Top 10 Lowest-Cost GLP-1 Providers, Ranked and Compared (July 2026)
This is the full picture: 6 providers with clean FDA records and verified pricing, plus 4 more that are worth knowing about but currently carry an active FDA warning letter for misleading marketing claims. We show all 10 so you can compare broadly — but we're upfront about which is which, and we don't rank flagged providers above clean ones just because a number looks lower.
All 10, At a Glance
| Provider | Lowest Price | Format | FDA Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Telos Rx | $49/mo* | Injectable sema/tirz, oral tirz | Clean |
| GobyMeds | $99/mo | Injectable sema | Clean |
| MadeMed | $99/mo | Oral sema | Clean |
| Wellorithm | $147/mo | Semaglutide | Clean |
| Yucca Health | $175/mo | Injectable sema | Clean |
| Care Bare Rx | $179/mo | Injectable sema/tirz | Clean |
| Sprout Health | $155/mo** | Injectable sema/tirz | FDA letter 9/2025 |
| Direct Meds | $179/mo** | Oral/sublingual sema | FDA letter 9/2025 |
| MEDVi | $179/mo** | Injectable/oral sema | FDA letter 2/2026 |
| Strut Health | $99/mo** | Oral sema lozenge | FDA letter 2/2026 |
*Requires 12-month prepay. **Promotional/first-month rate — see individual sections below for what the price reverts to.
The 6 Clean Options
All six below have no active FDA warning letter as of this update, and every price is verified directly against the provider's own pricing page. For full detail on the top 5 of these, see our complete Top 5 breakdown — recaps below.
1. Telos Rx
2. GobyMeds
3. MadeMed
4. Wellorithm
5. Yucca Health
6. Care Bare Rx
Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved for safety, effectiveness, or quality. Care Bare Rx's oral availability is unconfirmed as of this update — the price above is for injectable only; ask directly if you need an oral option.
4 More Options — FDA Disclosure Required
These four providers currently have an active FDA warning letter for misleading marketing — most commonly, claims that implied their compounded products are FDA-approved, or that the company itself compounds the medication when a separate pharmacy actually does. We're including them here for a complete comparison, but we don't feature them as recommended picks, and we'd encourage you to read the actual FDA letter (searchable at fda.gov) before enrolling with any of them.
Sprout Health
Pricing shown is a 3-month plan promotional rate. Confirm the standard ongoing rate before enrolling — it is higher than the promotional price shown here.
Visit Sprout Health Paid linkDirect Meds
The oral/sublingual format is the cheapest option here; injectable pricing is substantially higher. All-inclusive of telehealth consultation and delivery per the provider's published rate.
Visit Direct Meds Paid linkMEDVi
MEDVi's advertised prices are first-month intro rates. Every tier increases substantially after the intro period — confirm the ongoing rate before enrolling, not just the price on the landing page.
Visit MEDVi Paid linkStrut Health
Strut has the lowest raw advertised numbers of any provider we checked, including its oral lozenge at $99/mo with auto-refill. Given the nature of the FDA citation — mislabeling who actually compounds the product — we'd suggest asking Strut directly to name and confirm the actual compounding pharmacy before enrolling.
Visit Strut Health Paid linkHow we built this list
- Pulled current advertised pricing directly from each provider's official pricing page
- Calculated true lowest monthly cost, including any membership or platform fee
- Cross-referenced every provider against FDA.gov's warning letter database
- Split the list into a clean tier and a disclosure-required tier rather than ranking everyone by price alone — a lower number from a flagged provider doesn't outrank a verified clean provider on this page
Prices in this market change often, and FDA compliance status can change too. If something here looks out of date, let us know and we'll update it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I avoid every provider with an FDA warning letter entirely?
That's a personal risk decision, not something we can tell you. The letters we cite are about marketing and labeling claims — implying FDA approval or misstating who compounds the product — not necessarily about contamination or manufacturing defects. Some people will treat any warning letter as disqualifying; others will read the specific letter and decide it doesn't change their decision. Either way, read the actual letter yourself rather than relying on a summary, including ours.
How is this different from your Top 5 list?
The Top 5 covers only providers with a clean FDA record. This page adds four more providers — some with genuinely low advertised prices — that currently carry an FDA warning letter, so you can see the full market and make your own call rather than relying on us to have found literally everyone.
Why do the "flagged" providers show promotional prices instead of standard rates?
Several of these providers advertise a first-month or short-term promotional rate that reverts to a higher price afterward. We show both where we could verify the reversion price. If only a promotional rate is publicly available, we say so — don't assume the advertised number is what you'll pay every month.