Top 4 Found Alternatives in 2026
If you are weighing whether to switch from Found, here is the whole compounded GLP-1 field, compared all-in and apples to apples.
If you want a straight answer: the lowest-cost compounded GLP-1 medicine we found is pru, at about $60 a month for semaglutide, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, with the medicine passed through at cost and no member markup. Membership is separate: $50 a month billed annually for unlimited at-cost access to the platform and clinician messaging.
Found is a solid program that still compounds, and it runs roughly $199 to $299 a month all-in. Most other providers still compounding sit in that same $199 to $299 range, and a few advertise a low medicine price while charging a separate membership fee on top. Below is the full comparison, the reasons people look to switch, and three other real alternatives worth knowing.
Found alternatives, compared all-in
The pru figure is the medicine cost per month when you start on a 3-month plan: three titration vials plus one $20 consult, one $19.95 shipping, and $15 of supplies, divided across three months, which comes to about $60 a month for semaglutide.
Membership is separate, $50 a month billed annually for unlimited at-cost access, so it is not folded into the medicine number. The rival figures below are the all-in ranges each provider quotes. pru is listed first as the at-cost benchmark, not because the others are not worth a look.
| Provider | All-in per month | What that includes |
|---|---|---|
| pru | about $60 | semaglutide medicine per month when you start on a 3-month plan (3 vials + $20 consult + $19.95 shipping + $15 supplies, divided by 3), at cost; membership separate; physician confirms fit, 503A pharmacy fills with a Certificate of Analysis |
| Found | $199 to $299 | compounded, all-in, lower on annual prepay; coaching-forward program |
| Mochi Health | from $99 | compounded, verify whether a membership is added |
| Henry Meds | $247 to $397 | compounded, all-inclusive flat pricing with no insurance to deal with; established provider, lower on annual prepay |
| Noom Med | $199 to $279 | microdose to full dose, all-in, habit-change program |
Why people look for a Found alternative
Found is a legitimate program with real strengths: it pairs compounded GLP-1 access with coaching and habit support, and many members like that structure. People still shop around, and the reasons tend to be the same few.
- Price. Found's all-in cost lands around $199 to $299 a month. That is the middle of the field, and some members want a lower monthly number without giving up licensed care.
- Bundled pricing. Found quotes one all-in figure, which is simple, but it also means you cannot see what the medicine itself costs versus the program around it.
- Program fit. Found leans heavily on coaching. If you want the medicine and clinical oversight without a coaching program built on top, a leaner option can fit better.
- A narrowing field. In 2025 and 2026 four household names, Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame, exited compounded GLP-1 entirely as the FDA declared the semaglutide and tirzepatide shortages resolved. That churn has people double-checking that their provider is stable and transparent.
WHERE FOUND STANDSFound still compounds GLP-1s as of July 2026. It did not exit the way Hims, Ro, WeightWatchers, and Sesame did. If you are happy with Found's coaching and its all-in price, staying is a reasonable choice. This page is for people who want to compare.
pru: the at-cost benchmark
pru is a LegitScript-certified membership telehealth platform built only for compounded peptides, including GLP-1s. Its medicine cost for compounded semaglutide is about $60 a month, your price per month when you start on a 3-month plan, the lowest-cost medicine of any provider we found. The difference is the model, not a discount.
- At cost, no markup. The medicine is passed through at the pharmacy's price with no member markup. The consult and shipping show up as their own line items instead of being bundled into a marked-up subscription.
- Membership is separate and unlimited. A flat membership, $50 a month billed annually, funds unlimited at-cost access to the platform and clinician messaging. It is not folded into the medicine price, and because every peptide is priced at cost with no markup, the savings compound with every vial and you can stack more than one peptide without a markup on any of them. There is no second membership fee on top of the medicine.
- Licensed physicians confirm fit. A licensed physician reviews your history and confirms whether a GLP-1 is appropriate for you, or advises against it, and sets your dose.
- Pharmacy-grade, documented. An FDA-registered 503A pharmacy compounds and fills your prescription, and every fill comes with a Certificate of Analysis showing what is inside.
