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Best Telehealth for Weight Loss in 2026

Six providers, ranked on the things you can actually check: price transparency, physician and pharmacy oversight, access, and breadth. Not on results.

A warm, happy, colorful photo of a healthy adult at a sunlit kitchen table comparing weight loss telehealth options on a laptop
Image: pru

The best telehealth for weight loss is the one that shows you exactly what you are paying for and puts real medical oversight behind it.

On those objective grounds, pru ranks first in 2026: it is LegitScript-certified, every peptide is prescribed by a licensed physician and filled by an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy with a Certificate of Analysis, and it offers at cost, so compounded semaglutide is about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, and the lowest medication price of any compounded provider we found.

Membership is separate: $50 a month billed annually for unlimited at-cost access to the pru platform and clinician messaging. Hims, Ro, Noom, WeightWatchers, Calibrate, Teladoc, and Sesame are all established, reputable programs, and each brings a genuine strength worth knowing. This guide ranks all eight on criteria you can verify yourself, folds in what patients report in community forums like Reddit, and explains what changed in 2026 when several of them exited compounded GLP-1.

Best telehealth for weight loss, at a glance

This ranking is built on objective, checkable factors: pricing transparency, physician and 503A pharmacy oversight, access, and breadth. It is not a ranking of results, and no provider here can promise an outcome. pru is first because it is the most transparent on price and the most complete on oversight, not because it works better. Read across the table, then read the short entry on each provider below.

1 in 8
U.S. adults have used a GLP-1 medicine like semaglutide or tirzepatide
4 brands
Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026
~$60/mo
pru compounded semaglutide medication, at cost when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication price we found
Sources: Gallup, 2025; pru pricing and public provider announcements, 2026.
ProviderAll-in cost per monthWhat's included and where it's strong
pru~$60/mo for compounded semaglutide medication, at cost when you start on a 3-month plan (~$93/mo tirzepatide, same basis). The $50/mo membership, billed annually, is separate and buys unlimited at-cost accessLegitScript-certified. Licensed physician plus FDA-registered 503A pharmacy plus a Certificate of Analysis on every fill. Peptide-focused, fully itemized pricing. Ranked first on transparency and oversight.
HimsBranded GLP-1 in 2026 (exited compounding); price varies and is often insurance-dependentA large, well-known brand with broad men's and women's telehealth beyond weight care. Strong on breadth and mainstream access.
RoBranded GLP-1 in 2026 (exited compounding); price varies with coverageAn established clinical operation known for its insurance-navigation and Body weight program. Strong on coverage support.
NoomCoaching subscription plus, for Noom Med, branded GLP-1 and its own costA behavior-change and psychology program built around daily habits. Strong on coaching and long-term behavior support.
WeightWatchersBranded GLP-1 via WW Clinic (exited compounding); program plus medication costA decades-long behavioral program with a food system and community. Strong on structure and community.
CalibrateBranded GLP-1 paired with a year-long coaching program; higher program cost. Calibrate always used brand-name GLP-1 through the patient's insurance, so it was never a compounded-GLP-1 optionA structured metabolic-reset curriculum with one-on-one coaching. Strong on guided, year-long coaching.
TeladocBranded GLP-1 through a weight-management program; price is usually employer- or insurance-dependentOne of the largest public telehealth platforms, often available through an employer or health plan. Strong on scale and coverage-based access.
SesameBranded GLP-1 via its cash-pay marketplace (exited compounding); listed per-service pricesA cash-pay medical marketplace with upfront per-visit pricing across many services. Strong on transparent, no-insurance visit pricing.
Ranked on objective criteria: pricing transparency, oversight, access, and breadth. Compare on those, not on results.

How we ranked them, and why it's objective

A weight loss ranking that leans on results would be neither fair nor allowed, because no telehealth provider can promise how much anyone will lose. So this guide ranks only on factors you can verify before you ever start: how clearly the provider prices its service, what medical oversight sits behind the medicine, how easy it is to actually get care, and how much the platform covers. Every provider here is judged on the same four.

