OrderlyMeds Review
OrderlyMeds publishes a fuller GLP-1 pricing grid than most telehealth competitors. The current pricing page separates starter programs for new users, offers for people already taking GLP-1s, ongoing monthly compounded plans, and full cash-pay brand-name pricing.
The trade-off is timing and process discipline. Orderly says there are no membership fees or hidden costs, but buyers still need to plan for an 8-10 business day timeline from sign-up, no expedite option, and state-specific phone or video visits in some markets.
About OrderlyMeds
OrderlyMeds is strongest for shoppers who want a transparent GLP-1 price menu with all-in monthly or starter pricing. It is weaker if you need rush shipping or a long cancellation window after a prescription is signed.
Why it's for you
- The current pricing page publishes separate starter, current-user, monthly compounded, and brand-name cash-pay options instead of forcing a quote request.
- The FAQ says there are no membership fees or hidden costs, and that the listed price includes the doctor visit, medication, syringes, and shipping.
- OrderlyMeds accepts HSA and FSA cards and says medication pricing stays the same across dose levels.
- The physician network is advertised in all 50 states, with clear notes about when some states require a phone or video consult.
Why it's not for you
- The FAQ tells shoppers to expect medication within 8-10 business days of signing up, and orders cannot be expedited.
- Cancellation ends once the doctor finalizes the prescription, so the easy exit window closes earlier than some buyers expect.
- Compounded GLP-1 options are not FDA-approved brand medications and should be evaluated with that distinction in mind.
- The Terms include binding individual arbitration and a class-action waiver with only a limited opt-out path.
Eligibility for OrderlyMeds
OrderlyMeds does not promise a prescription to everyone. The most supportable fit language is that it may work for adults who can complete an online screening, are comfortable with telehealth review plus possible state-specific live consults, and can budget for either compounded or brand-name cash-pay treatment.
Likely a better fit if
- You want a published GLP-1 pricing grid before checkout, including starter and monthly options.
- You are comfortable using an online portal and waiting about 8-10 business days from sign-up to delivery.
- You like having HSA/FSA payment options and all-in pricing that includes visit, medication, syringes, and shipping.
May be a weaker fit if
- You need medication immediately or want an expedited shipping option.
- You want the ability to cancel after the provider has already finalized your prescription.
- You want brand-name-only treatment at a low monthly cost instead of full cash-pay pricing.
Program tiers
Use these tiers to understand how this program separates plan levels, medication paths, or support inclusions.
| Tier | What's included |
|---|---|
| 3-month starter programs for new GLP-1 users | Semaglutide is $224 total ($74/mo) and tirzepatide is $449 total ($149/mo). |
| 3-month special offers for current GLP-1 users | Semaglutide is $335 total ($111/mo) and tirzepatide is $670 total ($223/mo). |
| Monthly compounded plans | Semaglutide is $149 per month and tirzepatide is $299 per month. |
| Brand-name monthly plans | Wegovy is $1,839 per month and Zepbound is $1,498 per month on the current pricing page. |
Program choices and options
OrderlyMeds now has a much more defined menu than the older draft in this repo. The main decision is whether you are new to GLP-1 treatment, already taking a GLP-1, or want a month-to-month or brand-name cash-pay option instead.
The operational rules stay mostly the same across those paths: pay during screening, wait for provider review, and understand that shipping speed is measured from sign-up rather than from the moment the pharmacy prints a label.
1. Starter programs for new GLP-1 users
The best public values on the site are currently the 3-month starter programs for people beginning treatment. These are the numbers most likely to catch a comparison shopper looking for a lower effective monthly cost.
Because the pricing page breaks them out separately from other offers, it makes sense to treat these as dedicated onboarding tiers rather than as a universal price that everyone gets.
- Semaglutide starter: $224 total ($74/mo average).
- Tirzepatide starter: $449 total ($149/mo average).
2. Current-user and monthly compounded options
People who are already taking a GLP-1 are shown a different 3-month special offer, and the site also keeps a simpler monthly compounded menu. That means existing users do not need to rely on the new-customer pricing to understand ongoing costs.
The FAQ also says compounded medications stay the same price across dose levels, which is a helpful budgeting detail once titration begins.
- Current-user special offer: semaglutide $335 total, tirzepatide $670 total.
- Monthly compounded plans: semaglutide $149, tirzepatide $299.
- FAQ says there are no membership fees or hidden costs.
3. Brand-name cash-pay path
OrderlyMeds also posts brand-name monthly pricing instead of pretending the service is compounded-only. That gives shoppers a cleaner side-by-side comparison between the compounded and branded paths.
