Henry Meds vs. ShedRx

A side-by-side look at two telehealth GLP-1 programs — medication types, formats, pricing transparency, and what each one actually offers

By The GLP-1 Samples Desk · 7 min read · Updated 2026-06-14

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The short version: Henry Meds and ShedRx are both online (telehealth) platforms that connect adults with licensed providers who can prescribe GLP-1 weight-management medications when appropriate. The biggest practical difference is breadth of options — ShedRx publicly lists more formats (injections, sublingual drops, and lozenges) and offers both compounded and brand-name medications, while Henry Meds focuses on compounded injectable and oral options on a transparent cash-pay model.

Neither program lets you skip a prescription. Both require a consultation with a licensed provider, and the provider decides whether any medication is appropriate. We compare these two on factual attributes — medication types offered, delivery formats, telehealth structure, and published starting prices — not on weight-loss outcomes, which vary by individual and are not promised here.

For adults 18+. Prescription medications require a consultation with a licensed provider. This is not medical advice. Statements not evaluated by the FDA.

The short version

  • Both are legitimate telehealth platforms: each requires an online consultation with a licensed provider before any medication can be prescribed — there are no 'free samples' of prescription GLP-1s without a prescription.
  • ShedRx lists the wider menu: compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide plus brand-name Wegovy and Zepbound, and needle-free formats (sublingual drops and lozenges) in addition to injections.
  • Henry Meds runs an all-inclusive cash-pay model: the published price bundles the provider visit, medication, and supplies, with compounded injectable and oral options.
  • Published starting prices are similar for compounded options — roughly $199/month at the entry level for both — but the total depends on medication, dose, and (for ShedRx) format; always confirm current pricing at the source.
  • Brand-name medications carry separate, higher costs at both — ShedRx adds a separate subscription fee on top of brand-name medication cost; Henry Meds focuses on compounded options.
AttributeHenry MedsShedRx
Compounded semaglutideYes (injectable + oral dissolving tablet)Yes (injectable)
Compounded tirzepatideYes (injectable + oral dissolving tablet)Yes (injectable)
Brand-name optionsFocus on compounded optionsBrand Wegovy and brand Zepbound offered
Needle-free formatsOral dissolving tabletsSublingual drops and dissolvable lozenges (plus oral)
Telehealth consultation requiredYes — licensed providerYes — licensed provider
Published starting price (compounded)Compounded semaglutide ~$199–$297/mo month-to-month; ~$197/mo on 12-month prepay (provider-attributed, verify current)Compounded semaglutide/tirzepatide starting ~$199/mo; drops ~$229/mo; lozenges ~$199/mo (attributed, verify current)
Brand-name pricing structureN/A (compounded focus)Separate ~$99 subscription fee on top of brand medication cost (attributed)
Pricing modelAll-inclusive cash-pay (visit + medication + supplies)Per-format pricing; brand-name billed separately
InsuranceCash-pay modelConfirm at source
Price transparencyPublishes starting prices on sitePublishes per-format starting prices (per referenced reviews)

Attribute comparison of Henry Meds and ShedRx telehealth GLP-1 programs. Prices are 'starting at / typical' figures attributed to provider-referenced reviews and provider materials and may change — verify current pricing directly at each provider before enrolling.

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What brings you here today?

How the two programs are structured

Both Henry Meds and ShedRx operate the same basic way: you complete an online intake, a licensed provider reviews your information through a telehealth consultation, and — if a medication is determined to be appropriate — a prescription can be issued and the medication shipped to you. Neither is a pharmacy you can order from without a provider, and neither offers prescription medication without that consultation.

Henry Meds emphasizes an all-inclusive, cash-pay structure: the published monthly price is intended to bundle the provider visit, the medication itself, and supplies. According to provider-referenced 2026 reviews, compounded semaglutide is listed starting around $199–$297/month on a month-to-month basis, dropping to roughly $197/month on a 12-month prepay plan; tirzepatide is priced higher. Henry Meds also offers oral dissolving-tablet versions of semaglutide and tirzepatide for people who prefer to avoid injections.