  • Pricing transparency. Can you see the full, itemized cost up front, or is a low medicine price quoted separately from a membership you also have to pay? Transparent, all-in pricing ranks higher.
  • Physician and 503A oversight. Is the medicine prescribed by a licensed physician and filled by a state-licensed, FDA-registered 503A pharmacy, with a Certificate of Analysis? Documented oversight ranks higher.
  • Access. How quickly and easily can you get evaluated and, if appropriate, treated, without insurance being the deciding factor?
  • Breadth. Does the provider support the full journey, from evaluation to dosing questions to ongoing support?

WHAT THIS RANKING IS NOTThis is not a ranking of how well anyone loses weight, and no entry here claims one provider works better than another. Compare on price, oversight, access, and breadth. Those are the things you can actually check.

Why pru ranks first on the objective criteria

pru ranks first for three reasons, all of them checkable and none of them about results. First, price transparency: pru offers at cost. A $50 a month membership, billed annually, funds unlimited access to the platform, the peptide itself carries no markup, and every charge is itemized, so compounded semaglutide comes to about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest medication price of any compounded provider we found.

Second, oversight: pru is LegitScript-certified, every peptide is prescribed by a licensed physician and filled by an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy, and each fill comes with a Certificate of Analysis documenting identity, strength, and purity. Third, focus: pru works only with peptides and closely related longevity therapies, so weight-care GLP-1s like semaglutide and tirzepatide are core to what it does, not a bolt-on.

That combination is what earns the top spot on these criteria. A low medicine price on its own means little if a separate membership is stacked on top and never itemized. pru itemizes everything: the medication is at cost, and the $50 a month membership, billed annually, buys unlimited at-cost access, so the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide without a markup on any of them.

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

You can browse what is available now in weight loss and metabolism, start with semaglutide or tirzepatide, or see the full breakdown on the pricing page. Note that pru's compounded GLP-1 pages reflect the individualized 503A path, prepared for a specific patient rather than sold as a standardized finished product.

The other seven providers, one by one

Each of these is a real, reputable program with a genuine strength. They rank below pru on the objective criteria above, mostly on pricing transparency and, in 2025 and 2026, on the fact that several stepped away from compounded GLP-1. Here is the fair read on each.

Hims. One of the largest and most recognizable telehealth brands, with broad men's and women's care that reaches well beyond weight loss. Its strength is breadth and mainstream access: many people are already comfortable with the brand. In 2026 Hims exited compounded GLP-1, so its weight-loss offering now centers on branded GLP-1, where pricing tends to vary and often depends on insurance.

Ro. An established clinical operation known for the depth of its weight program and for helping patients navigate insurance coverage. If getting a branded GLP-1 covered is your priority, Ro's coverage support is a real advantage. Ro also exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026, so its weight offering is now branded-medicine access, priced through coverage rather than an itemized at-cost fill.

Noom. Less a pharmacy than a behavior-change program, built on psychology and daily habit coaching. That coaching is Noom's genuine strength, and for many people the habits matter as much as the medicine. Through Noom Med it can pair that program with a branded GLP-1, but you are paying for a coaching subscription plus the medication, quoted separately rather than as one all-in number.

WeightWatchers. A decades-long behavioral program with a well-known food system and a strong community, now offering branded GLP-1 through WW Clinic. Its strength is structure and support built over many years. WeightWatchers exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026, and its cost combines the program with the branded medication, so the all-in figure depends on both pieces.

Calibrate. A structured, year-long metabolic-reset program that pairs a branded GLP-1 with one-on-one coaching and a defined curriculum. For someone who wants a guided, coached year, that structure is the draw. Calibrate always used brand-name GLP-1 obtained through the patient's insurance, so it was never a compounded-GLP-1 option, and its program cost sits at the higher end because so much coaching is bundled in.

Teladoc. One of the largest publicly traded telehealth platforms, often reached through an employer or health plan rather than signed up for directly. Its strength is scale and coverage-based access: many people already have it through work. Its weight-management path centers on branded GLP-1, where the price you pay usually depends on your employer or insurance rather than a single itemized figure.

