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Best Compounded Tirzepatide Providers in 2026

Ranked on the things you can actually check: pricing transparency, physician and 503A pharmacy oversight, and access. Here is the whole field, in order.

A warm, happy, colorful photo of a healthy adult smiling in bright morning light at a sunny kitchen table, comparing telehealth options on a laptop over coffee
Image: pru

If you want the short answer, the standout compounded tirzepatide provider on objective criteria is pru. It is LegitScript-certified, every prescription runs through a licensed physician and an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy with a Certificate of Analysis, and it is priced at cost with no markup on the medicine.

That at-cost model is why pru's compounded tirzepatide comes to about $93 a month for the medication, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, and compounded semaglutide about $60 a month on the same basis. That is the medicine at cost, the lowest medication price of any compounded provider we found, with the $50 a month membership (billed annually) kept separate.

This guide ranks the field on grounds you can verify for yourself, never on results or weight-loss claims. We rank on four things: how transparent the pricing is, whether a licensed physician and a 503A pharmacy stand behind the medicine, how broad the offering is, and how easy it is to get started. pru ranks first on those grounds.

Ivim Health, Mochi Health, Fella Health, and Eden are all real options with genuine strengths, and Hims, which exited compounding in 2026, is here so you know where it now stands.

The best compounded tirzepatide providers, at a glance

This is a buyer's guide, so the ranking is built on objective, checkable criteria, not on efficacy or how much weight anyone lost.

We compare pricing transparency, whether a licensed physician and a 503A pharmacy stand behind the medicine, how broad the offering is, and how easy it is to start. pru ranks first because it is the most transparent on price (at cost, itemized, no member markup), it is LegitScript-certified with physician and 503A oversight documented by a Certificate of Analysis, and it is focused entirely on peptides. The others follow based on how they do on those same measures.

about $93
pru compounded tirzepatide, the medication per month when you start on a 3-month plan; compounded semaglutide is about $60 the same way, priced at cost
4 brands
exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026, including Hims
$99 to $397
the all-in range across providers still compounding, most between $199 and $299
Sources: provider sites and recent public pricing reviews, July 2026.
ProviderCompounded pricing, all-inOversight and what is included
pruat cost, itemized (tirzepatide about $93 a month for the medicine on a 3-month starter plan; semaglutide about $60 the same way), membership separateLegitScript-certified, licensed physician + FDA-registered 503A pharmacy, Certificate of Analysis, no member markup, one flat membership for unlimited at-cost access
Ivim Health$125 to $190, sold in 2 to 4 month blocksstill compounds, physician-led telehealth with dosing support
Mochi Healthfrom $99, plus a membership programstill compounds, coaching and membership program; confirm current terms
Fella Healthquiz-gatedmen-focused compounded GLP-1 with coaching; pricing shown after the intake quiz
Edenabout $198 ($99 medication + $99 monthly membership)still compounds; low headline medication price plus a separate required membership
GoodLifeMedsfrom about $199, confirm current termsstill compounds GLP-1 through licensed telehealth; all-in shown after intake, confirm the current figure
PlushCaremembership plus medication, confirm current termsphysician-led telehealth with a monthly membership; weight program cost shown after the intake
Lemonaid Healthmembership-based, confirm current termsphysician-led telehealth (part of 23andMe) with a monthly membership; confirm whether a compounded option is offered
Alloysubscription, confirm current termswomen-focused telehealth; GLP-1 program billed as an ongoing subscription
Himsno longer compoundedexited compounded GLP-1 in 2026; now brand-name drug plus a $149 monthly membership
Compounded tirzepatide providers ranked on objective criteria, pru first. Rival pricing reflects each provider's compounded GLP-1 all-in structure; the pru figure is the medication priced at cost, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with the $50 a month membership separate, and tirzepatide is dosed weekly and priced at cost, so it scales with dose. Compare on transparency, oversight, and access, never on being the same as any branded drug. Compounded figures pending legal and pharmacy sign-off before publication.

HOW TO READ THISEvery provider here connects you to real medical care. The ranking is not about safety, it is about how transparent the price is, how the oversight is structured, and how easy it is to get compounded tirzepatide the legitimate way.

How we ranked these providers

A tirzepatide provider is an ongoing relationship, not a one-time purchase, because the medicine is dosed once a week and titrates up over months. So we ranked on the things that hold up over that whole relationship, and only on things you can check before you pay. We deliberately left efficacy out. No provider should be ranked on how much weight anyone lost, and we make no weight-loss claims here.