Deciding to take your metabolic health in hand is a smart, responsible move, and pru exists to make that proactive choice the accessible one: licensed physicians, pharmacy-grade medicine, and at-cost pricing put the sensible path within reach. When you are ready to compare for yourself, see what is available now in the weight loss & metabolism category, or the at-cost pricing.
Three other real alternatives, objectively
pru is not the only option. If you are comparing, three others are worth a fair look, each with a different strength.
- Mochi Health. Advertises compounded GLP-1 starting from about $99 a month, one of the lower headline prices in the field, and it pairs the medicine with registered-dietitian support built into the program. The thing to verify is whether a separate membership is added on top, since the all-in number is what matters. If the entry price holds and the dietitian coaching is what you want, Mochi is one of the more affordable programs in the field. pru's at-cost medicine still comes in lower at about $60 a month when you start on a 3-month plan, with membership separate.
- Noom Med. Built around Noom's well-known habit-change and psychology-of-eating program, with compounded GLP-1 layered in at roughly $199 to $279 a month all-in. If behavior change and coaching are what you want most, Noom's program is a genuine strength, backed by one of the most recognized names in the space, and it sits in the same price band as Found.
- Henry Meds. One of the more established names in compounded GLP-1 telehealth, with all-inclusive flat pricing that folds the medicine, clinician, and shipping into one number and no insurance to deal with. It runs about $247 to $397 a month, lower on annual prepay. If you value a well-known provider and the simplicity of a single all-in price you never have to itemize, Henry is a sensible pick, and its prepay option narrows the gap. pru's at-cost medicine still comes in lower at about $60 a month when you start on a 3-month plan, with membership separate.
THE HIDDEN SECOND FEEWhen you compare any of these, watch for a low medicine price paired with a required monthly membership that marks the medicine up. As an example, Eden lists $99 for the medicine and then adds a $99 monthly membership, so the real all-in cost is about $198.
The number that matters is medicine plus every required fee plus shipping. pru's medicine is priced at cost with no markup, and its one membership, $50 a month billed annually, is flat and unlimited rather than a hidden markup on the medicine.
How to compare providers the right way
Prices in this category move, and headline numbers are easy to misread. A quick checklist keeps the comparison fair.
- Get the all-in number. Add the medicine, any required membership or consult, and shipping. That total is the real monthly cost.
- Check for a second fee. A low medicine price with a separate membership is common. Read the fine print before you compare.
- Confirm licensed care. A legitimate provider has a licensed physician confirm fit and set the dose, and fills through a licensed pharmacy.
- Look for documentation. Ask whether each fill comes with a Certificate of Analysis. Pharmacy-grade compounding is documented; grey-market vials are not.
- Confirm the provider is stable. After the 2025 and 2026 exits, it is worth checking that whoever you pick is still compounding and plans to keep doing so.
The one line worth avoiding entirely
Whichever provider you choose, the real divide is not between one telehealth brand and another. It is between a prescribed, pharmacy-made medicine and an unregulated research-grade vial sold online "for research use only." The research-grade route has no prescription, no licensed pharmacy, and no clinician behind it. Every provider compared on this page, Found and pru included, works on the prescribed, pharmacy-made side of that line, which is where safety starts.
PHARMACY-GRADE, NOT FDA-APPROVEDCompounded GLP-1s are prescribed by a licensed physician and prepared by a licensed 503A pharmacy for you as an individual. They are pharmacy-grade, documented with a Certificate of Analysis. That is different from an FDA-approved finished drug, and it is different again from an unregulated research vial. pru works only in the middle, prescribed tier.
Related reading
- Best Compounded Semaglutide Providers in 2026
- The Compounded GLP-1 Price Index
- Best Online GLP-1 Providers in 2026
- Are Compounded Peptides Legit?
Common questions
Sources & further reading
- Provider websites and recent public pricing reviews, July 2026.
- The Compounded GLP-1 Price Index 2026 (pru): all-in monthly cost across compounded providers. joinpru.com.
- pru catalog, category, and pricing pages. joinpru.com. Accessed July 2026.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Compounding and the FDA: Questions and Answers (on the regulatory status of 503A compounded drugs). fda.gov. Accessed July 2026.
- Compiled by pru; compounded GLP-1 figures pending legal and pharmacy sign-off before publication.