The market is messier than the ads suggest. A Novo Nordisk settlement in early 2026 pushed a wave of telehealth brands off compounded semaglutide entirely, and the FDA sent warning letters to more than 30 companies over how they were marketing compounded GLP-1s. So “nationwide GLP-1 telehealth” now means wildly different things depending on which brand you land on. Here is how I sort them.
Best If You Want More Than Just a GLP-1
1. FormBlends
Most weight-loss telehealth platforms are GLP-1 only. FormBlends is not. A licensed physician reviews your intake, a prescription goes to a compounding pharmacy partner, and from there you can get semaglutide or tirzepatide alongside a full peptide catalog that includes recovery, cognitive, and longevity compounds, all under the same clinical roof. That combination is genuinely rare. All costs are posted upfront before you ever create an account, no membership stacked on top of a medication fee. Each batch goes through three independent quality checks, and FormBlends publishes the actual purity percentages by product: semaglutide comes in at 99.1%, tirzepatide at 99.3%. Coverage reaches 47 states with temperature-controlled shipping included. The compounded medications are not FDA-approved, and the non-GLP-1 peptides are mostly supported by preclinical or early-stage human data, so temper expectations accordingly. But for someone who wants one prescriber-supervised source for GLP-1 therapy plus broader peptide work, nothing else I’ve seen is set up quite this way.

Best for Brand-Name Meds and Insurance Navigation
2. Hims & Hers
After exiting compounded semaglutide following the 2026 settlement, Hims & Hers moved new patients fully onto branded drugs. Wegovy injectable runs around $299 a month cash; with commercial insurance and a savings card, it can drop to near zero. The interface is well-built and getting started takes only a few minutes.
3. Ro Body
Ro’s prior-authorization team is the main draw here. If you have insurance and want someone to fight for coverage on Wegovy or Zepbound, Ro has the infrastructure for it. Month-to-month access runs roughly $149 after the first month, medication billed on top.
4. PlushCare
Same-day telehealth appointments for about $19.99 a month in membership fees, prescribing branded FDA-approved options only. Good if you already have insurance and just need a fast, legitimate prescriber visit.
Best for Low-Cost Compounded Programs
5. Mochi Health
Compounded semaglutide around $99 a month, compounded tirzepatide around $199. What sets Mochi apart from most budget options is that they staff board-certified obesity-medicine specialists rather than general clinicians. More clinical monitoring than you typically get at this price point.
6. Henry Meds
Speed is Henry’s signature. Shipping often hits within 24 to 72 hours, which is unusually fast for compounded injectables. Cash-pay, light-touch monitoring. First month typically lands between $179 and $249.
7. MEDVi
No contracts, no membership fees. Physician review and around-the-clock support are included in the base program at roughly $179 for the first month. Clean, uncomplicated structure.
8. Eden
Straightforward compounded semaglutide at about $149 a month cash. Not a lot of bells and whistles. Sometimes that is exactly what someone wants.
Best for Coaching-Heavy, Behavior-Change Programs
9. Calibrate
A 12-month commitment with a program fee separate from medication costs. Heavy emphasis on metabolic coaching and insurance navigation. Best fit for someone who wants structured accountability alongside their prescription.
10. Form Health
Physician plus registered dietitian, highly personalized, around $299 a month before labs and medication. Premium pricing for premium attention. Makes sense if you’re insured and want clinical depth.

Best for Flexible, Low-Entry Access
11. Sesame (Success by Sesame)
Marketplace pricing keeps the floor low, roughly $59 a month on an annual plan, with telehealth visits and unlimited messaging included and medication billed separately. Good for someone who wants to keep costs transparent and modular.
Nationwide GLP-1 access has never been easier to find. Choosing the right version of it still takes some thought. Before starting any GLP-1 program or compounded peptide regimen, get your own metabolic panel reviewed by someone who actually knows your history. An online intake form is not a substitute for that.
Sources
- FDA, 2026 warning letters on compounded GLP-1 marketing (FDA.gov)
- Examine.com, semaglutide and tirzepatide research summaries
- GoodRx, branded GLP-1 pricing data
- Drugs.com, drug information for semaglutide and tirzepatide
- Cleveland Clinic, obesity medicine and GLP-1 overview
- Verywell Health, telehealth and weight-loss medication coverage guides
- Healthline, GLP-1 agonist explainer and comparison content
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