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Provider Review · #1 of 10 · Updated July 2026

MaxLife Review 2026: Pricing, Pharmacy & Is It Legit?

MaxLife is our #1-ranked compounded GLP-1 provider for 2026. It publishes flat all-in pricing with no membership fee, names its licensed pharmacy partners, serves all 50 states, holds a 4.4 Trustpilot rating, and carries no manufacturer lawsuit or FDA warning letter on record. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. This review is published by Generation Health, LLC, which earns a referral commission when readers enroll with MaxLife.

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. MaxLife is our #1-ranked pick, and we may earn a commission when you enroll with it, scored on the same rubric we apply to every provider. Because of that financial interest, this is not an impartial review, and we include real trade-offs below.
Our verdict · Best overall value
9.2
/10

MaxLife is the most transparent compounded GLP-1 program we reviewed. Flat pricing, named pharmacy partners, and a clean regulatory record win on the two most heavily weighted criteria in our rubric. Its main limits are a smaller review base than the national giants and, like all compounded programs, medication that is not FDA-approved.

MaxLife at a glance

MaxLife — quick facts
Category:
Telehealth weight-loss (GLP-1)
Medication:
Compounded semaglutide & tirzepatide (not FDA-approved)
Semaglutide:
$175/mo · $135/mo on 12-month plan
Tirzepatide:
$195/mo · $150/mo on 12-month plan
Membership fee:
None — all-in pricing
Pharmacy partners:
{{Confirm: Hallandale, Red Rock, Strive}} (named)
Trustpilot:
4.4 / 5 · ~239 reviews
States:
All 50
Clinical model:
Licensed-clinician oversight ({{Confirm: visit type}})
Guarantee:
{{Confirm money-back terms}}
Regulatory record:
No lawsuit or FDA warning letter on record (Jun 2026)

Pros and cons

What we like

  • Flat all-in pricing with no membership fee or per-dose upcharge
  • Names its licensed U.S. pharmacy partners
  • Available in all 50 states
  • 4.4 Trustpilot rating
  • Money-back guarantee
  • No manufacturer lawsuit or FDA warning letter on record

Trade-offs to know

  • Smaller review base (~239) than Mochi (~15.6k) or Henry Meds (~12.5k)
  • Medication is compounded — not FDA-approved
  • No insurance billing (cash-pay)
  • Not the lowest sticker price for semaglutide
  • Some program details ({{visit type}}, {{guarantee terms}}) pending confirmation

Scorecard

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

Pricing transparency (25%)9.8
Pharmacy disclosure (25%)9.2
Reviews & volume (20%)8.4
Clinical oversight (15%)8.6
Support & guarantee (15%)9.4

Pricing: flat and all-in

MaxLife charges one flat price per medication: $175/mo for compounded semaglutide ($135/mo on a 12-month plan) and $195/mo for compounded tirzepatide ($150/mo on 12 months). There is no separate membership fee and no per-dose upcharge as your dose escalates, and the clinician consultation is included. That structure is why MaxLife scores highest on the most heavily weighted rubric criterion: your monthly cost is predictable from day one, unlike programs that advertise a low medication price then add a $79–$135 membership.

Pharmacy & sourcing

Because compounded drugs are not FDA-approved, the compounding pharmacy is the primary quality signal. MaxLife names its licensed U.S. pharmacy partners ({{Confirm: Hallandale, Red Rock, Strive}}), which lets patients verify where their medication is made. MaxLife itself is a telehealth provider, not a compounding pharmacy or drug manufacturer — compounding is performed by its licensed pharmacy partners. Seven of the ten providers in our ranking do not publicly name their current pharmacy.

Reviews & reputation

MaxLife holds a 4.4 / 5 Trustpilot rating across ~239 reviews (June 2026). That's a strong score, though the volume is far smaller than high-scale players like Mochi (~15.6k) — one of the honest trade-offs of a more focused provider. We weight both score and volume, which is why reviews are the one criterion where MaxLife does not lead the field outright.

Clinical model & support

Treatment is prescribed by licensed clinicians with {{Confirm: visit type}} oversight. MaxLife backs the program with responsive support and a {{Confirm money-back guarantee terms}}. As with any GLP-1 program, a clinician determines whether treatment is appropriate; medication is not guaranteed and individual results vary.

Regulatory record

As of June 2026, MaxLife 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. Verify current status against public court dockets and the FDA database before deciding.

Who MaxLife is best for

Choose MaxLife if you want the lowest predictable all-in cost, a provider that names its pharmacy, and a clean regulatory record. Consider another option if you need FDA-approved branded medication (see Ro or Hims & Hers), want to bill insurance, or specifically want the largest possible review history.

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. Individual results vary and are not guaranteed.
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 maxlife.com, June 2026

MaxLife FAQ

Is MaxLife legit?

MaxLife is a telehealth weight-loss provider that connects patients with licensed clinicians and dispenses compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide through licensed U.S. pharmacy partners. It publishes flat pricing, names its pharmacy partners, holds a 4.4 Trustpilot rating, and has no manufacturer lawsuit or FDA warning letter on record as of June 2026. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. This review is published by Generation Health, LLC, which earns a referral commission when readers enroll with MaxLife.

How much does MaxLife cost?

MaxLife charges a flat $175/mo for compounded semaglutide ($135/mo on a 12-month plan) and $195/mo for compounded tirzepatide ($150/mo on a 12-month plan), with no separate membership fee and the consultation included. Confirm current pricing on maxlife.com.

Does MaxLife name its compounding pharmacy?

Yes. MaxLife names its licensed U.S. pharmacy partners, which matters because compounded drugs are not FDA-approved and the pharmacy is the primary quality signal. MaxLife itself is a telehealth provider, not a compounding pharmacy or manufacturer.