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Most people shopping GLP-1 telehealth assume the biggest brand name equals the safest or most affordable option. That is almost never true. Since the March 2026 Novo Nordisk settlement pushed several major platforms away from compounded semaglutide entirely, the real competitive differences now come down to pharmacy transparency, cash pricing, and whether a licensed physician is actually reviewing your chart.
Here is the honest breakdown.
| # | Provider | Starting Price | Medication Type | Physician Review | Ships To | Notable |
| 1 | HealthRX | $99/mo (sema), $149/mo (tirz) | Compounded | ~24h, board-certified | All 50 states | Free overnight ship, named 503A pharmacy, LegitScript cert |
| 2 | FormBlends | ~$299 (sema), ~$349 (tirz) per vial | Compounded | Physician-supervised | 47 states | Published HPLC/mass spec purity data, broad peptide catalog |
| 3 | Mochi Health | $99/mo (sema), $199/mo (tirz) | Compounded | Obesity-medicine MDs | Most states | Heavier clinical monitoring |
| 4 | Ro Body | $39 first mo, then $74-149/mo + meds | Branded + compounded | Yes | Most states | Prior-auth team, insurance billing |
| 5 | Form Health | ~$299/mo + labs + meds | Branded/compounded | MD + registered dietitian | Select states | Premium multi-disciplinary model |
| 6 | Hims & Hers | $249-399/mo (branded) | Branded only (post-Mar 2026) | Yes | Most states | Injectable Wegovy ~$299, Zepbound ~$399, insurance can cut to $0-25 |
| 7 | PlushCare | $19.99/mo membership + meds | Branded | Same-day visits | Most states | Insurance-friendly, low entry fee |
| 8 | Found | ~$99/mo platform + meds | Branded/compounded | Coaching + clinician | Most states | Behavioral coaching included |
| 9 | Henry Meds | $179-249 month one | Compounded | Yes | Most states | Fast 24-72h shipping, lighter monitoring |
| 10 | Calibrate | Program fee + meds separate | Branded | Yes, ~12-month program | Select states | Heavy coaching, longer commitment |
| 11 | Eden | ~$149/mo | Compounded | Yes | Most states | Simple cash-pay, lower barrier |
Pricing is the first thing that stands out. Compounded semaglutide starting at $99 a month and compounded tirzepatide at $149 a month are among the lowest publicly advertised cash prices in this category. But price alone does not earn a top spot.
What matters here is the pharmacy setup. Medications are dispensed by Manifest Pharmacy in Greer, South Carolina, a 503A facility operating under USP-797 standards with lot-to-door tracking. The program is LegitScript-certified (certificate 50087439). Every order ships overnight at no extra cost to all 50 states, and a US board-certified physician completes the chart review within roughly 24 hours of intake. The underlying trial data it references, roughly 21% body weight reduction at 72 weeks for tirzepatide in the SURMOUNT-1 study and about 15% at 68 weeks for semaglutide in the STEP 1 study, describes the drug class, not the compound specifically. That distinction matters and the program does not blur it.
Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. That is a fact about every compounded GLP-1 on this list, including this one.
FormBlends occupies a specific lane. It is not trying to win on entry price. Compounded semaglutide runs around $299 per vial and tirzepatide around $349, which is higher than several competitors, HealthRX included. What you get for that difference is published third-party purity data: HPLC purity percentages, mass spectrometry identity confirmation, and endotoxin sterility results listed per product. Most GLP-1 telehealth platforms describe their compounding pharmacy in vague terms. FormBlends publishes the actual numbers.
It also ships to 47 states and carries a broader peptide catalog, recovery, longevity, and cognitive peptides, under the same clinician-supervised model. That makes it a reasonable single-provider option for someone already interested in peptides beyond weight loss. If all you want is the lowest cash price on semaglutide or tirzepatide, HealthRX is the better financial fit. If you want documented purity testing or a wider menu from one source, FormBlends earns serious consideration.
