Finding the best weight loss injections in 2026 is really a pricing puzzle wearing a medical costume. The two injectable medications that matter — semaglutide and tirzepatide — are the same molecules everywhere. What changes between providers is what you pay ($99 to $449 per month for compounded versions), whether that price climbs with your dose, and whether the company behind the website answers the phone when something goes wrong. We ranked 10 online providers on exactly those differences.

Every provider below was scored with the 5-factor rubric on our How We Rank page: pricing transparency (30%), total cost (25%), safety and sourcing disclosure (20%), service flexibility (15%), and reputation (10%). Prices were verified on each provider’s own site in July 2026. These are editorial ratings built from documented information — not sponsored placements, and not first-hand drug testing.

1. Ro — Best Overall for FDA-Approved Injections

Ro (formerly Roman) is the safest way to buy weight loss injections online in 2026, because it now sells only FDA-approved, brand-name GLP-1s — Wegovy and Zepbound pens and vials — sourced through Novo Nordisk’s NovoCare and Eli Lilly’s LillyDirect channels. There is no compounded medication anywhere on the menu, which removes the biggest quality question in this industry entirely.

Pricing Structure

Ro separates membership from medication. Membership costs $39 the first month, then $149/month (about $74/month if you prepay a year). Medication is billed on top: Wegovy pens start at $199 the first month, then run $199–$399/month depending on dose. If you have insurance, Ro’s concierge checks coverage free and handles prior-authorization paperwork — with coverage, your medication cost can drop to a copay.

Pros & Cons

Pros: FDA-approved medication only; official manufacturer supply chain; genuine insurance support that competitors lack; all 50 states plus D.C.; membership charged only if you are found eligible.

Cons: The mandatory membership makes Ro one of the pricier cash options — realistically $350+ per month at maintenance doses without insurance. Medication price rises with dose, and the advertised $199 is a first-month rate. BBB shows 610 complaints, many about membership billing clarity. Read the fine print on both bills — details in our Ro review.

2. Noom Med — Best Medication-Plus-Coaching Program

Noom built its name on psychology-based weight coaching, and Noom Med bolts prescription medication onto that program. It is the strongest “whole program” pick in this ranking: one subscription covers the clinician, the compounded medication, and the full Noom app.

Pricing Structure

Compounded semaglutide costs $129 the first month, then $249/month billed quarterly. A unique Microdose tier starts at $79 first month (then $199/month) for low-dose therapy. Compounded tirzepatide runs $149 first month, then $299/month. A brand-name pathway costs $39 the first month plus your medication cost through insurance. Note the quarterly billing: after month one you pay roughly $747 per 12 weeks on the semaglutide plan, not a small monthly charge.

Pros & Cons

Pros: Medication comes from an FDA-regulated 503B outsourcing facility, per Noom — the stricter compounding standard. The Taper-Off Guarantee offers a year of free Noom or medication discounts if you regain weight within 18 months after completing its 12-month protocol. Established public-facing company since 2008.

Cons: Not available in Alabama, Louisiana, or Mississippi for compounded plans. Noom’s own pages showed inconsistent recurring prices ($179 vs $199 for the microdose tier) when we checked in July 2026, and quarterly lump-sum billing surprises people. Full breakdown in our Noom Med review.

3. Hers — Best for Women and Oral Alternatives

Hers, the women’s brand of NYSE-listed Hims & Hers Health, pivoted its weight loss program toward brand-name medication after regulators pressured its compounded line in 2025. Today it offers Wegovy and Ozempic pens, Zepbound vials, and oral GLP-1 pills, with asynchronous visits in all 50 states.

Pricing Structure

Medication runs from $149/month for pills and from $199/month for Wegovy pens (Zepbound from $299), on top of a required membership: $39 the first month, then $149/month. Realistic ongoing cost for the cheapest combination is about $300/month. These are “from” prices — Hers does not publish a full dose-by-dose price table, and costs rise at higher doses.

Pros & Cons

Pros: BBB A+ rating and about 3.8/5 across ~7,000 reviews — among the best reputations in this ranking. No lab work or video call required in most states. Oral options are genuinely useful for the needle-averse.

Cons: The membership fee does not include or guarantee a prescription — Hers says so itself. The company received an FDA warning letter in September 2025 over compounded semaglutide marketing and was sued by Novo Nordisk in February 2026; its compounded era left scars we detail in our Hers review.

4. bmiMD — Best Flat Pricing on a Budget

bmiMD, a New York telehealth company operating since late 2022, wins the budget category on one number: $99/month for compounded semaglutide on its 12-month plan — with the same price at every dose, so your bill never jumps mid-titration.

Pricing Structure

Semaglutide costs $129/month month-to-month, $119/month on a 3-month plan, $109 on 6 months, and $99/month on 12 months (billed $1,188 upfront per year). Tirzepatide runs $139–$159/month by plan length, with an $89.50 first-month new-member promo. Everything is bundled: telehealth visit, unlimited provider messaging, medication, and free shipping on subscriptions.

Pros & Cons

Pros: Your card is authorized but not charged until a provider approves you, and ineligible applicants pay nothing. Trustpilot sits around 4/5 across roughly 800 reviews.

