The Best PT-141 Providers in 2026
Ranked the way it should be, on objective criteria you can verify: pricing transparency, licensed-physician and 503A pharmacy oversight, focus, and access.
On the objective grounds that actually separate PT-141 providers, at-cost pricing, licensed-physician and FDA-registered 503A pharmacy oversight, a Certificate of Analysis, LegitScript certification, and a focus on peptides, pru ranks first. It is the peptide-focused option that offers PT-141 at cost with one flat membership and no markup on the medicine, backed by a licensed physician and a 503A pharmacy on every fill.
Hims, Ro, and Eden are large, capable telehealth brands with real strengths in reach and breadth, and each is compared fairly below. This is a buyer's guide, so nothing here is ranked on results or efficacy, only on the structural things you can check before you choose. Compounded PT-141 is a pharmacy-grade peptide, not an FDA-approved product, and this page is a draft pending legal and pharmacy sign-off.
The best PT-141 providers, at a glance
The fastest way to compare PT-141 providers is to look at the structure, not the marketing: how pricing is presented, who oversees the prescription, and how focused the provider is on peptides. pru is listed first as the benchmark because it is transparent on all three. The rivals are established, capable platforms with genuine strengths, listed alongside so you can weigh the tradeoffs yourself.
| Provider | Pricing and key facts | What is included |
|---|---|---|
| pru | PT-141 priced at cost, itemized, under one flat membership. Its at-cost model puts compounded semaglutide medication at about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication cost of any compounded provider found. Membership is separate and unlimited. | Licensed physician review, FDA-registered 503A pharmacy fill, Certificate of Analysis, LegitScript-certified, peptide-focused, at-cost and itemized |
| Hims | A large, publicly known telehealth brand with a broad multi-category catalog and a polished app. In 2026 it exited compounded GLP-1 and moved to brand-name drugs. Confirm current PT-141 offering and pricing on its site. | Established telehealth care, wide catalog, strong brand and app experience |
| Ro | An established telehealth platform well known for men's health and a broad catalog. It also exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 in favor of brand-name drugs. Confirm current PT-141 offering and pricing on its site. | Established care model, broad catalog, familiar onboarding |
| Eden | A telehealth brand with a broad catalog that is still compounding in 2026. On GLP-1 it lists a low medication price with a separate required monthly membership, so read the all-in number. Confirm current PT-141 offering and pricing on its site. | Broad catalog, name recognition, compounding still active |
See exactly what pru charges on the pricing page, or view PT-141 from pru directly.
How this guide ranks PT-141 providers
A buyer's guide should rank on things you can verify, not on outcomes. So this guide uses four objective criteria, and nothing about results or efficacy, because compounded peptides are individualized and are not the branded drug.
- Pricing transparency. Is the price of the medicine shown at cost and itemized, or is a low medication figure paired with a separate required membership on another page? The number that matters is all-in.
- Physician and 503A oversight. Does a licensed physician review your history and set your dose, and does an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compound and fill it with a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis?
- Focus. Is the provider built around peptides, or is PT-141 one line in a wide general catalog? Focus tends to track depth of clinical support for the specific therapy.
- Access and trust signals. Is the provider verifiable, for example LegitScript-certified, and is the path to care and support clear?
WHAT WE DO NOT RANK ONThis guide never ranks providers on results, efficacy, or how well PT-141 will work for you. Those depend on the person and the physician, and compounded PT-141 is studied for desire and arousal, not sold as a guaranteed outcome. We rank only on structure you can check.
The providers, compared objectively
Here is each provider on the four criteria, starting with pru as the benchmark. Every one below is a real, established option, and each has genuine strengths worth naming.
- pru (the benchmark). pru is a LegitScript-certified, peptide-focused membership platform. It offers PT-141 at cost with no markup on the medicine, funded by one flat membership, and itemizes every charge so you can see what the therapy actually costs. Its at-cost model is proven: on compounded semaglutide the medication is about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication cost of any compounded provider found, with membership separate and unlimited. A licensed physician confirms fit and sets the dose, and an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compounds and fills it with a Certificate of Analysis. Best for people who want a focused, transparent, at-cost home for the peptide.
- Hims. A large, widely recognized telehealth brand with a broad multi-category catalog and a genuinely polished app and onboarding experience. Its strength is reach and brand familiarity. On the objective criteria here, it is a general platform rather than a peptide specialist, and in 2026 it exited compounded GLP-1 in favor of brand-name drugs, so confirm its current PT-141 offering and how pricing is presented before you compare.
- Ro. An established telehealth platform with a strong reputation in men's health and a broad catalog. Its genuine strength is a mature, familiar care model. Like Hims, it exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 for brand-name drugs, and it is a general provider rather than a peptide-focused one, so check current PT-141 availability and the all-in price on its site.
- Eden. A telehealth brand with a broad catalog that is still compounding in 2026, so it remains an active option. Its strength is reach and name recognition. The tradeoff on the pricing-transparency criterion is structure: on GLP-1 it lists a low medication price with a separate required monthly membership, so read the all-in number rather than the headline. Confirm how it presents PT-141 pricing specifically.
