. Hear from our Founder & CEO Celine Halioua on what this milestone means for Loyal and the advancement of the first longevity drug.
Loyal raises $100m as canine longevity drug nears approval. age1 leads Series C as Loyal advances LOY-002 toward FDA approval, completing key requirements for conditional approval. Loyal, the clinical-stage animal health company developing what it hopes will become the first FDA-approved drug for lifespan extension, has raised $100 million in a Series C financing led by age1, the next generation of Laura Deming's Longevity Fund. Baillie Gifford participated alongside existing investors. The raise follows a year in which the company completed two of the three major technical requirements for FDA Expanded Conditional Approval for its lead program, LOY-002, and finished enrollment of STAY, its pivotal efficacy trial involving more than 1,300 dogs across over 70 veterinary clinics nationwide. The capital is intended to carry Loyal from late-stage development into market readiness - a transition that, in drug development terms, is less about theory and more about documentation, manufacturing and distribution. LOY-002 is designed as a daily pill for senior dogs, intended to target metabolic pathways associated with aging in order to extend healthy lifespan. The company has previously reported that the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine has accepted both the Reasonable Expectation of Effectiveness and Target Animal Safety sections for LOY-002 as part of the Expanded Conditional Approval pathway. Longevity.Technology: Loyal's $100M Series C is easy to read as a capital vote, but it is really a regulatory vote - money arriving precisely because the unromantic mechanics of approval are now visible. By completing two of the three technical requirements for FDA Expanded Conditional Approval for LOY-002, and by fully enrolling its pivotal nationwide STAY study across more than 70 clinics, the company is doing something longevity biotechs are often accused of avoiding: operationalizing prevention at scale, in a real-world population, with endpoints regulators can interrogate. Dogs make this more than a feel-good detour; they are companion animals living in our exposures and our homes, and they offer a biologically plausible model of aging that moves fast enough to be tested within a commercial timeline. If age1's lead and Baillie Gifford's participation signal anything, it is that "longevity" becomes more investable the moment it starts to look like a product dossier rather than a philosophy. From concept to dossier. For Loyal's founder and CEO Celine Halioua, the financing marks both validation and obligation. "Our driving purpose at Loyal is to help dogs live longer, healthier lives," she said. "We're closer than ever to delivering a solution to the problem we set out to solve: an FDA-approved drug for canine lifespan extension. This capital will help our team see our lead program through the remaining FDA requirements and get to market [1]." The FDA's Expanded Conditional Approval pathway permits early approval of certain animal drugs based on a reasonable expectation of effectiveness, provided full demonstration of effectiveness is subsequently confirmed. Loyal has now secured acceptance of its safety and initial effectiveness data for LOY-002; what remains is the final demonstration of substantial evidence of effectiveness, supported by data from STAY, which the company describes as the largest clinical trial ever conducted in animal health [2]. Scale matters. Enrolling over 1,300 privately owned dogs in a longevity-focused trial introduces variability - breed, diet, environment, comorbidities - that laboratory models smooth away. It also brings the study closer to the conditions under which a commercial product would actually be used. Companion dogs age in our kitchens and backyards, not in controlled vivaria; their diseases are entangled with obesity, inactivity and environmental exposures that mirror our own. Investors and a preventive thesis. The investor mix reflects a maturing narrative around aging therapeutics. Alex Colville, Cofounder and General Partner of age1, framed Loyal's trajectory in explicitly cultural as well as scientific terms. "Loyal has created a scientific and cultural movement towards proactive therapeutics for aging," he said. "Very few realize the impact this has had to date and the impact it will have to come. The way we understand and approach aging will never be the same [1]." Such language would once have felt aspirational. Today, it sits alongside regulatory correspondence and trial enrollment figures. For Baillie Gifford, a firm known for long-horizon growth investing, the attraction lies in the combination of preventive medicine and commercial discipline. "Celine