How glp1medications.org May Earn Money
Some links on this site point to licensed telehealth providers that offer GLP-1 medication programs. When a user clicks one of those links and completes a qualifying action — such as signing up for an intake or completing a medical consultation — glp1medications.org may receive a referral commission from that provider. This is how the site is funded.
This type of arrangement is standard in the health and consumer information space and is regulated under FTC guidelines on affiliate marketing and endorsement disclosures. We are disclosing it here and near the relevant links throughout the site.
What affiliate compensation means, plainly stated
- glp1medications.org earns money when you use certain links on this site to visit a partner provider and take a qualifying action.
- We are paid by the provider, not by you. You do not pay more — and do not pay anything additional — because you arrived through an affiliate link.
- The existence of a referral relationship between this site and a provider is disclosed near the link or call-to-action button where that relationship exists.
- Not every provider mentioned on this site is an affiliate partner. Some providers appear in educational content without any commercial relationship.
How Affiliate Relationships Affect Content
We are not going to claim that affiliate relationships have zero effect on this site. That would not be accurate, and making that claim would itself be a disclosure failure.
Here is what is accurate:
- Affiliate relationships may influence which providers we cover and link to. If a provider is not a partner, we may have less incentive to write detailed coverage of their program. We acknowledge this openly.
- Affiliate relationships do not change medical facts, FDA-status language, or safety content. The approved indications for Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, and Mounjaro are what they are regardless of which providers advertise on this site. Side effects, contraindications, and clinical context are reported as published in official labeling.
- We do not suppress safety information to make a partner's offering appear more favorable. Known risks are described fully on every relevant page.
- Commission size does not determine ranking or prominence. We do not have a methodology that formally controls for this on every page, and we are not claiming we do. What we can say is that we do not actively sort or rank providers by commission rate.
The honest version of editorial independence
Genuine editorial independence in an affiliate-funded model means that safety content, indication accuracy, and medical guardrails are not negotiable — regardless of who pays referral fees. It does not mean that commercial relationships have zero influence on which topics we cover or which providers we feature. Claiming otherwise would be inaccurate. We aim to be useful and honest about both sides of that line.
For more detail on our editorial standards, see the Editorial Policy.
Affiliate Links Do Not Replace Medical Advice
Clicking a link on this site — including a link to a partner telehealth provider — is not medical advice and does not mean you qualify for prescription GLP-1 treatment.
GLP-1 medications are prescription drugs. Any telehealth provider linked on this site requires a medical intake and clinician review before a prescription can be issued — and a prescription is issued only if clinically appropriate for that individual. A referral link from this site is the beginning of that process, not the outcome.
What a partner link does and does not mean
- It connects you to a licensed telehealth provider that offers GLP-1 medication programs subject to medical screening.
- It does not mean you will qualify for treatment, receive a prescription, or be covered by insurance.
- It does not substitute for evaluation by a licensed clinician who knows your medical history.
- It does not constitute a referral from a physician or a recommendation that any specific medication is appropriate for you.
All content on this site is for general educational purposes. Talk with a licensed clinician before starting, stopping, or changing any prescription medication. See the Medical Review Policy for how medical content on this site is maintained.
Provider Details Can Change
Information about telehealth providers — including prices, availability, states served, medication options, insurance support, and program rules — can change at any time and without notice to this site. glp1medications.org does not have real-time access to each provider's current offerings, and we cannot guarantee that any information published here is current at the time you read it.
Before making any decision based on provider information on this site:
- Verify current pricing, availability, and program details directly with the provider.
- Confirm which states the provider is licensed to serve.
- Ask directly about insurance support, prior authorization assistance, and out-of-pocket costs.
- Confirm which medications are currently available through the provider's program.
This site makes reasonable efforts to keep provider information current, but we make no warranty that any specific detail is accurate at the time of your visit.
How We Evaluate Online GLP-1 Programs
When this site covers or compares online GLP-1 programs, we apply the following criteria to determine whether a provider is suitable to feature:
Licensed clinicians on staff
The provider must employ or contract with licensed physicians, nurse practitioners, or other qualified clinicians who conduct medical intakes and issue prescriptions where appropriate.
