A lot changed between late 2025 and spring 2026. Some household telehealth names pulled back from compounded semaglutide, regulators put more pressure on sloppy marketing, and LillyDirect added a lower-priced oral pathway that changed the comparison.
Here are the twelve that come up most.
1. HealthRX
Cash price is where this one starts to stand out. Compounded semaglutide from $99 a month and compounded tirzepatide from $149 is cheaper than almost every named competitor on this list, and the pricing is posted upfront with no surprise fees at checkout. The medication ships overnight at no extra charge to all 50 states, which is not a given in this category.
What gives it more credibility than a typical “order online and wait” setup: prescriptions are filled by Manifest Pharmacy in Greer, South Carolina, a 503A-registered compounding facility operating under USP-797 standards with lot-by-lot tracking. The platform carries LegitScript certification (certificate 50087439). A U.S. board-certified physician reviews the intake assessment within roughly 24 hours.
The trial data HealthRX points to comes from the SURMOUNT-1 study (tirzepatide, roughly 21% average body weight reduction at 72 weeks) and the STEP 1 trial (semaglutide, roughly 15% at 68 weeks). Those are trial figures, not program-specific outcomes. Still, for men who want compounded GLP-1s from a named, lot-tracked pharmacy at the lowest price point in the category, this is the starting point.
2. FormBlends
FormBlends sits in a different lane. Semaglutide runs around $299 per vial and tirzepatide around $349, so it costs more than HealthRX. What you get for that premium is published purity testing: HPLC purity percentages, mass spec identity confirmation, and endotoxin and sterility results, posted per product. Not many compounding telehealth brands show that documentation at all.
It ships to 47 states, and the same clinician model that covers GLP-1 prescriptions also covers a wide peptide catalog spanning recovery, longevity, and cognitive peptides. For men who want one provider handling a GLP-1 protocol alongside BPC-157 or other compounds, that breadth is genuinely unusual. If published lab data or a broader peptide menu matters more than hitting the lowest monthly price, FormBlends earns its spot here.
3. Mochi Health
Mochi uses board-certified obesity-medicine physicians rather than general practitioners, which means the clinical oversight is specialty-focused. Compounded semaglutide is priced around $99 a month and tirzepatide around $199. They monitor more closely than some of the lighter-touch platforms, which suits men who want check-ins built into the process.
4. Hims & Hers
After exiting compounded GLP-1 options following the March 2026 Novo settlement, Hims & Hers now sells branded medications. Injectable Wegovy is around $299 a month, oral semaglutide around $249, and Zepbound around $399 without insurance. With insurance and a savings card, the out-of-pocket cost can drop to $0 to $25. Brand recognition is high and the app experience is polished. The trade-off is that cash-pay pricing is among the steeper options on this list.
5. Ro Body
Ro’s first month runs about $39, then roughly $74 to $149 per month for the platform. Medications are billed separately. The team handles prior-authorization paperwork for insurance, which saves real time for men trying to get Wegovy or Zepbound covered. Ro takes insurance for branded meds, which separates it from most cash-pay competitors.
6. Henry Meds
Henry Meds is cash-pay and compounded, with a first-month price in the $179 to $249 range and shipping typically within 24 to 72 hours. Clinical oversight is less intensive than what Mochi or Form Health offer. Good fit for men who want fast turnaround and a straightforward process without heavy coaching layers.
7. Form Health
Premium tier. Around $299 a month, and that includes labs and access to both an MD and a registered dietitian. For men who want a structured, medically supervised program rather than just a prescription, Form Health is one of the few that delivers that level of clinical contact.
8. Found
Found charges around $99 a month for the platform plus medications on top. Coaching is included. It works for men who want some accountability structure but are not ready to pay for the full premium model.
9. PlushCare
PlushCare membership is $19.99 a month. It offers same-day visits, takes insurance for branded medications, and works well for men who already have insurance coverage and just need a quick pathway to a prescription.
10. Eden
Eden offers compounded semaglutide at roughly $149 a month in cash. Minimal frills. The pitch is simple: a low-cost entry point with physician oversight and none of the coaching fees layered on top.
11. MEDVi
MEDVi runs around $179 for the first month, compounded, no long-term contracts required. Month-to-month flexibility is the draw. Suits men who want to try GLP-1 therapy without locking into a 12-month program.
12. WeightWatchers Clinic
WeightWatchers Clinic charges about $74 a month for the program layer, with medications billed separately. Men who already trust the WeightWatchers behavioral framework and want GLP-1 medication added to it will find this familiar territory.
Quick Comparison
| Provider | Approx. Monthly Cost | Compounded or Branded | Ships to |
| HealthRX | From $99 (sema) / $149 (tirz) | Compounded | All 50 states |
| FormBlends | ~$299 (sema) / ~$349 (tirz) | Compounded | 47 states |
| Mochi Health | ~$99 (sema) / ~$199 (tirz) | Compounded | Varies |
| Hims & Hers | ~$249-$399 (branded) | Branded | Wide |
| Ro Body | ~$74-$149 + meds | Both | Wide |
| Henry Meds | ~$179-$249 | Compounded | Wide |
| Form Health | ~$299 + labs | Branded/Compounded | Wide |
| Found | ~$99 + meds | Both | Wide |
| PlushCare | ~$19.99 + meds | Branded | Wide |
| Eden | ~$149 | Compounded | Wide |
| MEDVi | ~$179 first month | Compounded | Wide |
| WeightWatchers Clinic | ~$74 + meds | Both | Wide |
FAQ
Do compounded GLP-1 medications count as the same thing as Ozempic or Wegovy?
No. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved and are not equivalent to or interchangeable with branded products. They are made in compounding pharmacies under different regulatory oversight.
Why did so many GLP-1 telehealth programs change in early 2026?
A settlement between Novo Nordisk and several telehealth platforms in March 2026, combined with FDA warning letters to more than 30 compounding and telehealth firms, pushed several providers to exit compounded semaglutide and switch to branded medications.
What should men specifically look for in a GLP-1 program?
Physician oversight, transparent pricing, a named and verifiable pharmacy, and a clear policy on what monitoring is included. Some programs are essentially just a prescription pathway. Others include labs, dietitian access, and regular check-ins.
Is insurance likely to cover these medications?
For branded medications like Wegovy or Zepbound, insurance coverage is possible and some platforms, including Ro and PlushCare, help with prior authorization. Compounded versions are almost always cash-pay only.
What signs tell me a compounding pharmacy can be trusted?
Look for 503A or 503B registration with the FDA, USP compliance (USP-797 for sterile injectables), and third-party certification such as LegitScript. A pharmacy that publishes lot tracking or per-batch purity testing adds another layer of verification.
Sources
- FDA: List of 503A and 503B compounding pharmacy registrations (fda.gov)
- LegitScript: Telehealth certification registry (legitscript.com)
- Wilding et al., *New England Journal of Medicine*, 2021 (STEP 1 trial)
- Jastreboff et al., *New England Journal of Medicine*, 2022 (SURMOUNT-1 trial)
- Novo Nordisk statement on compounding platform settlement, March 2026
- FDA warning letters to telehealth compounding firms, Q1 2026 (fda.gov)