and the team are redefining how preventive care is approached in veterinary medicine," said Tom Slater, partner at Baillie Gifford. "Helping dogs live longer, healthier lives matters to many families. By combining scientific rigour with a clear regulatory plan, Loyal has the foundations to build a substantial business in a large and expanding market [1]." But behind the rhetoric is a simple economic observation: pet owners will routinely pay out of pocket for interventions that promise incremental gains in health or longevity. Add to this that veterinary medicine, which is less constrained by reimbursement codes than human healthcare, and you have an early proving ground for therapies that target aging biology, and do it directly rather, than treating its downstream complications one organ at a time. The canine model and its limits. Dogs occupy a particular place in translational research. They share our homes, our pollutants and often our waistlines; they develop age-related diseases that resemble human pathologies, from osteoarthritis to certain cancers. Their shorter lifespans compress timelines, allowing interventional studies to read out within years rather than decades. Yet they are not small humans, and regulatory success in veterinary medicine does not automatically confer efficacy in people. Even so, the conceptual step is notable. To seek approval for a drug intended to extend lifespan in a healthy aging population is to test the proposition that aging can be a legitimate therapeutic target, not merely an inevitability to be managed symptom by symptom. In that sense, LOY-002 functions as both product candidate and policy experiment. A proving ground for prevention. If LOY-002 achieves Expanded Conditional Approval and proceeds to market, the implications will extend beyond veterinary shelves. Longevity science has long wrestled with endpoints, biomarkers and evidentiary thresholds, but in this case, those debates are being translated into pill bottles and prescribing guidelines. Quietly radical and entirely practical. For now, Loyal's task is execution - completing the remaining FDA requirements, scaling manufacturing and preparing veterinarians for a new category of therapy. Should it succeed, the first routinely prescribed longevity drug may arrive not in a geriatric clinic, but in a vet's exam room.
Loyal raises $100M in Series C funding. February 11, 2026 Loyal, a San Francisco, CA-based clinical-stage animal health company, raised $100M in Series C funding. The round was led by age1 with participation from Baillie Gifford alongside existing investors. The raise brought the total amount to over $250M since its founding in late 2019. The company intends to use the funds to expand operations and its development efforts. Led by CEO and Founder Celine Halioua, Loyal is an animal health company developing LOY-002, a prescription daily pill, which is its lead program aiming to extend the healthy lifespan of senior dogs by proactively targeting the underlying metabolic drivers of aging. With the Reasonable Expectation of Effectiveness (RXE) and Target Animal Safety (TAS) sections complete, the company has satisfied two of the three major requirements for LOY-002's application for Expanded Conditional Approval (XCA). It currently has three drugs in development and is making progress toward approval from the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine. 11/02/2026
Loyal, a clinical-stage animal health company developing lifespan extension drugs for dogs, has raised $100 million in Series C funding led by age1, Laura Deming's longevity fund. Baillie Gifford and existing investors participated, bringing total investment to over $250 million since 2019. The company's lead programme, LOY-002, is a daily pill aimed at extending the healthy lifespan of senior dogs by targeting metabolic drivers of ageing. Loyal has completed two of three major requirements for FDA Expanded Conditional Approval and plans to submit the final requirement later this year. If approved, LOY-002 would be the first FDA-approved drug for lifespan extension in any species. The funding will support scaling operations, building distribution channels and preparing for market launch. Loyal has enrolled 1,300 dogs across 70 veterinary clinics in its pivotal STAY study.
Celine Halioua, founder of Loyal, raised $135 million to develop longevity pills for dogs, aiming for FDA approval next year. Loyal's first product, a beef-flavored pill, could extend dogs' lives by addressing metabolic and hormonal imbalances. The company, valued at $425 million, plans to release the product by 2026. Loyal's success could pave the way for human longevity treatments, though these are more costly and complex. Loyal is featured in Forbes' "Next Billion-Dollar Startups" list.