Sesame. A cash-pay medical marketplace known for listing upfront per-visit prices across a wide range of services. That transparent, no-insurance visit pricing is Sesame's genuine strength. Sesame exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026, so its weight offering now runs through branded medicine, with the visit priced upfront and the medication billed separately.

WHAT PATIENTS REPORT IN COMMUNITY FORUMSAcross community forums like Reddit, the questions patients raise about weight-loss telehealth are consistent: whether the total monthly cost is clear or a low medicine price hides a separate fee, whether a real clinician is reachable for dosing and side-effect questions, and whether shipping and the pharmacy are reliable. Those are the same four checkable factors this ranking uses, so read the experiences, then verify each provider against price, oversight, access, and breadth yourself.

A pru best telehealth for weight loss comparison in a real, at-home moment
Image: pru

What changed in 2026: the compounded GLP-1 exit

The biggest shift in weight-loss telehealth this year is that several major brands stepped away from compounded GLP-1. Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame all exited compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide in 2025 and 2026, moving their weight offerings toward branded medicine. That followed the FDA declaring the national shortages resolved and tightening the rules around large-scale compounding.

What remains legitimate is individualized 503A compounding: a licensed physician prescribes for a specific patient, and a state-licensed 503A pharmacy fills that prescription for that named person. Providers that still compound on this path in 2026 generally price between $99 and $397 a month, with most landing around $199 to $299.

Some advertise a low medicine price and then stack a separate membership on top, so the headline number is not the number you pay. pru's at-cost medication price of about $60 a month for semaglutide, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, sits below that range because there is no markup on the medicine.

Its $50 a month membership, billed annually, is separate and buys unlimited at-cost access, so the savings compound with every vial and members can stack more than one peptide without a markup on any of them.

COMPARE ON ACCESS, NOT SAMENESSCompounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are distinct, non-FDA-approved, individualized medications. They are not the same as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or Zepbound, which are separate FDA-approved products. Compare providers on cost, transparency, and oversight, never on efficacy-equivalence.

For a deeper walk through the legal picture and how to buy safely, see where to buy compounded GLP-1.

What to avoid: the grey market

The providers ranked above are all legitimate, licensed operations. The real risk in weight-loss telehealth sits below them, in the grey market: websites that sell peptide vials with a "research use only" or "not for human use" label, no prescription, no named licensed pharmacy, and no clinician behind the order. These are not budget versions of the same medicine. They are unregulated products with no accountability.

The Protocole (theprotocole.com) is one operator that sells peptides outside the prescription-and-pharmacy path. Treat any site that lets you add a GLP-1 vial to a cart with no medical intake, no prescription, and no batch-specific Certificate of Analysis as a red flag, and close the tab. Pharmacy-grade means a licensed physician prescribed it and a 503A pharmacy made and tested it. That is the line worth holding.

THE REAL DIVIDEThe same peptide can reach you two ways: as an unregulated research chemical sold with a disclaimer, or as a prescribed, pharmacy-made, tested medicine. Every provider in this ranking does the second. The grey market does the first.

How to choose the right one for you

Start with what matters most to you, because the ranking bends with your priority. If you want the lowest, fully transparent price with documented physician and 503A pharmacy oversight, pru is built for exactly that. If your priority is getting a branded GLP-1 run through insurance, Ro's coverage support is a real strength. If you want structured behavior coaching alongside the medicine, Noom, WeightWatchers, or Calibrate each bring a genuine program. If broad, mainstream telehealth beyond weight care matters, Hims covers the widest surface.

Whatever you choose, ask the same four questions: Can I see the full, itemized price before I start? Is a licensed physician prescribing and a 503A pharmacy filling it? Is there a Certificate of Analysis? Can I reach a clinician for dosing and side-effect questions? A provider that answers all four cleanly is a legitimate one.