For the deeper how-to-choose version of this, see what to look for in a peptide provider.
Pricing transparency: read the all-in number
The single most common way a PT-141 price looks lower than it is: a low medication figure on one page, and a required membership on another. Across the compounded telehealth field, all-in prices run from about $99 to $397 a month, with most sitting around $199 to $299, and some providers place a low medication price in front of a separate membership fee. The number that matters is the total you actually pay each month.
pru runs the opposite structure. The medicine is passed through at the pharmacy's price with no member markup, and the consult and shipping show as their own line items, funded by one flat membership. There is no second membership stacked behind a low headline. Its at-cost model already produces the lowest medication cost found on compounded semaglutide, about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with membership separate and unlimited, and the same at-cost approach applies to PT-141.
THE HIDDEN SECOND FEEWatch for a low medication price paired with a required membership on a separate line. Total them before you compare. pru keeps one at-cost, itemized number with no second membership hidden behind the headline.
For pru's numbers, see how much does pru cost and the PT-141 cost breakdown.
Oversight: the difference between a provider and a vial
Whatever provider you choose, oversight is where safety starts. A legitimate PT-141 provider connects you to a licensed physician and a licensed 503A pharmacy before any medicine changes hands, and documents the batch with a Certificate of Analysis. A grey-market vial sold "for research use only" has no prescription, no licensed pharmacy, and no clinician behind it. That is the line to stay on the right side of, and operators that sell peptides without a prescription or pharmacy sit on the wrong side of it.
pru clears every part of that bar: LegitScript-certified, a licensed physician who reviews your history and sets your dose, an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy that compounds and fills it, and a Certificate of Analysis that documents what is inside. Hims, Ro, and Eden are all licensed telehealth platforms that use physician oversight as well, which is part of why they are on this list rather than in the grey market. The differences between them come down to focus and pricing transparency, not to whether real medical oversight exists.
THE REAL DIVIDEThe same peptide can reach you two ways: as an unregulated research chemical, or as a prescribed, 503A pharmacy-made medicine documented with a Certificate of Analysis. pru only does the second.
For the detail behind these terms, see LegitScript certification explained and research-grade vs pharmacy-grade peptides.
How pru handles PT-141 at cost
pru is built to be the focused, complete home for peptides. You select PT-141, guided by content like this. A licensed physician then reviews your health, confirms your choice is appropriate for you (or advises against it), and sets your dose. An FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compounds it for you by name and provides a Certificate of Analysis. Then it ships, with clinical support on hand for dosing and side-effect questions.

The part that is different is the money. One flat membership, $50 a month billed annually, funds unlimited at-cost access to the platform and clinician messaging, and PT-141 is priced at cost with no member markup, itemized so you see exactly what the therapy costs.
Because access is unlimited and at cost, the savings compound with every vial, and members can stack more than one peptide without a markup on any of them. Compounded PT-141 is a pharmacy-grade peptide, meaning a physician prescribed it and a licensed 503A pharmacy made it. Compounded PT-141 is not the branded product.
Taking your intimacy and vitality seriously is a responsible thing to do, and pru exists to make that proactive choice the accessible one, with licensed physicians, pharmacy-grade medicine, and at-cost pricing so the smart path is also the easy one. When you are ready, see PT-141 from pru, browse sexual health and intimacy, or review membership pricing. Peptides made simple, for everyone. One membership, easy access, complete support, and transparent at-cost pricing.
What to check before you choose a PT-141 provider
Run any PT-141 provider, including the ones above, through the same short checklist. It maps directly to the four objective criteria this guide ranks on.
- Read the all-in monthly cost, not just the medication line. Add any required membership and shipping before you compare.
- Confirm a licensed physician reviews your history and sets your dose, rather than a cart with no medical intake.
- Confirm a state-licensed, FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compounds and fills it, with a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis.
- Check whether pricing is itemized or bundled, so you can see what you are paying for.
- Look for verifiable trust signals such as LegitScript certification.
- Walk away from any site with "research use only" language, crypto-only payment, or claims that a compounded product is the same as a branded drug.
For the full version, read where to buy PT-141 and the complete PT-141 guide.
Related reading
- The Compounded GLP-1 Price Index
- Best Peptides by Goal in 2026
- Peptide Therapy Explained: A Complete 2026 Guide
- Are Compounded Peptides Legit?
Common questions
Sources & further reading
- Provider websites and recent public pricing reviews, July 2026.
- pru catalog, category, and pricing pages. joinpru.com. Accessed July 2026.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Compounding and the FDA: Questions and Answers (Sections 503A and 503B). fda.gov.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA Clarifies Policies for Compounders as National GLP-1 Supply Begins to Stabilize. fda.gov, 2025.
- LegitScript. Certification standards for healthcare merchants. legitscript.com. Accessed July 2026.
- Compiled by pru; compounded peptide figures pending legal and pharmacy sign-off before publication.