ShedRx lists a broader set of choices. Per provider materials and referenced reviews, it offers compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide injections starting around $199/month, sublingual GLP-1 drops around $229/month, and dissolvable lozenges around $199/month. ShedRx also offers brand-name Wegovy and Zepbound, which carry a separate subscription fee (about $99/month, attributed) on top of the medication's own cost.

Compounded vs. brand-name medications

This is a meaningful distinction between the two. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are prepared by compounding pharmacies and are not the same FDA-approved products as the brand names. Brand-name products — Wegovy and Ozempic (semaglutide) and Zepbound and Mounjaro (tirzepatide) — are FDA-approved medications made by their manufacturers.

ShedRx offers both compounded options and brand-name Wegovy and Zepbound, so it can serve people specifically seeking a brand-name product through telehealth. Henry Meds, per its published materials, focuses on compounded injectable and oral options.

If brand-name access is your priority, ShedRx's menu is the more direct fit of these two. If a transparent, all-in cash price for a compounded option is the priority, Henry Meds' bundled model is straightforward. In both cases the provider — not the platform — determines what, if anything, is appropriate to prescribe.

Formats: injections vs. needle-free

Both companies offer alternatives to weekly injections, but ShedRx lists more of them. ShedRx publicizes sublingual drops (taken under the tongue) and dissolvable lozenges in addition to standard injections. Henry Meds offers oral dissolving tablets of semaglutide and tirzepatide as its needle-free route.

Format can affect both price and routine — daily oral/sublingual options are dosed differently from a weekly injection. Confirm the exact format, dosing schedule, and current price at each provider's site before deciding, since these details change.

Which might fit which person

Consider Henry Meds if you want a single, all-inclusive cash price that bundles the visit, medication, and supplies, you're comfortable with a compounded option, and you'd like the choice of an oral dissolving tablet instead of an injection.

Consider ShedRx if you want the widest published menu — including brand-name Wegovy or Zepbound — or you specifically want a needle-free format like sublingual drops or lozenges, and you're comfortable with a separate subscription fee applying to brand-name medication.

For adults 18+. Prescription medications require a consultation with a licensed provider. This is not medical advice. Statements not evaluated by the FDA. Whether any GLP-1 medication is appropriate for you is a decision for a licensed provider based on your individual health.

Questions, answered

Can I get a GLP-1 medication from Henry Meds or ShedRx without a prescription?

No. Both are telehealth platforms that require an online consultation with a licensed provider. The provider decides whether a prescription medication is appropriate. Neither offers prescription GLP-1 medications, or 'free samples' of them, without that consultation and a prescription.

What is the difference between the compounded and brand-name options?

Brand-name products such as Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, and Mounjaro are FDA-approved medications from their manufacturers. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are prepared by compounding pharmacies and are not the same FDA-approved products. ShedRx offers both compounded and brand-name (Wegovy, Zepbound) options; Henry Meds focuses on compounded injectable and oral options.

How much do Henry Meds and ShedRx cost?

Both publish starting prices around $199/month for compounded options. Henry Meds lists compounded semaglutide starting roughly $199–$297/month month-to-month (about $197/month on a 12-month prepay), bundling visit, medication, and supplies. ShedRx lists compounded injections starting around $199/month, drops around $229/month, and lozenges around $199/month, with brand-name options billed separately plus a subscription fee. These figures are attributed to provider-referenced reviews and materials and change over time — confirm current pricing directly at each provider.

Does either offer needle-free options?

Yes. ShedRx lists sublingual drops and dissolvable lozenges in addition to injections. Henry Meds offers oral dissolving tablets of semaglutide and tirzepatide. The right format, if any, is something to discuss with the prescribing provider.

Which one offers brand-name medications?

Of these two, ShedRx publicly offers brand-name Wegovy and Zepbound alongside its compounded options. Henry Meds, per its published materials, focuses on compounded injectable and oral options.

Is this medical advice?

No. This page is educational and is a directory-style comparison of telehealth providers. It is not medical advice and statements here have not been evaluated by the FDA. For adults 18+. Whether any GLP-1 medication is appropriate for you is a decision for a licensed provider.