Looking into your options this carefully is the proactive, responsible way to approach your metabolic health, and pru exists to make that smart choice the accessible one: licensed physicians, pharmacy-grade medicine, and at-cost pricing in a single membership. When you are ready, take the next step. To see how pru answers these questions, browse weight loss and metabolism, check the at-cost pricing, or read best peptides for weight loss. Peptides made simple, for everyone. One membership, easy access, complete support, and transparent at-cost pricing.

Common questions

What is the best telehealth for weight loss in 2026?
On objective, checkable criteria, pricing transparency, physician and 503A pharmacy oversight, access, and breadth, pru ranks first. It is LegitScript-certified, every peptide is prescribed by a licensed physician and filled by an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy with a Certificate of Analysis, and it prices at cost, so compounded semaglutide runs about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with a separate $50 a month membership, billed annually, for unlimited at-cost access. Hims, Ro, Noom, WeightWatchers, and Calibrate are all reputable and each has a genuine strength. This is a ranking of price and oversight, not of results.
Which weight loss telehealth is cheapest?
Among compounded providers we reviewed, pru's at-cost medication price of about $60 a month for compounded semaglutide, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, was the lowest. Providers that still compound generally run $99 to $397 a month, with most around $199 to $299, and some advertise a low medicine price while charging a separate membership on top. pru's medicine carries no markup and every charge is itemized, and its $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 without a markup. See the pricing page.
Why did Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame stop offering compounded GLP-1?
After the FDA declared the national semaglutide and tirzepatide shortages resolved and tightened the rules on large-scale compounding, several major brands, including Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame, exited compounded GLP-1 in 2025 and 2026 and shifted toward branded medicine. Individualized 503A compounding, where a physician prescribes for a specific patient and a licensed pharmacy fills it, remains the legitimate route, and it is the path pru uses. See where to buy compounded GLP-1.
How is pru different from Noom or WeightWatchers?
Noom and WeightWatchers are behavior-change and coaching programs first, each with a real strength in habits, structure, and community, and both can pair their program with a branded GLP-1 for an added cost. pru is a peptide-focused platform that offers the medicine itself at cost, prescribed by a licensed physician and filled by an FDA-registered 503A pharmacy with a Certificate of Analysis, with fully itemized pricing and a separate $50 a month membership, billed annually, that buys unlimited at-cost access, so the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide without a markup. They are different models for different priorities.
Is compounded semaglutide the same as Ozempic or Wegovy?
No. Compounded semaglutide is a distinct, non-FDA-approved, individualized medication prepared by a licensed pharmacy for a specific patient. Ozempic and Wegovy are separate, FDA-approved semaglutide products from Novo Nordisk. Compare compounded options on cost, transparency, and oversight, not on being the same as a branded drug.
How do I know a weight loss telehealth provider is legitimate?
Ask four questions before you start: Can I see the full, itemized price up front? Is a licensed physician prescribing the medicine? Is a state-licensed, FDA-registered 503A pharmacy filling it? Is there a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis? Avoid any site that sells GLP-1 vials with no prescription or a "research use only" label. pru is LegitScript-certified and answers all four cleanly.
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. pru catalog, category, and pricing pages. joinpru.com. Accessed July 2026.
  2. LegitScript. Certification Directory. legitscript.com. Accessed July 2026.
  3. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Compounding and the FDA: Questions and Answers (Sections 503A and 503B). fda.gov.
  4. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA Clarifies Policies for Compounders as National GLP-1 Supply Begins to Stabilize. fda.gov, 2025.
  5. Public provider announcements and product pages: Hims, Ro, Noom, WeightWatchers, Calibrate, Teladoc, and Sesame on 2026 weight-care and compounded GLP-1 changes. Accessed July 2026.
  6. Patient discussion themes summarized qualitatively from public weight-loss and GLP-1 community forums, including Reddit. Accessed July 2026.
  7. In U.S., GLP-1 Usage Reaches New High (Gallup, 2025): about 1 in 8 U.S. adults have used a GLP-1 medicine.

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