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7 Online GLP-1 Services Worth Recommending to a Friend Who's Watching the Budget

7 Online GLP-1 Services Worth Recommending to a Friend Who’s Watching the Budget

Price is the thing. Not the brand name on the pen, not the celebrity ad. When people ask friends which telehealth GLP-1 service they actually use, cost comes up first, every single time. The gap between $99 a month and $1,300 a month is real, and this list is built around that gap.

These seven providers show up repeatedly in forums, Reddit threads, and Facebook groups dedicated to affordable weight-loss medication access. No made-up quotes. Just recurring themes from what real people say publicly, plus the numbers that matter.

1. Mochi Health

Compounded semaglutide at $99 per month and tirzepatide at $199. Those are genuinely low numbers, and Mochi pairs them with board-certified obesity-medicine clinicians rather than general practitioners skimming charts. People consistently mention the monitoring frequency as a plus. Not just a script and a tracking app. If you want clinical oversight alongside a low cash price, Mochi comes up more than almost anyone else.

2. Henry Meds

Henry runs a cash-pay compounded model with fast shipping, often 24 to 72 hours. First-month costs typically fall somewhere between $179 and $249. The recurring comment in communities is that onboarding is quick and the process doesn’t feel like jumping through hoops. Lighter on coaching than some, but that’s fine for people who already know the protocol and just want medication access without a bloated membership fee.

3. FormBlends

FormBlends sits in a specific niche: compounded GLP-1 telehealth with physician oversight, dispensed through a 503A FDA-registered compounding pharmacy, and unusually transparent about what’s inside the vials. They publish per-product purity testing with actual numbers, including HPLC purity percentages, mass spec identity confirmation, and endotoxin and sterility results. Most telehealth brands don’t do that. Cash pricing runs higher than some competitors, around $299 for semaglutide and $349 for tirzepatide per vial, so it’s not the cheapest entry point. But for someone who wants documented purity data before injecting anything, that transparency has real value. FormBlends also carries a broader peptide catalog covering recovery, longevity, and cognitive support under the same clinician model, something almost no GLP-1-only telehealth brand offers. Ships to 47 states.

4. Eden

Eden offers compounded semaglutide at roughly $149 per month cash, no insurance gymnastics required. It comes up frequently as a straightforward option: fill out the intake, get a clinician review, get the medication. The price point lands it in the accessible tier without extras you may not want. A good fit if simplicity matters as much as cost.

5. HealthRX

At $99 per month for compounded semaglutide and $149 for compounded tirzepatide, HealthRX sits at the low end of what’s available right now. The single fact worth highlighting: medication is dispensed by Manifest Pharmacy in Greer, South Carolina, a named 503A/USP-797 compounding facility with lot-level tracking, not a black-box lab. HealthRX also holds LegitScript certification (cert 50087439) and ships free overnight to all 50 states. Physician review runs about 24 hours. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved, which applies to every compounding pharmacy in this list. But the combination of the lowest posted price, named and credentialed pharmacy, and nationwide overnight shipping is hard to beat at this tier.

6. Ro Body

Ro‘s first month runs about $39, then $74 to $149 per month after that, with medications billed separately. The membership model can look confusing at first glance, but the prior-authorization support team is a genuine differentiator. If you have insurance that might cover branded GLP-1s and you haven’t been able to get through the paperwork, Ro has actual staff dedicated to working that process. People who end up on branded Wegovy or Zepbound through insurance credit Ro’s PA team regularly.

7. PlushCare

PlushCare charges around $19.99 per month for its membership and focuses on branded medications with insurance coverage. Same-day visits are available. It’s not the place for compounded GLP-1s at rock-bottom prices. It’s the place if you have decent insurance and want a same-day appointment with a real clinician rather than an async review queue. The monthly platform fee is the lowest on this list, which matters when you’re paying that separately from medication costs.

A Few Things to Know Before You Pick

The FDA sent warning letters to more than 30 compounding telehealth firms in early 2026. The rules around compounded GLP-1s are shifting, and any provider on this list could change their offerings. Hims and Hers, for example, exited compounded GLP-1s after a March 2026 Novo Nordisk settlement and now focuses on branded versions starting around $249 to $399 per month. That’s the kind of change that happens quickly in this space.

Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. That’s true across the board. The distinction worth making is whether the pharmacy behind the product has verifiable credentials, lot tracking, and a public certification you can look up. Several entries here clear that bar. Several do not tell you enough to know.

Your doctor’s input matters regardless of which platform you choose.

Common Questions

Which of these services is actually the cheapest all-in for a first month?

HealthRX posts the lowest listed price at $99 for compounded semaglutide, with free overnight shipping included. Ro Body’s $39 first-month membership looks lower, but medication costs are billed on top of that. Total first-month spend depends heavily on your dose and whether you need any add-on consultations.

Does FormBlends’ higher price buy anything a cheaper service doesn’t offer?

Specifically, it buys published lab data. HPLC purity percentages, mass spec identity confirmation, and sterility results are posted per product. No other service on this list does that by default. Whether that’s worth $150 to $250 more per vial than competitors is a personal call, but the data exists and is verifiable.

If I have insurance, which of these platforms is most likely to actually get it used?

Ro Body. Their prior-authorization team is the most frequently cited reason people in online communities end up on branded Wegovy or Zepbound through insurance rather than paying cash for compounded versions. PlushCare is worth a look too, but Ro’s PA support infrastructure is the more discussed differentiator.

Can I switch between these services if the rules around compounded GLP-1s change again?

Yes, practically speaking. None of these platforms lock you into a long-term contract that would prevent you from leaving. The more relevant issue is that compounding availability can shift fast, as it did when Hims and Hers exited the market after the March 2026 settlement. Keeping your prescribing history and lab records in hand makes any transition easier.

What does the 503A designation actually mean, and why does it matter for budget shoppers?

A 503A pharmacy compounds medications for individual patients under a valid prescription and is regulated by state boards plus FDA oversight. It matters for budget shoppers because not every low-cost telehealth service names or credentials their pharmacy. HealthRX names Manifest Pharmacy specifically. FormBlends and Henry Meds also operate under this model. Anonymous sourcing at a low price is a different risk profile than named, credentialed sourcing at the same price.

Sources

  • FDA: 503A compounding pharmacy regulations and 2026 warning letters (fda.gov)
  • SURMOUNT-1 tirzepatide trial, NEJM 2022 (Jastreboff et al.)
  • STEP 1 semaglutide trial, NEJM 2021 (Wilding et al.)
  • LegitScript pharmacy certification database (legitscript.com)
  • Novo Nordisk settlement announcement, March 2026 (public press release)
  • LillyDirect orforglipron pricing, April 2026 (Eli Lilly public announcement)

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