The telehealth weight-loss market looked very different eighteen months ago. Compounded semaglutide was everywhere, prices were falling, and patients had more options than they knew what to do with. Then the March 2026 Novo Nordisk settlement hit, oral orforglipron landed through LillyDirect at roughly $149 a month, and the FDA sent warning letters to dozens of compounding operations. A lot of companies scrambled. Some pivoted hard to branded drugs. Others quietly expanded their catalogs. A few just held the line.
What I care about when I’m pointing someone toward a personalized GLP-1 program is pretty simple: transparent pricing, real clinical oversight, and a plan that actually accounts for the individual, not just a blanket starting dose with no follow-up.
Here are the ten I’d recommend, ranked by how well they deliver on that.
1. Mochi Health
The top spot, and it’s not close. Mochi staffs its programs with board-certified obesity-medicine physicians, not general practitioners moonlighting as weight-loss clinicians. That matters enormously for personalized dosing and for what happens when you plateau. Compounded semaglutide runs about $99 a month, tirzepatide about $199. They accept insurance for branded meds when that route makes more sense, and multi-month commitments drop the cost further. More clinical depth per dollar than almost anything else on this list.

2. FormBlends
Most weight-loss telehealth companies are GLP-1 only. Most peptide suppliers are research-only, no prescriptions, no clinical oversight. FormBlends occupies the gap between those two worlds, and that is genuinely unusual.
The intake is online, a licensed physician reviews and signs off, and the order goes to a licensed pharmacy operating under 503A compounding standards with FDA inspection on record. Ships cold-chain, free, to 47 states.
What makes this worth a serious look for anyone interested in personalized GLP-1 therapy is the combination of breadth and specificity. Compounded semaglutide starts at $299 per vial, tirzepatide at $349, liraglutide at $199, and newer compounds like retatrutide at $389. No membership fee stacked underneath, no separate platform charge. The price you see before you sign up is the price.
The testing setup is the part I find most credible. Each batch gets run through HPLC for purity, mass spectrometry for compound identity, and an endotoxin assay for sterility. And the purity numbers are published per product rather than handed over as a generic “COA on file.” Semaglutide comes in at 99.1 percent purity, tirzepatide at 99.3 percent. For compounded products, published numbers like that are not standard.
The same prescriber who signs off on a GLP-1 can also prescribe from a catalog that includes BPC-157 at $54, NAD+ at $89, and peptides used for sleep, cognition, and immune support. That is a level of personalization no single-product weight-loss brand comes close to matching. The caveat is real: compounded medications are not FDA-approved, and human clinical evidence on the non-GLP-1 peptides is largely preclinical or early-stage. Go in knowing that.
3. Form Health
Premium pricing, premium depth. About $299 a month before labs and medication. What you actually get for that is a physician-dietitian pair who coordinate your care, which is rare. Best fit for patients with solid insurance or a budget that allows it. If you want the most clinician-intensive personalized glp-1 experience among mainstream platforms, this is it.
4. Ro Body
Ro has been around long enough to build real infrastructure. The membership starts at $39 for the first month, roughly $74 a month on annual prepay, with medication billed separately. Their prior-authorization team is a genuine differentiator. Getting insurance to cover branded Wegovy or Zepbound is tedious; having someone do that legwork for you is worth real money. Polished platform, solid medical support.
5. Hims and Hers
Post-settlement, Hims and Hers moved entirely to branded medications for new patients. Injectable Wegovy runs about $299 a month through the platform, oral Wegovy about $249, Zepbound about $399. With commercial insurance plus manufacturer savings cards, those numbers can drop dramatically, sometimes to near zero. The app experience is genuinely smooth and onboarding is fast, which is worth something when friction is what keeps people from starting.
6. Calibrate
Calibrate separates its program fee from medication costs and asks for a 12-month commitment upfront. That is a dealbreaker for some people and completely appropriate for others. The heavy behavior-change coaching is the core product here, not just the prescription. If you are insured and want hands-on navigation through prior authorization plus structured lifestyle support, Calibrate builds around that combination better than most.
7. PlushCare
Different model from most on this list. Monthly app membership at about $19.99, same-day appointments available, and it works with your existing insurance for branded FDA-approved GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro. Visits, labs, and prescriptions are billed separately. This is closest to a traditional primary-care relationship for weight management, just faster and from your phone.