Medical screening required
The provider must require a medical intake — not just a brief quiz or instant approval flow — before issuing a prescription. Programs that offer medications without proper clinical review are not featured.
Legitimate pharmacy fulfillment
Prescriptions must be fulfilled through a licensed pharmacy. We do not feature providers that source medications through unverified supply chains, grey-market importers, or non-pharmacy channels.
FDA-approved or properly disclosed compounded medications
The provider must be transparent about whether it dispenses FDA-approved brand medications or compounded products, and about the regulatory differences between them.
No no-prescription or OTC language
We do not feature providers that market prescription medications as available without a prescription, or that use deceptive language about the clinical requirements for treatment.
Transparent pricing
Providers should be reasonably transparent about what users will pay, including medication cost, consultation fees, and any recurring subscription charges. Hidden-fee structures are a disqualifying factor.
These criteria reflect what we look for when deciding whether to feature a provider — they are not a formal audit, a clinical certification, or a guarantee of service quality. Providers are ultimately independent businesses, and their practices can change. We recommend verifying current standards directly before signing up. See Best Online GLP-1 Programs for our current provider comparisons.
Compounded and FDA-Approved Medications Are Not the Same Thing
Some online GLP-1 providers dispense compounded versions of semaglutide or tirzepatide rather than FDA-approved brand medications such as Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, or Mounjaro. These are not the same product and are not interchangeable.
- FDA-approved medications have undergone clinical trials, regulatory review, and manufacturing quality controls as a condition of approval.
- Compounded medications are not FDA-approved products. They may be legally produced by licensed compounding pharmacies under specific regulatory frameworks, but they have not individually completed the FDA approval process. The FDA has raised concerns about compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide products in several communications.
- Supplements, patches, gummies, drops, and research peptides marketed as GLP-1 alternatives are not prescription medications and are not equivalent to FDA-approved GLP-1 drugs. This site does not feature or monetize those product categories.
When this site links to providers that offer compounded products, we disclose that distinction. We do not represent compounded products as equivalent to FDA-approved medications. Users should ask any prospective provider explicitly whether the medication they will receive is FDA-approved or compounded, and understand what that distinction means for quality, regulatory oversight, and insurance coverage.
For more on this topic, see the GLP-1 Medications hub.
Your Choice Comes First
This site earns money through referrals. We are transparent about that. But a referral commission is not a reason to use any particular provider, and it is not a substitute for your own evaluation.
Before choosing a provider:
- Compare multiple options — including providers not featured on this site.
- Ask your own physician or clinician for a referral if that is an option for you.
- Verify current pricing, availability, and medication options directly with the provider before committing.
- Ask explicitly whether the program uses FDA-approved brand medications or compounded products, and what that means for your insurance coverage.
- Talk with a licensed clinician about whether GLP-1 treatment is appropriate for your individual health situation — not just whether you meet a BMI threshold on a website intake form.
No provider comparison on this site — including our Best Online GLP-1 Programs page — is a substitute for your own due diligence and a licensed clinician's individualized evaluation.
Questions or Corrections
If you have a question about how affiliate relationships work on this site, believe that a disclosure is missing from a page where one should appear, or believe that provider information is outdated or inaccurate, please use the contact page.
We also accept correction requests for factual content. If a claim about a medication's approved indication, safety profile, or regulatory status appears to conflict with an official primary source, send us the specific claim and the official document you believe contradicts it. We review correction requests and update content when errors are confirmed.
Medical disclaimer
All content on glp1medications.org is for general educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment guidance for any individual. GLP-1 medications are prescription drugs and require a licensed clinician's individualized evaluation. Clicking a link on this site to a telehealth provider does not mean you qualify for treatment or that any specific medication is appropriate for you.
Medication indications, risks, costs, and availability can change. Always talk with a licensed clinician before starting, stopping, or changing any prescription medication.