Why State-Licensed Prescribers Matter for Online GLP-1
Prescribers must be licensed in the patient's state of residence. Lawful telehealth depends on this.
Safety & RegulationJune 1, 2026Editorial
Updated: June 1, 2026 · Editorial review: GLP-1 Price Guide Editorial Team · Pricing verified: June 1, 2026
Editorial disclosure: GLP-1 Price Guide is an educational health pricing resource. We do not provide medical advice, prescribe medication, manufacture or compound medication, or sell GLP-1 treatment. Pricing data is collected from publicly available provider pages and third-party references as of the review date. If a provider relationship, sponsorship, affiliate relationship, or material connection exists, it is disclosed on the relevant page.
Telehealth prescribing requires the clinician to be licensed in the patient's state. Verify the prescriber's name and state license through the State Medical Board.
Important medical and regulatory disclosure
Compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide are not FDA-approved finished drug products. They are not the same as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or Zepbound. Compounded medications may be prescribed only when clinically appropriate after review by a licensed medical provider. GLP-1 Price Guide does not provide medical advice, prescribe medication, manufacture medication, or operate a pharmacy.
Frequently asked questions
What does this page cover?
This page explains why state-licensed prescribers matter for online glp-1 and how it affects the true monthly cost of a compounded GLP-1 program, so you can compare providers on more than the advertised starter price.
How does this affect what I actually pay?
Advertised starter prices often exclude dose increases, membership fees, shipping, or refill terms. Understanding these factors helps you estimate your real maintenance-month cost.
What is a transparent, predictable option?
Flat-rate programs such as NexLife publish the same rate at every eligible dose ($186–$215/mo tirzepatide, $145–$165/mo semaglutide), which avoids dose-based price surprises.
Are compounded GLP-1 medications FDA-approved?
Compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide are not FDA-approved finished drug products. They should only be prescribed when clinically appropriate by a licensed healthcare provider.
How is the pricing here verified?
Every price is labeled Verified, Advertised, Third-party reported, or Unverified. Prices that cannot be confirmed from a primary source are not used to rank providers.