Cons: The $99 headline requires committing $1,188 upfront. All sales are final once the pharmacy processes an order, and cancelling after intake approval but before pharmacy processing costs a $50 fee. BBB rates it C+ with 38 complaints on file. No brand-name option exists here at all — compounded only, which the site correctly discloses is not FDA-approved. Details in our bmiMD review.

5. TrimRx — Best Flat-Price Tirzepatide

San Diego-based TrimRx (founded 2024) stakes its claim on one promise: flat, all-inclusive pricing that never rises with dose — most notably tirzepatide at $349/month whether you inject 2.5mg or 15mg. At maintenance doses, that undercuts most dose-tiered competitors.

Pricing Structure

Compounded semaglutide starts at $199/month with an annual commitment; standard month-to-month runs about $349. Tirzepatide is $349/month at all doses ($449 standard rate without promo). The price includes consultations, medication, syringes, alcohol pads, a sharps container, and cold-chain shipping — and $0 is charged until a prescription is approved.

Pros & Cons

Pros: No membership or platform fees. BBB accredited since June 2025. Free consultation and a month-to-month option exist if you refuse contracts.

Cons: The advertised $199 requires a 12-month commitment — read that twice. TrimRx does not publicly name its compounding pharmacies, citing only “FDA-registered pharmacies.” Trustpilot averages a polarized ~3.3/5 across ~727 reviews, with complaints clustering on multi-month billing and cancellation friction. Our TrimRx review has the full complaint pattern.

6. MEDVi — Best Injection-or-Tablet Flexibility

Delaware-based MEDVi has pushed over 100,000 patients through its platform since 2023, per its own January 2026 press release, and it is one of the few providers offering both injections and daily dissolvable tablets for semaglutide and tirzepatide alike.

Pricing Structure

Compounded semaglutide injections cost $179 the first month, then a flat $299/month — a 67% jump after the promo month, but flat across doses after that. Tablets start at $249 the first month. Tirzepatide starts around $349. No membership fee; consults, shipping, and support are bundled.

Pros & Cons

Pros: Names its compounding pharmacies publicly (Triad Rx, RedRock Pharmacy, Beaker Pharmacy). Trustpilot shows a strong ~4.4/5 across roughly 14,000 reviews. Prescriptions come through OpenLoop Health’s clinician network, usually within 24 hours.

Cons: The BBB tells a very different story than Trustpilot: an F rating with 662 complaints, 100 of them unanswered. Refunds are generally unavailable once medication ships. The $179 advertising leans hard on a price that only lasts one month. We weigh both reputations in our MEDVi review.

7. ReadyRx — Best Money-Back Guarantee

Wyoming-registered ReadyRx (Executive Medical, LLC, operating since 2022) offers something nobody else in this ranking does: a 5% weight-loss money-back guarantee — a full refund if you lose less than 5% of your baseline weight after 28 weeks of prescribed use.

Pricing Structure

Third-party pricing reports put compounded semaglutide at $299/month month-to-month or $249/month with a 3-month prepay ($747 upfront), and tirzepatide at $399/month flat. Frustratingly, ReadyRx’s own product pages hide exact prices behind signup, showing “$XXX” placeholders — a transparency failure that cost it points in our rubric.

Pros & Cons

Pros: Every batch is third-party lab tested for potency, sterility, pH, and endotoxicity, with a certificate of analysis available on request — rare and genuinely valuable in compounded medicine. LegitScript certified, no membership fee, and most approvals land within 24 hours.

Cons: Hiding prices until signup is exactly the practice this site exists to punish. Communication is text-only — no video or phone consults. Semaglutide is unavailable in 7 states, tirzepatide in 9. Our ReadyRx review explains the guarantee’s fine print.

8. OMZO — Bundled Pricing, Thin Track Record

OMZO is a newer telehealth platform selling compounded semaglutide ($199 first month, then $299/month locked), tirzepatide, oral dissolvable tablets, and brand-name options, all cash-pay with no contract.

Pricing Structure

Per OMZO’s own terms: semaglutide $199 the first month (advertised as low as $179 in its funnel), then $299/month; tirzepatide $349 first month, then $399/month. Brand-name Ozempic is listed at $1,299/month in the terms — though the site navigation says “starting at $1,999/mo,” one of several internal inconsistencies we found.

Pros & Cons

Pros: Refills genuinely locked at one price regardless of dose. Full refund if medication has not shipped within 14 business days, or if a clinician finds you medically ineligible.

Cons: OMZO does not name its compounding pharmacies or their 503A/503B status. Its refund terms contradict its “lose weight or your money back” marketing — the binding terms allow refunds only for ineligibility or billing errors. And the track record is thin: about 7 Trustpilot reviews and no BBB profile when we checked. Details in our OMZO review.

9. Trinity Meds — Cheapest Entry Price, Real Caveats

Trinity Meds advertises the lowest semaglutide entry price in this ranking — $99/month, falling to $84/month on a 12-month plan — with “same price, every dose” and four publicly named dispensing pharmacies. So why rank it ninth? Because price is 55% of our rubric, and the other 45% went badly.

