Many compounded programs carry both semaglutide and tirzepatide. Fewer also name the independent, US-licensed medical group whose clinicians actually make the prescribing decision and are matched to you. The programs below do both — listed alphabetically, not ranked by price (one publishes no price at all). Having both medications under one named clinical group is what lets a clinician switch you between them without re-enrolling somewhere else.
Who this list is for
People who want both GLP-1 options available from one program — so a clinician can move them between semaglutide and tirzepatide by response — and who want that clinician to come from a named, independent medical group rather than an unnamed “licensed provider.”
Ranked programs
| Provider | All-in monthly | Semaglutide | Tirzepatide | Compounded vs brand | Insurance accepted? | Last verified | Price source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not publicly listed | Compounded — advertised 'Starting at $179' on the medication card; the same funnel's FAQ says the program 'starts at just $249/month' — conflicting first-party figures, confirm at enrollment | Compounded — advertised 'Starting at $279' on the medication card; ongoing rate not consistently listed, confirm at enrollment | Compounded | No | go.livbody.com ↗ | See pricing → | ||
| Not publicly listed | Compounded — advertised 'first month low as $49'; ongoing recurring rate not published (funnel-gated), confirm at enrollment | Compounded — injectable advertised 'first month low as $99'; oral 'first month low as $49'; microdosed 'first month low as $69'; ongoing recurring rate not published, confirm at enrollment | Compounded | No | telosrx.com ↗ | See pricing → | ||
| $99/mo | Compounded — $99/mo on the annual plan, BILLED YEARLY ($1,188/yr up front). Verified 2026-07-14. | Compounded — $125/mo on the annual plan (billed yearly). Verified 2026-07-14. | Compounded | No | trytrimi.com ↗ | See pricing → |
Why we ranked them this way
- Both medications under one roof matters because clinicians often start patients on semaglutide and switch to tirzepatide (or vice versa) based on response, tolerability, and cost — a program carrying both lets that happen without starting over elsewhere.
- What narrows this list is the clinical model. Each program names the independent medical group behind its prescribing: LIV Body uses OpenLoop Health; telos rx and Trimi both use Arora Health, which states its physician Sean Arora, MD is licensed in all 50 states. We treat a named, accountable medical group as one of our editorial transparency criteria — it lets you look up who is actually prescribing — though a name alone is not a quality guarantee.
- Honest caveat on LIV Body: it publishes no single price — its own pages show conflicting figures — so it appears here without a price; confirm the rate at enrollment. See the LIV Body review (linked below) for the full picture.
- All three prescribe compounded GLP-1 medication, which is not FDA-approved. Ask each program which specific pharmacy fills your prescription and request that pharmacy’s certificate of analysis for your batch.
The picks in detail
LIV Body
Best for: Compounded GLP-1 with four NAMED dispensing pharmacies and a named medical group (OpenLoop Health).
Watchout: LIV Body's own funnel shows two conflicting entry prices: medication cards say compounded semaglutide 'Starting at $179' / tirzepatide 'Starting at $279', while the SAME page's FAQ says 'The LivBody GLP-1 program starts at just $249/month' and elsewhere states 'Medication is included in the cost of the LIV Body Program.' No single defensible entry price — confirm the real rate at enrollment. State availability is not published ('Not available in all 50 states')..
Pricing: Not publicly listed — shown after intake — semaglutide compounded — advertised 'starting at $179' on the medication card; the same funnel's faq says the program 'starts at just $249/month' — conflicting first-party figures, confirm at enrollment, tirzepatide compounded — advertised 'starting at $279' on the medication card; ongoing rate not consistently listed, confirm at enrollment.
telos rx
Best for: One integrated care team across GLP-1, hormones/longevity, sexual health, and recovery (peptide-led telehealth) rather than a single-indication weight-loss pure-play.
Watchout: telos publishes only 'first month low as' intro figures (semaglutide $49, tirzepatide $99, oral tirzepatide $49, microdosed tirzepatide $69); the ongoing monthly rate is not shown on the public site and is confirmed inside the intake flow — confirm the real recurring price at enrollment. State availability is not published, no dispensing pharmacy is named, and shipped compounded medication is non-refundable..
Pricing: Not publicly listed — shown after intake — semaglutide compounded — advertised 'first month low as $49'; ongoing recurring rate not published (funnel-gated), confirm at enrollment, tirzepatide compounded — injectable advertised 'first month low as $99'; oral 'first month low as $49'; microdosed 'first month low as $69'; ongoing recurring rate not published, confirm at enrollment.
Trimi
Best for: Lowest-cost compounded GLP-1 on an annual plan with a plain 503A disclosure.
Watchout: The $99/mo semaglutide and $125/mo tirzepatide rates are the ANNUAL plan, BILLED YEARLY (semaglutide = $1,188 charged up front). A month-to-month rate is not published — confirm billing terms before enrolling..
Pricing: $99/mo all-in (medication included) — semaglutide compounded — $99/mo on the annual plan, billed yearly ($1,188/yr up front). verified 2026-07-14., tirzepatide compounded — $125/mo on the annual plan (billed yearly). verified 2026-07-14..
Frequently asked questions
Can one program switch me between semaglutide and tirzepatide?
If a program carries both compounded medications, a clinician can move you between them based on response and tolerability without you re-enrolling elsewhere. The programs on this list all offer both. The switch is still a clinical decision made by the prescriber, not something you self-select.
What does a “named medical group” mean here?
It means the program identifies the independent, US-licensed medical group whose clinicians make the prescribing decisions — LIV Body names OpenLoop Health; telos rx and Trimi name Arora Health. We use naming-the-group as one of our editorial transparency criteria because it lets you look up who is prescribing; it is not a guarantee of quality.
Why does LIV Body appear here without a price?
LIV Body’s own pages show conflicting entry figures (its medication cards and its funnel FAQ disagree), so we do not assert any single LIV Body price. It is included on this list for its clinical model — both medications under a named medical group — not on price. Confirm the real monthly rate at enrollment.
Related guides
RangeYourself is reader-supported. We may earn a commission when you click on certain links — at no extra cost to you. Editorial recommendations are made independently. Pricing last verified July 17, 2026.