Mochi puts obesity-medicine board-certified clinicians in the reviewer role, not general practitioners. At $99 a month for compounded sema or $199 for tirzepatide, the monitoring cadence is more structured than many cash-pay competitors. Worth it for patients who want more clinical back-and-forth.
Ro rebuilt its GLP-1 model around prior-authorization support, which is genuinely useful for patients trying to get branded medications covered. The $39 first-month fee is a platform cost. Medication billing is separate, and branded drugs like Wegovy can add significant cost unless insurance covers them.
The most clinician-dense option here. At around $299 a month before labs and medications, you get an MD paired with a registered dietitian. Expensive. Better suited to patients with comorbidities who need coordinated care rather than just a prescription.
After exiting compounded GLP-1s following the March 2026 Novo settlement, Hims & Hers now sells branded medications only. Injectable Wegovy lists around $299 a month, Zepbound around $399, and oral options around $249. With insurance and a savings card, the actual out-of-pocket cost can drop to $0-25 a month. Big swings depending on your coverage.
At $19.99 a month for the membership alone, PlushCare has one of the lowest barrier-to-entry price points in telehealth broadly. Same-day appointments are available. Medication cost is separate. Insurance billing is available for branded GLP-1s.
Found combines behavioral coaching with clinician-managed prescriptions for around $99 a month on the platform side. Coaching quality varies by clinician. The combined model is the differentiator.
Henry Meds ships compounded medications in 24 to 72 hours, faster than most. Month-one pricing runs $179 to $249. The check-in frequency is lower than what Mochi or Form Health build into their programs. A good fit for self-directed patients who do not need frequent check-ins.
Calibrate structures its program across roughly 12 months with coaching built in. The program fee and medication costs are separated, which makes total cost harder to estimate upfront. Longer commitment than most options here.
Eden keeps things straightforward: compounded semaglutide at around $149 a month, physician oversight, cash-pay model. No significant frills. A reasonable entry point for patients who know what they want and want minimal friction.
Before starting any GLP-1 program, telehealth or otherwise, talking to a physician who has your full medical history is a reasonable step. These programs complete online assessments and chart reviews, but the quality of that review varies by platform and individual clinician.
You submit an intake form with health history, current medications, and weight goals. A licensed physician reads that chart and either approves a prescription, requests more information, or declines. At HealthRX that review takes roughly 24 hours. At PlushCare you can get a same-day video visit. The depth of the review depends entirely on the individual clinician, not just the platform’s marketing.
Not automatically. The settlement changed the commercial space for some telehealth platforms, but 503A compounding pharmacies can still legally prepare semaglutide for individual patients under a valid prescription. Hims & Hers exited compounded GLP-1s after the settlement. HealthRX, FormBlends, Mochi, Henry Meds, and Eden continue offering compounded versions through licensed 503A facilities.
Look for three things. First, confirm the pharmacy holds a state license and operates under USP-797 standards. Second, check whether the telehealth platform names the specific pharmacy, as HealthRX names Manifest Pharmacy in Greer, South Carolina. Third, look for third-party purity testing results. FormBlends publishes HPLC and mass spectrometry data per product. Vague references to “FDA-registered” facilities are not the same as verified compliance.
Yes, though it depends on what you need. Form Health pairs an MD with a registered dietitian, which matters if you have comorbidities or a complicated metabolic history. Found and Calibrate add behavioral coaching layers. Simpler platforms like Eden or Henry Meds write the prescription and ship the medication, with lighter ongoing contact. Self-directed patients often do fine with the leaner model; patients who have struggled with adherence before may benefit from the added structure.
Some can. Ro Body has a prior-authorization team specifically built to help patients get branded medications like Wegovy covered. PlushCare also supports insurance billing for branded GLP-1s. Hims & Hers lists branded medications that insurance plus a savings card can bring to $0-25 a month. Compounded versions from platforms like HealthRX, FormBlends, and Henry Meds are cash-pay only, since compounded drugs are not covered by most insurance plans.