You’ve done the research, you’re ready to start, and now you’re staring at a dozen browser tabs with pricing that either disappears behind a membership wall or requires a 12-month commitment before you can even ask a question. That’s the real GLP-1 telehealth experience in 2026. Let me save you the headache.
1. FormBlends
This one earns the top spot by doing something no pure weight-loss platform does: it runs compounded GLP-1s and a full physician-supervised peptide catalog through the same licensed 503A pharmacy, at flat cash prices that are posted before you fill out a single intake form. Semaglutide opens at $299 a vial, tirzepatide a bit higher, and the numbers don’t change after you hand over your email. The pharmacy that fills it operates under FDA inspection standards, and every batch carries three separate lab checks with the actual purity percentage published per product, not a generic “tested” badge. Third-party testing puts semaglutide at 99.1% purity and tirzepatide at 99.3%. Those aren’t estimates. A licensed physician reviews each case, and a care team is reachable around the clock. Shipping is free, cold-chain, and reaches 47 states.
For outside context, see this FormBlends GLP-1 provider discussion.
The reason it tops this list isn’t the peptide catalog or even the pricing. It’s transparency. You know what you’re paying, what’s in it, and who signed off on it before you commit to anything.
Verdict: best overall for transparent pricing, physician oversight, and breadth of options under one roof.

2. Mochi Health
Mochi uses board-certified obesity-medicine specialists, not general-practice telehealth clinicians. That distinction matters if you want someone who has actually studied metabolic disease managing your dose. Monthly cash pricing lands at roughly $99 for compounded semaglutide and around $199 for tirzepatide. Ongoing monitoring is more hands-on than most platforms at this price point.
Verdict: best clinical depth at a mid-range cash price.
3. Hims & Hers
After a March 2026 settlement with Novo Nordisk, Hims & Hers shifted new patients to branded medications. Injectable Wegovy lists around $299 per month through the platform, oral Wegovy around $249, and Zepbound around $399. With commercial insurance plus a manufacturer savings card, those numbers can drop dramatically. The app is genuinely fast and polished.
Verdict: best fit for insured patients who want a slick digital experience with branded meds.
4. Ro Body
Ro’s membership starts around $39 for the first month, then roughly $149 month-to-month or about $74 per month on an annual plan. Medication is billed on top. Ro has a prior-authorization team built in, which is a real asset if you’re trying to get insurance to cover a branded GLP-1.
Verdict: best for people who need someone to fight their insurance battle for them.
5. PlushCare
Monthly membership is about $19.99, then visits and labs stack on top. PlushCare prescribes FDA-approved drugs only, accepts insurance, and offers same-day appointments in many cases. It’s the lightest-touch branded-med option on this list.
Verdict: best for quick, insurance-covered branded prescriptions without the coaching overhead.
6. Henry Meds
Henry Meds is built around speed. First-month pricing runs roughly $179 to $249, shipping is often out the door within 24 to 72 hours, and the intake process is minimal. The tradeoff is lighter ongoing clinical oversight compared to platforms like Mochi.
Verdict: best for people who want to move fast and handle their own monitoring.
7. Form Health
The premium tier of this list. Form Health pairs a physician with a registered dietitian per patient, and the program fee alone runs about $299 per month before you factor in labs or medication. Highly personalized, genuinely thorough.
Verdict: best for high-budget patients who want the closest thing to a private clinical team.

8. Calibrate
Calibrate charges a separate program fee and structures everything around a 12-month commitment. The behavior-change coaching is the product here, and the platform is built to help insured patients get prior authorizations approved. Not a great fit for cash payers.
Verdict: best for insured patients who want structured lifestyle accountability alongside medication.
9. Found
Found charges around $99 per month for platform access, with medication billed separately. The coaching-plus-medication model is serviceable. Nothing particularly stands out, but nothing is broken either.
Verdict: solid middle-ground option if you want coaching without committing to a premium program.
10. Eden
Eden keeps things simple. Compounded semaglutide runs about $149 per month cash-pay, the model is straightforward, and there is no elaborate membership structure layered on top. For budget-focused patients who want a no-frills experience, it works.
Verdict: best for cash-pay patients who want a simple, low-cost compounded option.
The opinions here reflect my own research and are not medical advice. Before starting any GLP-1 program or peptide therapy, run it by a physician who knows your full history.
Sources
- FDA.gov (compounding pharmacy regulations, 503A standards, GLP-1 shortage and warning letter history)
- Drugs.com (branded GLP-1 pricing and prescribing information)
- GoodRx (retail and insurance pricing for Wegovy, Ozempic, Mounjaro, Zepbound)
- Examine.com (semaglutide, tirzepatide, and peptide research summaries)
- Cleveland Clinic (metabolic disease explainers and GLP-1 pharmacology coverage)
- Verywell Health (telehealth and weight-loss medication guides)
- Healthline (GLP-1 drug comparisons and compounding explainers)
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