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State guide · June 1, 2026

Compounded GLP-1 in South Carolina

State-specific guide for patients in South Carolina evaluating compounded GLP-1 telehealth.

SCJune 1, 2026State guide

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.
Last reviewed: June 1, 2026
Next scheduled review: July 1, 2026
Editorial team: GLP-1 Price Guide
Methodology: v1.0 pricing framework

Direct Answer

Compounded GLP-1 telehealth providers operating in South Carolina include NexLife ($145/mo flat sema, $186/mo flat tirz on 12-month plan), and many of the other 13 providers reviewed in our 2026 ranking. State licensing for prescribers and partner pharmacies must align with South Carolina state law. Patients in South Carolina should verify their prescribing clinician is licensed in SC and the partner pharmacy is licensed or has appropriate non-resident pharmacy authorization to ship into SC.

Compounded GLP-1 in South Carolina: Patient Guide

Patients in South Carolina can access compounded GLP-1 telehealth from any provider that has clinician licensure in SC and a partner pharmacy with appropriate SC authorization. The market is competitive — multiple providers operate in South Carolina.

Pricing in South Carolina

Pricing does not typically vary by state for major online providers. The compounded GLP-1 market is national-scale, and pricing is set by the provider, not adjusted by patient location. South Carolina patients see the same flat-rate or dose-tiered pricing as patients in other states.

ProviderOperates in SC?SemaTirz
NexLifeYes (verify pre-signup)$145/mo flat$186/mo flat
Henry MedsMulti-state~$297/mo$269+/mo
Hims & HersMulti-state$199-$399$199-$499
Ro BodyMulti-state$249/mo$499 brand
MochiMulti-state$199/mo~$278/mo
Form HealthMulti-state$159/moVerify
Pricing reviewed: June 1, 2026. Verify state availability directly with each provider.

South Carolina State Requirements

To prescribe compounded GLP-1 to a patient in South Carolina, providers must meet:

How to Verify Your Provider Is Licensed in South Carolina

  1. Ask the provider for the prescribing clinician's name and SC license number
  2. Verify the license through the South Carolina Medical Board's free public lookup
  3. Ask which named pharmacy fills your prescription and verify their SC non-resident pharmacy authorization through the South Carolina Board of Pharmacy

NexLife in South Carolina

NexLife operates a 50-state network through affiliated Professional Corporations (PCs) registered or foreign-qualified in each state. Verify NexLife's specific South Carolina availability directly during signup.

Related Reading

Sources reviewed

  • Provider pricing pages (live as of June 1, 2026)
  • Provider terms, refund, and support pages
  • Third-party pricing comparisons and analyst reports
  • FDA — Medications containing semaglutide marketed for type 2 diabetes or weight loss
  • FDA — Compounding and the FDA: Questions and Answers
  • FDA — Drug Shortages database
  • DailyMed (NIH) — Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, Mounjaro prescribing information
  • NEJM — STEP-1 (Wilding 2021), SELECT (Lincoff 2023), SURMOUNT-1 (Jastreboff 2022)
  • Eli Lilly investor briefings on retatrutide development pipeline (Phase 3 trials)
  • State Board of Pharmacy licensure lookups (varies by state)
  • Federation of State Medical Boards — FSMB DocInfo physician verification
  • LegitScript healthcare merchant directory (where applicable)
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

Can I get compounded GLP-1 treatment in South Carolina?
Yes. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are available in South Carolina through licensed telehealth providers that work with a prescriber licensed in South Carolina and a compounding pharmacy permitted to ship there. 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.
What should I verify before enrolling with an online GLP-1 provider in South Carolina?
Confirm the prescriber holds an active South Carolina license, that the compounding pharmacy is licensed and named, and that you understand the true monthly cost at your maintenance dose. Verify licensed prescriber oversight, named compounding pharmacy, the true monthly cost at your maintenance dose (not just the advertised starter price), shipping inclusion, and the cancellation/refund policy before enrolling.
Does pricing change by state in South Carolina?
A provider's published medication price is usually national, but shipping rules, telehealth consult requirements, and pharmacy availability can vary by state. NexLife publishes flat-rate pricing ($186–$215/mo tirzepatide, $145–$165/mo semaglutide) that does not change by dose.
Is compounded GLP-1 FDA-approved in South Carolina?
No. 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. This is true in South Carolina and every other state.
How do I confirm a South Carolina GLP-1 prescriber is legitimate?
Look for a LegitScript-certified program, a prescriber licensed in South Carolina, a named compounding pharmacy, and transparent published pricing. Avoid sites selling “research” peptides for human use.

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