Pricing Structure

Semaglutide: $99/month monthly, $94 (3-month), $89 (6-month), $84 (12-month). Tirzepatide: $149/month down to $125 on annual plans. No insurance needed; FSA-eligible. Note that Trinity’s own funnel page simultaneously listed semaglutide “from $159/month” when we checked — the company’s pricing is inconsistent across its own properties.

Pros & Cons

Pros: Genuinely low flat pricing; named pharmacy partners (Belmar, Strive, Epiq Scripts, Casa Pharma Rx); all-inclusive fees.

Cons: Trustpilot 2.1/5 with 65% one-star reviews citing unresponsive support and post-cancellation charges. Sales of prescription products are final, and programs auto-renew until cancelled. Its operator, Trinity Healthcare Supply, LLC, received a June 2026 FDA warning letter concerning misleading compounded GLP-1 claims on its sister brand altRx’s website. Full context in our Trinity Meds review.

10. Sprout Health — Sublingual Option With a Warning Label

Encinitas-based Sprout Health sells compounded semaglutide from $149/month with a written guarantee that your price never rises with dose — and it is the only provider here with a sublingual (under-the-tongue) semaglutide format for the truly needle-averse.

Pricing Structure

Semaglutide starts at $149/month (a 3-month supply recently promoted at $465, about $155/month). Tirzepatide promos from $199/month, regular $349. Brand-name Wegovy ($1,799) and Zepbound ($1,999) are also listed. Cash-pay only, no membership fee.

Pros & Cons

Pros: The price-lock guarantee is explicit on the official site. Bundled pricing with no consultation fees.

Cons: Serious ones. The FDA sent Sprout Health a warning letter in September 2025 for falsely claiming its compounded GLP-1s were “FDA-approved” (the claim has since been corrected). BBB rates it F with 32 of 63 complaints unanswered; Trustpilot shows ~2.2/5. The company has existed only since January 2025. If the sublingual format is not decisive for you, stronger options sit above it — see our Sprout Health review.

How We Ranked the Best Weight Loss Injections

Every score comes from the public rubric on our How We Rank page, applied to information we verified on provider websites, BBB files, Trustpilot records, and FDA correspondence in July 2026. Pricing transparency carries the most weight (30%) because it is where this industry misbehaves most — teaser prices, hidden memberships, and dose-based increases are the three ways a $149 advertisement becomes a $350 reality. We do not test medications personally, we do not accept payment for placement in this ranking, and the commission relationships disclosed at the top of this page do not move scores. One provider we cover, altRx, was excluded from this list entirely: its $89/month advertising is the cheapest in the market, but its BBB F rating, 39 unanswered complaints, and a pattern of customers reporting $189–$199 charges after signing up at $89 kept it out of any list with “best” in the title. Our altRx review explains in full.

Hidden Fees to Watch Before You Buy

Four costs routinely surprise buyers of weight loss injections. Membership fees: Ro and Hers bill $149/month on top of medication — over a year, that is $1,788 before a single dose ships. Promo-to-regular jumps: MEDVi goes from $179 to $299 after month one; OMZO from $199 to $299; Noom’s microdose tier from $79 to $199. Dose escalation pricing: brand-name programs price by dose, so reaching the 2.4mg Wegovy maintenance dose can double your medication bill versus the starter dose. Prepay commitments: the lowest advertised prices at bmiMD ($99), TrimRx ($199), and Trinity Meds ($84) all require 12-month commitments, often billed upfront. None of these fees is illegal or even unusual — but a provider that states them plainly earns transparency points in our rubric, and one that hides prices behind a signup wall loses them.

Who Qualifies for Weight Loss Injections Online?

Telehealth providers follow the same clinical criteria the FDA set for these medications: generally a BMI of 30 or higher, or 27+ with at least one weight-related condition such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, or sleep apnea. Expect disqualification if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN 2 syndrome, a history of pancreatitis, are pregnant or planning pregnancy, or have an active eating disorder. A legitimate provider screens for all of this and rejects applicants who do not qualify — several providers in this ranking state plainly that a prescription is never guaranteed, and that is a good sign, not a bad one. If a website seems willing to prescribe to anyone with a credit card, close the tab.

How Online Prescribing Actually Works

The process is broadly identical across providers: you complete a health questionnaire (10–20 minutes, covering weight history, medications, and conditions), a state-licensed clinician reviews it — asynchronously in most states, by video where law requires — and, if appropriate, sends a prescription to a partner pharmacy that ships to your door in roughly 2–7 days. Refills usually involve brief check-ins about side effects and progress. Two structural things are worth understanding: first, most platforms are not medical practices themselves — they connect you to independent clinician networks (MEDVi uses OpenLoop Health, for example). Second, with compounded programs, the pharmacy matters as much as the platform: 503B outsourcing facilities follow federal manufacturing standards closer to those of drug manufacturers, while 503A pharmacies compound patient-by-patient under lighter oversight. Our guide to how telehealth weight loss works walks through every step, and the semaglutide dosage chart shows the titration schedule your clinician will likely follow.