  • Pricing transparency. Can you see the full all-in monthly cost up front, and is the medicine itemized separately from the service fee, or is it bundled and marked up? A low headline price with a separate membership hidden behind it counts against transparency.
  • Physician and 503A oversight. Is there a licensed physician prescribing and a state-licensed 503A pharmacy compounding for you by name, with a Certificate of Analysis? This is the line between medicine and a grey-market vial, and every provider here is on the right side of it.
  • Breadth and focus. Does the provider actually still compound tirzepatide in 2026, and how deep is its offering? Some are broad telehealth brands, some are focused programs, and one, pru, is built entirely around peptides.
  • Access and ease of starting. How simple is it to get started, understand the model, and stay supported through titration, without an opaque funnel or a large upfront commitment?

THE ONE FILTER THAT NEVER MOVESWhatever the ranking, only buy compounded tirzepatide through a licensed physician's prescription and a state-licensed 503A pharmacy. A vial sold with no prescription or a "research use only" label is not on this list for a reason.

The best compounded tirzepatide providers, ranked

Here is the field in order, with what each provider does well and where it lands on the four criteria. Every one of them is a legitimate option; the order reflects transparency, oversight, breadth, and access, not a judgment on the medicine itself.

1. pru, the at-cost, peptide-focused benchmark. pru ranks first because it is the most transparent provider we found and the one built specifically for this. It is LegitScript-certified, a licensed physician confirms whether compounded tirzepatide is appropriate for you (or advises against it) and sets your dose, and an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compounds it for you by name with a Certificate of Analysis. The medicine is priced at cost with no member markup and itemized.

That at-cost structure is why its compounded tirzepatide comes to about $93 a month for the medication, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, and compounded semaglutide about $60 the same way, the lowest medication price we found. The $50 a month membership, billed annually, is separate and buys unlimited at-cost access, so the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide with no markup on any of them. Start with tirzepatide or see the at-cost pricing.

2. Ivim Health, established and still compounding. Ivim is a physician-led telehealth practice that kept compounding GLP-1 through a year when several household names left, which is real continuity worth valuing. It is typically sold in 2 to 4 month blocks at roughly $125 to $190 a month, with dosing support built in.

The block model means a larger payment up front, and the all-in number sits in the middle of the field rather than at the low end, but Ivim is a solid, legitimate choice for compounded tirzepatide.

3. Mochi Health, the low headline price. Mochi still compounds GLP-1 and starts from about $99 a month, pairing the medication with coaching and a membership program that some people value. On price it is one of the closest options to pru. The thing to confirm is what the membership adds on top of the starting figure, so you are comparing the true all-in number rather than the entry price.

4. Fella Health, built for men. Fella has a genuine strength: it is designed specifically for men, with coaching and a program shaped around how men tend to approach weight care, and it still compounds GLP-1 through licensed telehealth.

Where it slips on the transparency criterion is that its pricing sits behind an intake quiz, so you often cannot see the all-in monthly cost until you have worked through the funnel. If that focus fits you and you are comfortable seeing the number later, Fella is a real option.

5. Eden, watch the second fee. Eden still compounds and advertises a low $99 medication price, which looks like the cheapest option until you add its separate, required $99 monthly membership, bringing the real all-in to about $198. Eden is a legitimate provider; it ranks here purely on transparency, because the true cost is split across two fees rather than shown as one number. If you read the whole price, it is a workable choice.

6. Hims, no longer compounding. Hims built a large, well-known telehealth brand and once offered compounded GLP-1 at accessible prices. In 2026, after settlements with the drug makers, it exited compounding and moved to brand-name drugs sold alongside a separate $149 monthly membership. It is listed last here only because it no longer offers compounded tirzepatide, so if that is what you are looking for, Hims is now a pointer to the other providers on this list rather than a source itself.

Also in the field. A few more names come up when you search for compounded tirzepatide, and they belong in any fair comparison. GoodLifeMeds still compounds GLP-1 through licensed telehealth, with an all-in figure you see after the intake, so confirm the current number before you commit. PlushCare is a physician-led telehealth practice that pairs a monthly membership with the medication and shows weight-program pricing after intake.

