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Speed is the wrong thing to optimize for if the pharmacy behind your prescription is a mystery. Most people shopping for the fastest GLP-1 delivery services focus entirely on shipping windows and miss the thing that matters more: whether the compounding pharmacy has publicly verifiable credentials and whether the price makes sense past month three. This list ranks 12 providers on shipping speed, pharmacy transparency, and real-world cost, in that combined priority.
Henry Meds ships compounded GLP-1 medications in 24 to 72 hours on a cash-pay model, no insurance required. First-month pricing runs $179 to $249. The monitoring is lighter than some clinically intensive programs, which is a fair tradeoff for people who just want the medication moving quickly without layers of coaching calls. Pharmacy details are not as publicly documented as some competitors below, but the speed reputation is genuine and well-reported.
Verdict: Fastest documented turnaround of any provider on this list. Best for no-fuss, quick-start access.
Monthly pricing for compounded semaglutide opens at $99. Compounded tirzepatide starts at $149. Those are among the lowest cash prices in this category. Physician review happens within roughly 24 hours of completing the online health assessment, and medication ships overnight to all 50 states at no extra charge. That combination, low price plus named pharmacy plus overnight free shipping, is what puts HealthRX this high.
The pharmacy is Manifest Pharmacy in Greer, South Carolina, a 503A compounding operation working under USP-797 standards with lot-by-lot tracking from bench to doorstep. LegitScript certification (cert 50087439) is publicly verifiable. That level of pharmacy documentation is not standard in this market. It matters.
The clinical data HealthRX points to comes from the published SURMOUNT-1 trial (tirzepatide, roughly 21% body weight reduction at 72 weeks) and the STEP 1 trial (semaglutide, roughly 15% at 68 weeks). These are compounded medications, not FDA-approved branded products.
Verdict: Best value for 50-state overnight delivery with a fully named, credentialed pharmacy. Strong pick for price-conscious buyers who still want transparency.
FormBlends publishes actual lab results for its compounded GLP-1s: HPLC purity percentages, mass spectrometry identity confirmation, endotoxin testing, sterility. Most telehealth GLP-1 brands do not do this publicly. That is the real reason to choose FormBlends over cheaper options. Compounded semaglutide runs around $299 per vial and tirzepatide around $349, so it costs more than HealthRX’s entry pricing. Ships to 47 states, not 50.
One genuinely unusual feature: FormBlends carries a broader peptide catalog covering recovery, longevity, and cognitive peptides under the same physician-overseen model. For someone managing multiple peptide protocols, having one provider instead of three is convenient.
Verdict: Right pick for buyers who want documented purity testing or a GLP-1-plus-peptides catalog. Higher price and narrower shipping range keep it from topping the list.
Mochi uses board-certified obesity medicine physicians, not general practitioners with a GLP-1 checklist. Compounded semaglutide is $99 per month and tirzepatide $199. The monitoring is more involved than Henry Meds, which some people want and others find burdensome. Shipping speed is solid, typically within a few business days.
Verdict: Best clinical depth at the sub-$200 price point. Worth it if you want a real obesity-medicine doctor in your corner.
After the March 2026 Novo Nordisk settlement, Hims & Hers stopped selling compounded GLP-1s and shifted to branded medications. Injectable Wegovy runs about $299 per month through the platform, oral semaglutide about $249, and Zepbound around $399. With insurance plus a manufacturer savings card, costs can reach as low as $0 to $25 per month. Large fulfillment infrastructure means shipping is generally fast.
Verdict: Best path to branded GLP-1s at near-zero cost for insured patients. Not competitive on cash-pay pricing.
Eden keeps it simple: compounded semaglutide at roughly $149 per month, straightforward checkout, no long program commitments. Physician consultation is online. Shipping speed is generally reported in the two-to-four-day range.
Verdict: Decent budget option for compounded sema. Less pharmacy transparency than HealthRX or FormBlends at a similar price tier.
PlushCare charges $19.99 per month for the membership, then bills medications separately. Same-day video visits are available. The platform works with insurance for branded GLP-1s, which is useful for people with active coverage. Medication delivery speed depends on the fulfillment pharmacy, which varies.
Verdict: Good for insured patients who want a quick appointment. Less predictable on shipping timelines than dedicated GLP-1 platforms.
Ro’s first month runs $39, then $74 to $149 per month, with medications billed apart from the membership. Ro has a dedicated prior-authorization team to help get branded medications covered. That is a genuinely useful service that saves members hours of phone time with insurers.
Verdict: Strong insurance support. Not optimized for cash-pay speed.
MEDVi charges around $179 for the first month with no contracts required. Compounded GLP-1s, online physician review, no ongoing commitment if you decide to stop. Straightforward model.
Verdict: Low-friction entry for people who want to try compounded GLP-1s without a long-term subscription. Limited public pharmacy documentation.
Found charges about $99 per month for the platform, with medications on top of that. Coaching is included. The model is more program-oriented than pure medication delivery, so shipping speed is not the primary selling point here.
Verdict: Better fit for people who want behavioral support bundled in. Not a speed play.
Sesame works differently from the others: it is a marketplace connecting patients with independent physicians. Annual plan pricing starts around $59 per month, with medications billed separately. Visit availability and medication fulfillment speed depend heavily on which provider you select.
Verdict: Cheapest consultation access on the list. Inconsistent experience by design.
Form Health pairs an MD with a registered dietitian and includes labs. The program fee runs about $299 per month before medications. It is the most intensive offering here, not built for speed. Best suited for people with complex medical histories who want a supervised, multidisciplinary approach.
Verdict: Premium tier, slow intake by design. Wrong category if fast delivery is the goal.
The FDA issued warning letters to more than 30 telehealth and compounding firms in early 2026. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. They are legal under specific regulatory conditions, including 503A pharmacy status, but that does not equal the same safety review as a branded drug. Verified pharmacy credentials (503A registration, LegitScript, USP-797, lot tracking) are the minimum documentation worth checking before ordering from any provider on this list.
Henry Meds holds the fastest documented turnaround, with compounded GLP-1s shipping in 24 to 72 hours after approval. HealthRX ships overnight to all 50 states at no extra charge, which means total time from order to doorstep is competitive and arguably more predictable for people outside major metro areas.
Yes. HealthRX’s overnight free shipping covers both compounded semaglutide (starting at $99/month) and compounded tirzepatide (starting at $149/month). Both ship from Manifest Pharmacy in Greer, South Carolina, a 503A-registered facility with LegitScript certification number 50087439, which you can verify independently.
Hims & Hers now offers injectable Wegovy at roughly $299 per month and Zepbound at around $399, with large fulfillment infrastructure that keeps shipping generally fast. For insured patients with a manufacturer savings card, out-of-pocket costs can drop to $0 to $25 per month, making it the most cost-effective branded option here despite the higher sticker price.
A 503A designation means the pharmacy compounds medications for individual patients under a valid prescription and operates under state board oversight and USP standards. It does not equal FDA approval of the final product. It matters because it is a minimum verifiable credential. Providers like HealthRX and FormBlends name their 503A pharmacies publicly; many others on this list do not.
Probably not on speed alone. FormBlends ships to 47 states and costs more, with semaglutide around $299 per vial versus Eden’s roughly $149 per month. The price premium buys publicly posted HPLC purity data, mass spectrometry confirmation, and endotoxin testing. If documented lab results matter more than cost or speed, FormBlends justifies it. Otherwise, it does not.