Data investigation
Is $99 Compounded Semaglutide Real? We Verified Every Provider at the Floor Price
Multiple telehealth providers advertise compounded semaglutide at $99 per month — well below the market median. We verified the licensing, pharmacy partner, dose, and total monthly cost for each one.
- Pricing
- Compounded GLP-1
- Live dataset
The cheapest compounded semaglutide on the cash-pay telehealth market as of 2026-04-06 sits at $30 per month, advertised by one provider we track. That's only 16% of the market median of $184, and a small fraction of brand-name Wegovy cash-pay pricing. We verified each floor-price provider against our pricing index and pharmacy database to answer one question: is the floor price legitimate, or are there hidden gotchas?
The market context: where $30 sits in the distribution
Across the 43 telehealth providers we track that offer compounded semaglutide, the price distribution looks like this:
| Statistic | Monthly price |
|---|---|
| Cheapest (floor) | $30 |
| 10th percentile | $95 |
| Median | $184 |
| 90th percentile | $344 |
| Most expensive | $999 |
At $30, the floor price is 84% below the median provider and 91% below the 90th percentile. That kind of dispersion is unusual in any consumer drug market — it tells you the providers at the floor are playing a very different pricing game than the providers above it.
The provider at $30/month
Here's every provider we track that currently advertises compounded semaglutide at the $30/month floor, plus the editorial verification we've completed for each:
- Lemonaid Health — $30/month · WLR score 7.5/10 · ships to 50 states. Best for: budget-conscious shoppers.
The next tier: providers within $10 of the floor
As of this update, every provider above the floor sits at least $10/month higher — there's no second tier within striking distance.
What floor pricing actually buys you (and what it doesn't)
A $30/month advertised price almost always refers to the starting dose of compounded semaglutide (typically 0.25mg weekly), not the maintenance dose most patients end up at after titration (1.0mg or 1.7mg weekly). When you actually progress through your dose schedule, the monthly cost on most floor-priced providers rises to match the higher-dose tier on their pricing page. We track maintenance pricing on the same price tracker.
Things the floor price does include for the verified providers above: a synchronous or asynchronous medical consultation, a prescription written by a licensed clinician, the compounded medication itself, basic patient support, and shipping.
Things the floor price typically does not include: labs, insurance billing, syringes (some providers; check the per-provider page), expedited shipping, after-hours support, and dose changes that fall outside the manufacturer's standard titration. None of these are deal-breakers, but they're worth knowing about before you commit.
Red flags that mean the cheapest price is too good
Not every $30/month listing is legitimate. We verified that the providers above are licensed and shipping real product, but elsewhere on the open internet there are sub-floor offers that come with serious problems. Watch for:
- No US-based prescriber. Compounded semaglutide requires a valid prescription from a clinician licensed in your state. Sites that skip the consultation step or that have a prescriber outside the US are violating federal law and your medication is not legitimate compounded product.
- No named compounding pharmacy. Reputable providers name their fulfillment pharmacy on their website or in their consent forms. If you can't find out who is actually compounding your medication, that's a problem.
- Salt forms. Multiple FDA warning letters cite providers using semaglutide sodium or semaglutide acetate (salt forms) instead of base semaglutide. Salt forms are not the same active ingredient as the molecule used in approved drugs and have not been evaluated for safety. See our FDA warning letter investigation for the full pattern.
- Prices below the legitimate floor. Anything dramatically cheaper than the $30/month tier documented here should be treated as suspicious until proven otherwise.
Methodology
Every price in this article is computed at render time from the Weight Loss Rankings provider dataset. When new providers are added or existing providers change their pricing, this article updates automatically — the prose adjusts to reflect the new floor, the new median, and any new verified providers tied at the floor.
The pricing dataset itself is verified directly against each provider's public website on a continuous basis by our editorial team. The verification process and data sources are documented at our methodology page. The full provider list and their pricing rows are available on the live price tracker.
Last data refresh: 2026-04-06.