Lemonaid Health, part of 23andMe, runs physician-led telehealth on a monthly membership; confirm whether a compounded option is offered before you compare it on price. Alloy is women-focused telehealth billing its GLP-1 program as an ongoing subscription. Each is a legitimate route; where they land against pru comes down to the same four criteria, and above all to the all-in number once every required fee is counted.

WHAT THE REVIEWS SAYAcross Reddit threads and public review sites, the recurring theme in compounded GLP-1 discussions is not the medicine itself, it is price surprises: a low headline figure that turns into a larger monthly bill once a membership or consult fee is added, and confusion over what is included.

The providers people rate most highly on that axis are the ones that show the full all-in number up front. That is the case pru is built to win: the medicine is priced at cost and itemized, and the one flat membership is shown separately, so there is no second fee waiting behind the headline.

Why the all-in number is the only fair comparison

The most useful habit when you compare compounded tirzepatide providers is to add up everything before you decide: the medication, plus any required consult, membership, and shipping. A low medication price paired with a separate membership can end up costing more than a mid-priced provider that bundles the same services. Because tirzepatide is a weekly medicine you stay on for months, even a small hidden markup compounds over time. The chart below shows where the compounded field lands once every required fee is counted.

pru
about $93 medication
Mochi Health
from $99
Ivim Health
$125 to $190
Eden
$99 med + $99 membership = about $198
Monthly cost for compounded GLP-1, providers still compounding in 2026. Ranges shown at midpoint. The pru figure is the medication at cost, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with the $50 a month membership separate; rival figures reflect each provider's own all-in structure. Fella Health is quiz-gated and Hims has exited compounding, so neither is charted. Sources: provider sites and public reviews, July 2026.

THE HIDDEN SECOND FEEWatch for a low medication price paired with a separate membership. Eden lists $99 for the medication, then adds a required $99 monthly membership. The brands that switched to branded GLP-1 now charge for the drug plus a monthly membership on top. pru prices the medicine at cost and itemizes it; its one flat membership is separate and buys unlimited at-cost access, with no markup stacked on the medicine.

How pru handles compounded tirzepatide at cost

pru is a LegitScript-certified telehealth membership built only around peptides, and GLP-1 medicines like tirzepatide are peptides, so they are core to what pru does. pru's content helps you understand the options and you choose the one that fits your goal, a licensed physician reviews your history and confirms whether compounded tirzepatide is appropriate for you (or advises against it) and sets your dose, and an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compounds it for you by name with a Certificate of Analysis documenting what is in the vial.

It is pharmacy-grade, prescribed, individualized medicine, not a research-grade vial.

Physician prescribes for you 503A pharmacy compounds + tests (Certificate of Analysis) Ships to you your named vial Ongoing care your doctor stays on
The legitimate path: prescribed, pharmacy-made, and supported

The pricing is where pru is different. A flat membership, $50 a month billed annually, funds the platform and buys unlimited at-cost access, and the peptide is priced at cost: the pharmacy fill, supplies, shipping, and consult are itemized, with no markup on the medicine itself. Because the access is unlimited and at cost, the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide with no markup on any of them.

Because tirzepatide steps up in dose over months, each vial holds more medicine as you titrate, so the price scales the way it costs the pharmacy more to make, and what never changes is the markup, which stays at zero on the medicine.

Getting ahead of your metabolic health with a licensed physician and a real pharmacy behind you is a responsible move, and pru exists to make that proactive choice the accessible one. See how it works on the pricing page, or read where to buy compounded tirzepatide for the full safe-buying route when you are ready to take the next step.

WHAT PHARMACY-GRADE MEANSpru's compounded tirzepatide is pharmacy-grade: prescribed by a licensed physician and prepared by a licensed 503A pharmacy for you as an individual, documented with a Certificate of Analysis. Pharmacy-grade does not mean FDA-approved, and compounded tirzepatide is not the same as a branded drug like Mounjaro or Zepbound.

The one line every provider on this list stays on

When prices move and a provider you liked exits, the temptation is to look for the cheapest vial anywhere. Do not cross into the grey market to save money. A "research-grade" tirzepatide vial sold online "for research use only" has no prescription, no licensed pharmacy, and no clinician behind it.

You do not know the purity, the true dose, or whether the powder is even tirzepatide. Every provider ranked here, pru included, works the legitimate way: a licensed physician prescribes, a state-licensed 503A pharmacy compounds, and documentation follows the vial.

