Making life worth living

Rahul Bhageeradhan
Founder & Chairman
Rahul Bhageeradhan founded Ayurvalley on a belief that has only sharpened over fifteen years of running it: that Ayurveda belongs at the centre of modern life, not on its edges. The practice has grown into a clinic network across India, where classical Ayurvedic medicine meets the reality of how people actually live and work today.
His starting point is simple, if unfashionable. You cannot treat the body in isolation. Physical health, mental clarity, and emotional balance are one system. That conviction shapes everything from Ayurvalley’s clinical approach to the everyday experience of the people it serves.
Rahul also leads in artificial intelligence and enterprise technology. He does not find this strange. Most people use AI to accelerate. He keeps asking whether it can instead help people slow down, reconnect, and return to practices that have sustained human wellbeing for thousands of years. Whether those two things can work together is a question he is still working out.
What he is clear about is this: Ayurveda deserves to be taken seriously. Not as a trend, not as an alternative, but as a time-tested system with something real to offer people who are tired of treating symptoms and ignoring everything underneath them.

Dr. Rohith Bhageerathan
Co-Founder & Chief Medical Officer
Dr. Rohith Bhageeradhan has practised Ayurvedic medicine for over twenty years. As co-founder and Chief Medical Officer of Ayurvalley, he brought both the clinical foundation and the conviction that made the practice possible. A qualified Ayurvedic physician (BAMS), his clinical work centres on Panchakarma, the detoxification and rejuvenation therapies that remain central to classical Ayurvedic care.
He does not treat symptoms. He looks for the root cause and tailors treatment to the individual. Two patients presenting with the same complaint will rarely receive the same prescription. This is not a refinement he has added to Ayurveda. It is what Ayurveda is.
As Chief Medical Officer, he sets the clinical standards for everything Ayurvalley does, from treatment protocols to practitioner training to what patients actually experience when they walk through the door. He tends to resist the idea that authenticity and rigour are separate concerns. A treatment not grounded in classical Ayurveda is not authentic. A treatment that is not safe and consistent is not rigorous. He does not find these hard to hold together.
His aim is simple enough: to offer people genuine Ayurvedic care, not a softened version of it, in a form that works for lives shaped by modern pressures. Lasting health rather than managed symptoms. The whole person rather than the presenting complaint.