The brand prices are much higher, so this is mainly useful for people who know they want a brand-name discussion and are prepared for full cash-pay costs.
- Wegovy: $1,839 per month.
- Zepbound: $1,498 per month.
4. State coverage and consult rules
OrderlyMeds says its physician network is available in all 50 states, but the visit format is not identical everywhere. The FAQ says Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Kansas, Rhode Island, and West Virginia require a phone or video consultation instead of portal-only chat.
That is a practical detail worth surfacing because it changes the expected onboarding experience without changing the headline price.
- All 50 states advertised through the physician network.
- Some states require phone or video instead of asynchronous chat.
- Expect provider review within about 48 hours, then pharmacy processing and delivery inside the broader 8-10 business day window.
Detailed review
A pricing grid that finally matches how people shop
OrderlyMeds now has a broader and more current pricing structure than the older local draft. The live pricing page separates new-user starter plans, current-user 3-month offers, monthly compounded plans, and brand-name cash-pay options so shoppers can compare ingredient and budget paths more directly.
For new GLP-1 users, the starter pricing is currently $224 total for semaglutide and $449 total for tirzepatide. Current users see higher 3-month offers at $335 and $670 respectively, while the monthly compounded menu sits at $149 for semaglutide and $299 for tirzepatide. Brand-name pricing is also public: Wegovy at $1,839 and Zepbound at $1,498.
What happens after payment
The FAQ explains why people are charged during screening rather than after shipment: OrderlyMeds says payment up front helps streamline medical review and keeps the process moving once the provider makes a decision. Within about 48 hours, licensed medical providers review the information and prescribe treatment when appropriate.
From there, the company tells shoppers to expect medication within 8-10 business days of signing up. That is the safer planning number for this review. The FAQ also says orders cannot be expedited, so buyers should not expect to pay extra for rush handling.
State coverage, consult format, and all-in pricing
OrderlyMeds says its physician network is available in all 50 states. It also makes an unusually useful distinction about consult format: some states still require a phone or video visit instead of the standard portal chat flow.
The FAQ says the listed price includes the doctor visit, medication, syringes, and shipping, with no membership fees or hidden costs. It also says HSA and FSA cards are accepted and that medication pricing stays the same across dose levels.
Cancellation and legal terms
OrderlyMeds gives buyers a clear refund rule: you can cancel before the doctor finalizes the prescription, and if you are denied a prescription the payment is fully refunded. Once the prescription is written after the medical consultation, cancellation is no longer possible for that order.
The Terms add binding individual arbitration and a class-action waiver, with an opt-out path described in the agreement. That is not unusual in telehealth, but it is still part of the buying decision.
Operational model and partner pharmacies
The medical consent page reinforces that OrderlyMeds operates as a telehealth coordinator rather than a single in-house pharmacy. It names multiple pharmacy partners, including Red Rock, Hallandale, Anazao, The Pharmacy Hub, Southend, RXReinvented, Nationwide, and Strive.
That partner-network model helps explain why timelines, consult formats, and exact operational details can vary slightly by state and treatment path even when the front-end pricing looks standardized.
Bottom line
OrderlyMeds is a better fit for shoppers who want public GLP-1 pricing, like comparing starter versus ongoing plans, and can plan around an 8-10 business day telehealth timeline. It is a weaker fit for people who need fast medication turnaround, a long post-prescription cancellation window, or lower-cost brand-name treatment.
Expert take

Keith Murphy
Senior Editor
OrderlyMeds works best if you want clear, posted GLP-1 prices and you can plan ahead for shipping. The month-to-month rate is straightforward, starter bundles lower the first three months, and multi-month options make refill timing less stressful if you like getting everything in one box.
It is not the ideal fit if you need brand pens included in a flat membership or you avoid arbitration language. If you proceed, budget using the specific page you intend to buy from, set an 8-10 business day expectation, and keep your tracking emails so the hand-off from pharmacy to carrier is easy to follow.
External review scores
These scores reflect third-party review platforms when the provider or review data includes them.
Trustpilot
3.7Review count
456Read before you choose
Understanding GLP-1 basics, eligibility, costs, and safety helps you evaluate any provider more carefully.
What is GLP-1?
Mechanism, FDA approvals, and brand vs compounded.
Read guideSemaglutide vs tirzepatide
Head-to-head trial data, dosing, and patient fit.
Read guideCosts & pricing
List prices, self-pay options, and hidden fees.
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Incidence rates, dose schedules, and safety warnings.
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Coverage patterns, Bridge program, and savings cards.
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Step-by-step from intake to dose escalation.
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