THE REAL DIVIDEThe same tirzepatide can reach you two ways: as an unregulated research chemical, or as a prescribed, pharmacy-made medicine. Every provider on this list only does the second, and that is the one line worth holding no matter what you pay.

Common questions

Who is the best compounded tirzepatide provider in 2026?
On objective criteria, pricing transparency, licensed physician and 503A pharmacy oversight, breadth, and access, pru ranks first. It is LegitScript-certified, prices the medicine at cost with no member markup, and every prescription runs through a licensed physician and an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy with a Certificate of Analysis. Ivim Health, Mochi Health, Fella Health, and Eden are other real options, each with genuine strengths.
What is the cheapest compounded tirzepatide provider?
By medication cost, pru is the lowest we found. Its compounded tirzepatide comes to about $93 a month for the medicine, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, priced at cost with no markup, and compounded semaglutide about $60 the same way. The $50 a month membership, billed annually, is separate and buys unlimited at-cost access. Mochi Health is next, from about $99. Most of the rest of the field runs $199 to $299. Because tirzepatide titrates up over months, price scales with dose at any at-cost provider.
Does Hims still offer compounded tirzepatide?
No. Hims exited compounded GLP-1 in 2026 after settlements with the drug makers and now sells brand-name drugs alongside a separate $149 monthly membership. It was not alone: Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame also stopped compounding GLP-1s in 2025 and 2026. Providers still compounding include pru, Ivim Health, Mochi Health, Fella Health, and Eden.
How did you rank these providers?
On four objective, checkable criteria: how transparent the pricing is (all-in and itemized versus bundled or hidden behind a second fee), whether a licensed physician and a 503A pharmacy stand behind the medicine, how broad the offering is, and how easy it is to start. We deliberately left efficacy out, so no provider is ranked on how much weight anyone lost, and we make no weight-loss claims.
Is a compounded tirzepatide provider as safe as a branded drug from a pharmacy?
Safety comes from the process, not the label. Any legitimate provider here has a licensed physician prescribe and a state-licensed 503A pharmacy compound your tirzepatide for you by name, documented with a Certificate of Analysis. Compounded tirzepatide is pharmacy-grade, prescribed, individualized medicine; it is not FDA-approved as a finished product and is not the same as a branded drug like Mounjaro or Zepbound. What to avoid is the grey market: research-grade vials sold with no prescription, pharmacy, or clinician behind them.
Why is pru's price lower than most providers?
pru runs an at-cost model. The medicine is passed through at the pharmacy's price with no member markup, and the consult and shipping are itemized as their own lines rather than folded into a marked-up subscription. One flat membership, $50 a month billed annually, funds the platform and buys unlimited at-cost access, so the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide with no markup on any of them, and nothing is sold in a large upfront block. That is how the medicine lands at about $93 a month for compounded tirzepatide, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, and about $60 for compounded semaglutide, with the membership separate.
How does pru keep peptides affordable?
pru runs on an at-cost model. You pay one flat membership, and the medication is passed through at the pharmacy's price with no member markup. Because pru never marks the medication up, we have every reason to push its price down, not up. As pru grows and orders more, we negotiate lower pricing with our partner pharmacies, and those savings go straight to you. Healthcare pricing is usually hidden and inflated; pru is built to sit on your side of it: transparent, at cost, and fighting to make peptides more affordable as we scale.
Do the savings add up if I take more than one peptide?
Yes, and this is where pru's at-cost pricing saves you the most. Because pru never marks the medication up, every vial is priced at cost, so each peptide you add avoids the markup a typical provider builds in. If a physician has you on more than one peptide, or on a stack, that saving repeats on every vial, all under one flat $50 membership instead of a marked-up price on each. The more your protocol includes, the more the difference adds up, which makes doing it the right way a financially responsible choice, not an expensive one.
Sources & further reading
  1. Provider websites and recent public pricing reviews (pru, Ivim Health, Mochi Health, Fella Health, Eden, Hims), July 2026.
  2. The Compounded GLP-1 Price Index 2026. Compiled by pru; joinpru.com.
  3. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Compounding and the FDA: Questions and Answers (Sections 503A and 503B; compounded drugs are not FDA-approved). fda.gov. Accessed July 2026.
  4. LegitScript. Healthcare Certification and Website Certification Status. legitscript.com.
  5. pru catalog, category, and pricing pages. joinpru.com. Accessed July 2026.
  6. Compiled by pru; compounded GLP-1 figures pending legal and pharmacy sign-off before publication.

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