Compounded Semaglutide & Tirzepatide · Updated July 2026

The 10 Best Compounded GLP-1 Providers of 2026

We scored 10 U.S. telehealth providers of compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide on a five-part rubric: price transparency, pharmacy sourcing, review score, clinical oversight, and support. MaxLife ranks first for flat all-in pricing, named pharmacy partners, and a clean regulatory record. Mochi leads on clinical depth; Eden and Ivim on low compounded pricing.

10 providers reviewed No paid placements Rubric-scored, same criteria Pricing verified Jun 2026 Clinician-reviewed
Reviewed by {{Medical Reviewer, Credential}} Last updated July 3, 2026
Advertising disclosure: The GLP-1 Guide is published by Generation Health, LLC and is supported by referral commissions. We may earn a commission when you enroll with a provider we feature here, including MaxLife, our #1-ranked pick. That is a financial interest you should weigh. Every provider is scored on the same published rubric.
Editor's Pick · #1 of 10 · Best overall value
ML MaxLife Compounded · all 50 states · no membership fee
9.2/10

MaxLife wins on the two most heavily weighted criteria in our rubric: it publishes flat, all-in pricing with no membership fee and names its pharmacy partners. Add a 4.4 Trustpilot score, all-50-state coverage, a money-back guarantee, and no lawsuit or FDA warning letter on record, and it is the most transparent option we reviewed.

Flat all-in pricing Names pharmacy partners All 50 states Money-back guarantee Clean regulatory record
Semaglutide
$175/mo
$135/mo on 12-mo plan
Tirzepatide
$195/mo
$150/mo on 12-mo plan

The full ranking

2026 Compounded GLP-1 Provider Rankings

# Provider Score Semaglutide Tirzepatide Names pharmacy Reviews
1
MLMaxLife Top PickNo membership · names pharmacy
9.2
$175/mo$135 (12-mo)
$195/mo$150 (12-mo)
✓ Yes
4.4 ★
~239
Visit →
2
MoMochi HealthVideo visits + dietitian
7.6
$99/mo+ $79 membership
$199/mo+ membership
Not named
4.4 ★
~15.6k
Review
3
TrTrimRxFlat all-in + guarantee
7.3
$199/mo$174 (12-mo)
$349/mo$283 (12-mo)
Not named
3.4 ★
verify
Review
4
EdEdenLicensed 503A · no membership
7.1
$229/mo$149 first mo
$329/moverify live
Not named
verify
Review
5
ivIvim HealthIndividualized dosing
6.9
from $7512-mo + $75 mbr
from $13312-mo + mbr
Not named
verify
Review
6
HHenry MedsOral & sublingual formats
6.8
inj $297+oral fr $249
oral $349+verify live
✓ Hallandale
4.5 ★‡
~12.5k
Review
7
ZZealthyInsurance coordination
6.6
$151/mo3-mo + $135 mbr
$216/mo3-mo + membership
Not named
verify
Review
8
WWillowFlat price · no dose upcharge
6.4
$299/moflat
$299–549by dose
Not named
verify
Review
9
FeFella HealthMen-focused program
6.2
$299/mo$99 (12-mo)
$399/mo$199 (12-mo)
Not named
verify
Review
10
EmEmergeDose-tiered · no membership
6.0
Not offeredtirz-only
$287–419by dose
✓ Named
verify
Review

Scores follow our published rubric: pricing transparency (25%), pharmacy disclosure (25%), review score & volume (20%), clinical oversight (15%), support & guarantee (15%). Provider pricing and review figures were sourced June 2026 and change frequently — verify on each provider's own site before deciding.
‡ Henry Meds' Trustpilot listing has been flagged for suspected incentivized reviews. Where a provider does not publicly name its current compounding pharmacy, we mark it "Not named." "Verify" means the figure was not confirmable to a primary source at publication.

Compounded medication notice: Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. They are prepared by U.S.-licensed compounding pharmacies when a licensed provider determines treatment is appropriate. Compounded semaglutide is not Ozempic® or Wegovy®; compounded tirzepatide is not Mounjaro® or Zepbound®. MaxLife is not affiliated with Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly.

Why MaxLife ranks #1

The transparency case, criterion by criterion

Pricing transparency (25%) — leads the field

MaxLife publishes one flat price per medication with no separate membership fee and no per-dose upcharge: $175/mo semaglutide ($135 on a 12-month plan) and $195/mo tirzepatide ($150 on 12 months). Several higher-volume competitors bill a membership on top of the medication (Mochi $79, Ivim ~$75, Zealthy $135) or gate the real number behind an intake quiz (Henry Meds).

