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Provider Review · #6 of 10 · Updated July 2026

Henry Meds Review 2026: Cost, Pharmacy & Verdict

Henry Meds ranks #6 in our 2026 compounded GLP-1 comparison. It's the format-flexible, low-cost pick — injection, oral, and sublingual options with no membership fee. The catches are a BBB F rating, a Trustpilot listing flagged for suspected inauthentic reviews, quiz-gated pricing with a $100 dose upcharge, and a confirmed Eli Lilly lawsuit. Compounded medication is not FDA-approved.

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 readers enroll with providers we feature, including MaxLife, which we rank #1 above Henry Meds. We score every provider on the same published rubric using public information; this is not an impartial review.
Our verdict · Best for format flexibility
6.8
/10

Henry Meds offers among the lowest prices and the most formats, offset by real trust concerns. No membership, month-to-month, and injection, oral, and sublingual options are genuine draws. But it carries a BBB F rating with 100% complaint non-response, a Trustpilot listing flagged for suspected inauthentic reviews, quiz-gated pricing with a $100 dose upcharge, and a confirmed Eli Lilly lawsuit over oral compounded tirzepatide.

Henry Meds at a glance

Henry Meds — quick facts
Category:
Telehealth weight-loss (GLP-1)
Medication:
Compounded semaglutide, tirzepatide & liraglutide (not FDA-approved)
Formats:
Injection, oral, sublingual
Advertised from:
"From $179" (real pricing gated behind intake quiz)
Semaglutide:
Injectable ~$297–397/mo · oral ~$249–349/mo
Tirzepatide:
Oral ~$349–449/mo
Membership fee:
None · but +$100/mo dose upcharge; prepay non-refundable
Pharmacy:
Names Hallandale Pharmacy (PCAB 503A, FL); multiple partners
Trustpilot:
~4.5 / 5 · ~12,500 (listing flagged for suspected inauthentic reviews)
BBB:
F rating, not accredited, 100% complaint non-response
Clinical model:
Quick questionnaire + provider video (Doxy) or async; NP/PA prescribers
Regulatory note:
Eli Lilly lawsuit confirmed (see below); FDA letter status unconfirmed

Pros and cons

What we like

  • Among the lowest compounded prices in our comparison
  • No membership fee
  • Multiple formats: injection, oral, and sublingual
  • Month-to-month, no long commitment
  • Names a PCAB-accredited pharmacy partner (Hallandale)

Trade-offs to know

  • BBB F rating, not accredited, 100% complaint non-response
  • Trustpilot listing flagged for suspected inauthentic reviews
  • Billing-after-cancellation and unresponsive-support complaints
  • Pricing gated behind a quiz, plus a $100/mo dose upcharge
  • Delivery delays reported; Eli Lilly lawsuit; not FDA-approved

Scorecard

Scored on the same five-criterion rubric we apply to every provider. Weights in parentheses.

Pricing transparency (25%)6.8
Pharmacy disclosure (25%)7.5
Reviews & volume (20%)5.5
Clinical oversight (15%)7.0
Support & guarantee (15%)5.0

Pricing: low, but gated

Henry Meds has no membership fee and advertises pricing "from $179," but the real number is gated behind an intake quiz and a $100/mo dose upcharge applies as your dose escalates. Reported figures include injectable compounded semaglutide around $297–397/mo, oral around $249–349/mo, oral compounded tirzepatide around $349–449/mo, and liraglutide around $179/mo. Prepayments are non-refundable. The headline is among the lowest in our comparison, but the quiz gate and dose upcharge make the true cost harder to predict. Verify current pricing on henrymeds.com.

Pharmacy & sourcing

Henry Meds names Hallandale Pharmacy, a PCAB-accredited 503A facility in Florida — a transparency point in its favor. However, it uses multiple pharmacy partners and does not pre-disclose which fills a given order. Because compounded drugs are not FDA-approved, the specific pharmacy is a key sourcing signal, so a named-but-not-per-order model is stronger than silence but weaker than full per-order disclosure. Verify current details directly with Henry Meds.

Reviews & reputation

Henry Meds shows a Trustpilot rating around 4.5 across roughly 12,500 reviews, but that listing has been flagged by Trustpilot for suspected inauthentic or incentivized reviews, so treat the score cautiously. Its BBB profile is an F rating, not accredited, with 100% complaint non-response. Reported negatives cluster around billing after cancellation, unresponsive support, and delivery delays. Because the two signals diverge sharply, we weight them together and check current listings.

Clinical model

Henry Meds uses a quick questionnaire plus a provider video visit (via Doxy) or async intake, with NP and PA prescribers. The video option is a step up from async-only programs. As with any GLP-1 program, a licensed clinician determines whether treatment is appropriate; medication is not guaranteed and individual results vary.

Regulatory context

Eli Lilly has filed a lawsuit against Henry Meds: Eli Lilly and Company v. Adonis Health Inc. d/b/a Henry Meds (case no. 3:25-cv-0353, N.D. Cal., filed April 2025), which challenges oral compounded tirzepatide. We present this as a factual, publicly filed matter, not as a finding of wrongdoing. Any FDA warning-letter status is unconfirmed. Verify the current docket and the live FDA warning-letter database before deciding, as status can change.

Who Henry Meds is best for

Choose Henry Meds if you specifically want oral or sublingual formats at a low price with no membership and can tolerate the trust concerns. Consider our #1 pick instead if you want transparent pricing, a stronger trust record, and no active manufacturer lawsuit — see our MaxLife review.

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®. The GLP-1 Guide is not affiliated with Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly. Individual results vary and are not guaranteed. Competitor figures are sourced from public information (June 2026) and change frequently — verify before deciding.
Medically reviewed by {{Medical Reviewer Name, Credential}} Board-certified · last clinically reviewed July 3, 2026
Researched & written by The GLP-1 Guide editorial team Facts verified against public sources, June 2026

Henry Meds FAQ

How much does Henry Meds really cost?

Henry Meds has no membership fee and advertises pricing "from $179," but real pricing is gated behind an intake quiz and a $100/mo dose upcharge applies as your dose escalates. Reported figures include compounded semaglutide injectable around $297–397/mo, oral around $249–349/mo, oral tirzepatide around $349–449/mo, and liraglutide around $179/mo. Prepayments are non-refundable. Verify current pricing on henrymeds.com.

Does Henry Meds name its compounding pharmacy?

Partly. Henry Meds names Hallandale Pharmacy, a PCAB-accredited 503A facility in Florida, but it uses multiple partners and does not pre-disclose which one fills a given order. Because compounded drugs are not FDA-approved, the specific pharmacy is a key sourcing signal. Verify current details with Henry Meds.

Is Henry Meds FDA-approved?

Henry Meds' compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. Compounded semaglutide is not Ozempic® or Wegovy®; compounded tirzepatide is not Mounjaro® or Zepbound®.