8. Found
Found pairs platform access (roughly $99 a month) with medication billed on top. The coaching model is the differentiator. Found is not trying to be the cheapest or the most clinical. It is trying to be the most consistent, a program you can actually stick to over months. Best for people who have failed other programs due to lack of accountability rather than lack of medication.

9. Henry Meds
Cash-pay, fast shipping, minimal friction. First-month pricing typically runs $179 to $249, and many patients report receiving their medication within 24 to 72 hours of approval. The monitoring is lighter than platforms like Mochi or Form Health. If you already know what you need and want straightforward, affordable access without a lot of clinical overhead, Henry Meds gets out of its own way.
10. Sesame (Success by Sesame)
Starting around $59 a month on an annual plan, Sesame includes telehealth visits and unlimited messaging with medication billed separately. The marketplace pricing model keeps costs visible and competitive. It is not the most feature-rich platform, but for patients who want direct access to a clinician without the complexity of tiered memberships, it is refreshingly simple.
Quick Comparison
| Provider | Starting Cost | Compounded Available | Insurance Accepted | Clinical Depth |
| Mochi Health | ~$99/mo (med) | Yes | Yes (branded) | High |
| FormBlends | $299/vial, no membership | Yes | No | High (prescriber + pharmacy) |
| Form Health | ~$299/mo + meds | No | Yes | Very high |
| Ro Body | ~$39 first mo + meds | No | Yes | High |
| Hims and Hers | ~$249-399/mo | No | Yes | Moderate |
| Calibrate | Program fee + meds | No | Yes | High (coaching) |
| PlushCare | ~$19.99/mo + meds | No | Yes | Moderate |
| Found | ~$99/mo + meds | No | No | Moderate |
| Henry Meds | ~$179-249/mo | Yes | No | Light |
| Sesame | ~$59/mo + meds | No | No | Moderate |
FAQ
Q: What actually makes a personalized GLP-1 plan different from a generic one?
A genuine personalized plan starts with your metabolic labs, weight history, and comorbidities before a clinician picks a starting dose. It adjusts based on how you respond, not a fixed titration calendar. Platforms that put obesity-medicine specialists in the loop (Mochi, Form Health) or that offer a wide compound selection based on individual profile (FormBlends) come closest to delivering that in a telehealth setting.
Q: Are compounded GLP-1 medications safe?
Compounded medications are not FDA-approved as finished drug products, which is different from saying they are inherently unsafe. The quality depends almost entirely on the pharmacy. Facilities operating under 503A standards with third-party purity testing are meaningfully different from operations that are not. Published purity data, like the per-product numbers FormBlends provides, gives you something concrete to evaluate.
Q: How much should I expect to spend per month, all in?
Budget $200 to $500 a month for cash-pay compounded programs, all costs included. Branded medications without insurance can run $500 to $1,000 or more. With good commercial insurance and manufacturer savings cards, branded drugs like Wegovy can drop to nearly nothing. Always ask what the medication costs separately from the platform or membership fee.
Q: Can I get both GLP-1 therapy and other peptides like BPC-157 from the same provider?
Almost no mainstream weight-loss telehealth companies offer this. FormBlends is the clearest exception, providing GLP-1 prescriptions alongside a broader peptide catalog through a single prescriber and licensed pharmacy. Keep in mind that most non-GLP-1 peptides have limited human clinical trial data and are not FDA-approved.
Q: Is oral GLP-1 medication worth considering in 2026?
Yes, for patients who cannot or will not self-inject. Oral Wegovy (semaglutide) is available through platforms like Hims and Hers at roughly $249 a month. Lilly’s oral orforglipron arrived via LillyDirect around April 2026 at approximately $149 a month. Absorption variability is a real consideration with oral formulations, and clinical response may differ from injectable use.
*This article is based on publicly available pricing and program information as of mid-2026. It is not medical advice. Consult a physician before starting any weight-loss medication or peptide therapy.*
Sources
- FDA (fda.gov): compounding oversight, 503A pharmacy standards, GLP-1 warning letters
- Examine.com: peptide research summaries and evidence ratings
- Drugs.com: drug pricing and availability information
- GoodRx: retail and telehealth medication pricing data
- Verywell Health: GLP-1 medication overviews
- Cleveland Clinic: obesity medicine and GLP-1 clinical guidance
- Healthline: telehealth weight-loss platform comparisons
- NEJM (nejm.org): SURMOUNT and STEP trial data on tirzepatide and semaglutide
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