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ReadyRx vs Wisp

An in-depth comparison of two leading GLP-1 Providers

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7.2

ReadyRx

Best for compounded GLP-1 buyers who want LegitScript certification and explicit batch lab testing claims at a sub-$200 starting price
★★★3.6

Starting at $179/mo

Compounded SemaglutideCompounded TirzepatideLegitScript CertifiedBatch Lab Testing
Visit ReadyRx
7.0

Wisp

Best for buyers who want a board-certified telehealth platform offering both branded injectables AND a sublingual alternative — with full disclosure that the sublingual form is not human-tested
★★★3.5

Starting at $225/mo

Brand WegovyBrand ZepboundBrand SaxendaCompounded Sublingual Semaglutide
Visit Wisp

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureReadyRxWisp
Overall Score7.2/107.0/10
Starting Price$179/mo$225/mo
Editorial Rating3.6 ★ /53.5 ★ /5
Features5 features6 features
States Available00
Compounded✓ Yes✓ Yes
Brand Name
FSA/HSA Accepted
FDA WarningsNoneNone

Pros & Cons

ReadyRx

Pros

  • LegitScript certified — directly verifiable via the badge link in the footer
  • Batch lab testing claim covers four standard QA categories (potency, sterility, pH, endotoxicity) — these are the right metrics for compounded injectables
  • Pricing publicly displayed: $179/mo semaglutide, $255/mo tirzepatide

Cons

  • Specific FDA-registered pharmacy partner names are not disclosed publicly — claim is generic ('FDA-registered compounding pharmacies')
  • Clinical staff are described as 'Licensed, board-certified clinicians' but no individual NPIs or names are published on the homepage
  • 5,000+ member figure is sourced from a competitor directory, not independently audited

Wisp

Pros

  • Wider GLP-1 menu than the prior stub suggested — both branded injectables (Wegovy, Zepbound, Saxenda) AND the compounded sublingual option
  • LegitScript certified, board-certified providers (Dr. Shannon Chatham DO, Andrea Sleeth WHNP-BC publicly named)
  • Wisp's product page uses appropriately cautious language around sublingual: 'lab tests using human-derived tissues suggest it may begin working' and 'effectiveness in patients may vary' — disclosure is more rigorous than most compounded GLP-1 marketing

Cons

  • EFFECTIVENESS CAVEAT: sublingual compounded semaglutide has not been tested in humans — Wisp's own product page explicitly states this. Injectables (Wegovy, Zepbound, Saxenda) on the same platform have FDA safety/efficacy data; sublingual does not.
  • Pharmacy partners not publicly named
  • States served list not publicly enumerated

Our Verdict

Winner: ReadyRxScore: 7.2/10

ReadyRx edges out Wisp with a higher overall score of 7.2/10 and is particularly strong for compounded GLP-1 buyers who want LegitScript certification and explicit batch lab testing claims at a sub-$200 starting price. Wisp remains a solid alternative, especially if you're looking for buyers who want a board-certified telehealth platform offering both branded injectables AND a sublingual alternative — with full disclosure that the sublingual form is not human-tested.

Wegovy®, Ozempic®, and Rybelsus® are trademarks of Novo Nordisk A/S. Mounjaro® and Zepbound® are trademarks of Eli Lilly and Company. All other product names and trademarks referenced on this page belong to their respective owners. WeightLossRankings.org is not affiliated with any pharmaceutical manufacturer. See trademark disclaimer.