Top 5 Lowest-Cost GLP-1 Providers in July 2026 (Verified Pricing)
A lot of "cheapest GLP-1" lists just repeat whatever number is on a provider's homepage. We didn't do that. Every price below was checked directly against the provider, and every provider was cross-referenced against current FDA warning letter records before it made this list. If a company is under active FDA enforcement for misleading pricing or safety claims, it's not here — no matter how low the advertised number is.
The 5 Lowest Verified Prices Right Now
| # | Provider | Lowest Price | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Telos Rx | $49/mo* | Injectable sema/tirz, oral tirz option |
| 2 | GobyMeds | $99/mo | Injectable semaglutide |
| 3 | MadeMed | $99/mo | Oral semaglutide |
| 4 | Wellorithm | $147/mo | Semaglutide (format varies) |
| 5 | Yucca Health | $175/mo | Injectable semaglutide |
*$49/mo requires a 12-month prepaid commitment. Month-to-month rate is $199/mo. See details below.
1. Telos Rx — From $49/mo
Telos Rx prices flat regardless of dose — the $49/mo rate is the same whether you're on a starting dose or a maintenance dose, as long as you commit to the 12-month plan. That's the cheapest verified rate on this list, but it's a real commitment, not a teaser rate that reverts after month one like some "starting at" ads you'll see elsewhere. If you're not ready to commit to a year, the month-to-month rate of $199 is still competitive.
Telos Rx offers both injectable semaglutide and tirzepatide, plus a needle-free oral tirzepatide option for people who'd rather avoid injections. The company is LegitScript certified.
2. GobyMeds — $99/mo, No Membership Fee
GobyMeds doesn't charge a separate membership or platform fee — the advertised price is the price. It also doesn't increase as you titrate to a higher dose, which is a common hidden cost with other providers. Use code X7X72R at checkout for $25 off your first order, which brings the effective first-month semaglutide price to $74.
GobyMeds also offers NAD+ and Sermorelin for people interested in stacking longevity peptides alongside GLP-1 treatment.
3. MadeMed — Oral Semaglutide From $99/mo
MadeMed is one of the few LegitScript-certified providers offering a genuinely low-cost sublingual (under-the-tongue) option for people who want to avoid injections entirely. Pricing varies with dose within the $99–169 range for semaglutide, so confirm your specific tier at checkout before enrolling.
4. Wellorithm — Semaglutide From $147/mo
Wellorithm bills on a 28-day cycle rather than a calendar month, which is worth noting if you're comparing total annual cost against providers that bill monthly. Confirm whether your specific plan is injectable or oral before enrolling — Wellorithm doesn't clearly publish that split for every dose tier.
5. Yucca Health — Injectable Semaglutide From $175/mo
Yucca Health is injectable-only — there's no oral or sublingual option here, so this pick is best for people specifically looking for a traditional injection. New patients can get up to $400 off, and shipping is free with 2-day delivery advertised.
Why some well-advertised "cheap" providers aren't on this list
Several providers with aggressive low-price marketing are currently under active FDA enforcement for misbranding — claiming or implying their compounded products are FDA-approved, or claiming to be the compounder when they're not. We exclude any provider with a current warning letter from featured rankings, regardless of price. As of July 2026, that includes:
This doesn't necessarily mean these companies' medication is unsafe — the letters cite marketing and labeling claims, not manufacturing defects. But it does mean you should read the actual FDA letter (searchable at fda.gov) before enrolling with any provider on this list, including the ones we've featured, since compliance status can change.
How we built this list
Our ranking process for this article:
- Pulled current advertised pricing directly from each provider's official pricing page
- Calculated the true lowest monthly cost, including any membership or platform fee, not just the medication price
- Cross-referenced every provider against FDA.gov's warning letter database and excluded any provider with an active letter from the top rankings
- Excluded "starting at" or first-month-only promotional prices unless we could confirm what the price reverts to afterward
Prices in this market change often. If you find a provider on this page listing a different rate than what's advertised at checkout, the checkout price is correct — let us know and we'll update this article.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide safe?
Compounded GLP-1 medications are not FDA-approved products, which means they haven't gone through the same safety and efficacy review as brand-name Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or Zepbound. That doesn't automatically make them unsafe, but it does mean the burden is on you to check who's compounding the medication, whether that pharmacy is a licensed 503A or 503B facility, and whether independent testing is available. Ask any provider these questions directly before enrolling.
Why do GLP-1 prices vary so much between providers?
Pricing differences usually come down to a few factors: whether a membership or platform fee is bundled into the price, whether the price is flat across all doses or increases as you titrate up, whether it's an injectable or oral/sublingual format, and how the provider structures commitment length. Longer prepaid commitments (like Telos Rx's 12-month plan) are consistently cheaper per month than paying month-to-month.
What happened with the 2025–2026 FDA warning letters?
Starting in September 2025, the FDA issued warning letters to more than 50 telehealth and compounding companies for misleading marketing around compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide — mainly claims that implied the products were FDA-approved when they aren't, or that a company was the actual compounder of the medication when it wasn't. More letters followed into 2026. We check this list before including any provider in our rankings.
Are 12-month prepaid plans worth it?
If you're confident you'll stay on treatment for a full year and the provider is otherwise a good fit, prepaid annual plans meaningfully lower the effective monthly cost — Telos Rx's $49/mo annual rate versus its $199/mo month-to-month rate is a good example of how large that gap can be. The tradeoff is flexibility: confirm the cancellation and refund policy before committing to a full year.