Pharmacy disclosure (25%) — names its partners

Because compounded drugs are not FDA-approved, the pharmacy is the main quality signal. MaxLife names its licensed U.S. pharmacy partners; seven of the ten providers here do not publicly name their current compounding pharmacy, which removes the patient's ability to verify sourcing.

Reviews & record (20%) — strong rating, clean docket

MaxLife holds a 4.4 Trustpilot score. As of June 2026 it has no manufacturer lawsuit or FDA warning letter on record — a meaningful signal in a category under active regulatory scrutiny, where several ranked providers face litigation or documented safety actions.

Honest trade-offs. MaxLife's review base (~239) is far smaller than Mochi's (~15.6k) or Henry Meds' (~12.5k). Its medication is compounded, which is not FDA-approved. Patients who want an FDA-approved branded medication or insurance billing may prefer a branded program — see the note below.

Clinical evidence

What the trials of the FDA-approved drugs showed

Compounded versions have not been studied in these trials. The figures below are for the branded, FDA-approved molecules and are provided as context. Individual results vary and are not guaranteed.

MoleculeTrialAvg. weight lossDuration
Semaglutide (Wegovy®)STEP 1 · NEJM 2021~15%68 weeks
Tirzepatide (Zepbound®)SURMOUNT-1 · NEJM 2022up to ~24.3%72 weeks

Trials paired medication with diet and exercise. Sources: Wilding et al., NEJM 2021 (STEP 1); Jastreboff et al., NEJM 2022 (SURMOUNT-1).

Our method

How we rank providers

Every provider is scored on the same five criteria, weighted by how much they affect a patient's outcome and wallet:

  • Pricing transparency (25%) — flat all-in pricing vs. hidden membership or dose fees.
  • Pharmacy disclosure (25%) — does the provider name its compounding pharmacy and offer testing documentation?
  • Review score & volume (20%) — verified ratings across Trustpilot, BBB, and app stores.
  • Clinical oversight (15%) — video vs. async visits, dietitian access, monitoring.
  • Support & guarantee (15%) — responsiveness, refund terms, results guarantee.
Advertising disclosure: The GLP-1 Guide is published by Generation Health, LLC and earns referral commissions from providers we feature, including MaxLife, our #1-ranked pick. We score every provider on the identical rubric and disclose real trade-offs, but you should weigh our financial interest. We do not present this site as impartial.
Prefer FDA-approved branded medication? This ranking covers compounded GLP-1 programs. Providers such as Ro and Hims & Hers now focus on branded, FDA-approved medications (Wegovy®, Zepbound®) with insurance navigation, following 2025–2026 industry settlements — a different path, at typically higher cash prices. We compare those in our provider guides.
Medically reviewed by {{Medical Reviewer Name, Credential}} Board-certified · last clinically reviewed July 3, 2026
Researched & written by The GLP-1 Guide editorial team Pricing verified against provider sites, June 2026

Frequently asked questions

Which compounded GLP-1 provider is best in 2026?

It depends on your priorities. For transparent flat pricing, named pharmacy sourcing, and a clean regulatory record, MaxLife ranks first among the 10 compounded providers here. Mochi stands out for included video visits and a registered dietitian; Eden and Ivim for low compounded pricing; Henry Meds for oral and sublingual formats.

Is compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide FDA-approved?

No. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. They are prepared by U.S.-licensed compounding pharmacies when a licensed provider determines treatment is appropriate. Compounded semaglutide is not Ozempic® or Wegovy®; compounded tirzepatide is not Mounjaro® or Zepbound®.

Why does pharmacy transparency matter for compounded GLP-1?

Because compounded medications are not FDA-approved, the compounding pharmacy is the primary quality signal. Providers that name their pharmacy partner and can supply a certificate of analysis (potency, sterility) give patients a way to verify what they're injecting. Seven of the ten providers here do not publicly name their current pharmacy.

How much does compounded semaglutide cost per month?

Among the providers here, semaglutide programs run from roughly $99 to $299 per month, though several add a separate membership fee (Mochi, Ivim, Zealthy) and some gate exact pricing behind an intake form (Henry Meds). Figures were sourced in mid-2026 and change frequently; confirm current pricing and exactly what's included on each provider's own site.

What's the difference between a 503A and a 503B pharmacy?

A 503A pharmacy compounds patient-specific prescriptions under state board of pharmacy oversight. A 503B outsourcing facility registers with the FDA and follows federal cGMP standards, allowing larger-batch production under more oversight. Neither status makes a compounded drug FDA-approved.

Is this an independent review site?

The GLP-1 Guide is published by Generation Health, LLC, which is not owned by MaxLife. It is affiliate-supported: we earn a referral commission when you enroll with providers we feature, including MaxLife, which we rank #1. Because of that financial interest, we do not present our rankings as impartial — we score every provider on the same published rubric and disclose trade-offs. Verify current details on each provider's own site.