Range Yourself

LIV Body GLP-1 Review (2026): Pricing, Coverage, and Tradeoffs

LIV Body review — 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. Compounded GLP-1 with four NAMED dispensing pharmacies and a named medical group (OpenLoop Health). Independent 2026 review from RangeYourself.

Quick take

LIV Body is compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide — once-weekly injection; program run on a telehealth funnel (go.livbody.com) with care by openloop health clinicians, priced as monthly program; advertised per-medication 'starting at' pricing that conflicts with the funnel faq's own program-start figure — no single defensible entry price (oak mechanism). Best for: Compounded GLP-1 with four NAMED dispensing pharmacies and a named medical group (OpenLoop Health). Watch out for: 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').

Is LIV Body legit?

LIV Body — the GLP-1 program fronted by fitness personality Paige Hathaway — carries several signals of a legitimate compounded telehealth operation, alongside real transparency gaps worth weighing. On the positive side, it names the four pharmacies that dispense its medication (RedRock Pharmacy, Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding Pharmacy, and Triad Rx), it states that prescribing is handled by a named independent medical group, OpenLoop Health, and it discloses upfront that “compounded drug products are not approved or evaluated for safety, effectiveness, or quality by the FDA” (LIV Body’s own wording). It offers both compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide as once-weekly injections.

The pricing is contradictory — confirm at enrollment

This is the most important thing to know before you sign up: LIV Body’s own materials show conflicting figures. Its medication cards advertise compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide at “starting at” prices, while the same funnel’s FAQ states a different single program-start price per month (both figures are on the pricing summary below, read first-party). Because LIV Body’s pages disagree with each other, we do not assert any single LIV Body price — confirm the real monthly rate at enrollment before you enter payment details. LIV Body states that your medical consultation, ongoing provider support, and customized treatment plan are included in the program cost.

Transparency gaps to weigh

Judged against the transparency criteria we apply to every compounded program — a stated 503A/503B pharmacy status, published testing, a public state list — a few gaps remain. It names its four pharmacies but states no 503A or 503B status for any of them, so you cannot confirm the compounding tier from its site. Its pharmacy blurb says it receives “updated reports on their medication testing” from partner pharmacies — that is not the same as published third-party batch testing or a certificate of analysis, and LIV Body should not be read as “third-party tested.” It does not publish a list of the states it serves (“Not available in all 50 states” — confirm your state at signup). And two of its footer legal links (“Medical Consent” and “Bill of Rights”) point to start.livbody.com, a domain that does not currently resolve — a wobble worth noting on links that should carry medical-consent terms. See how LIV Body’s disclosure compares with peers on our compounded GLP-1 testing transparency page.

Pricing summary

  • Price verified: (checked against the provider’s public pricing surface)
  • All-in monthly cost: 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
  • Compounded vs brand-name: Compounded only
  • Insurance accepted: No (cash-pay only)
  • Consult type: Async (questionnaire-based)
  • Dose-escalation pricing: Not published. Entry figures conflict on LIV Body's own funnel ($179 sema card vs $249/month program FAQ); dose-tier pricing not shown — confirm at enrollment.
  • Refund policy: Not published on the funnel; footer links 'Medical Consent' and 'Bill of Rights' point to start.livbody.com, which does not resolve (dead domain) — refund terms not verifiable first-party (not tracked for meds).
  • States served: Not available in all 50 states — confirm your state at signup

Check LIV Body pricing

Choose LIV Body if

  • You want a compounded GLP-1 program that NAMES its dispensing pharmacies (RedRock Pharmacy, Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding Pharmacy, Triad Rx)
  • You value a named independent medical group (OpenLoop Health) making all prescribing decisions
  • You value an upfront 'not FDA-approved' compounding disclosure
  • You're comfortable confirming the real monthly rate at enrollment (LIV Body's own pages show conflicting entry figures)

Skip LIV Body if

You want a single published price, a stated 503A/503B pharmacy status, a published state list, or a brand-name (non-compounded) GLP-1.

Contraindications and clinical notes

Standard GLP-1 contraindications; 'OpenLoop Health … has established exclusionary criteria to determine if an individual does not qualify for GLP-1s.' Prescribing decisions rest solely with OpenLoop clinicians.. Talk to a clinician about personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, MEN 2, pancreatitis, or other conditions before starting any GLP-1 medication.

How LIV Body compares

Frequently asked questions

How much does LIV Body cost per month?

LIV Body does not publish pricing publicly — you only see your monthly cost after creating an account and completing the intake assessment. Not published. Entry figures conflict on LIV Body's own funnel ($179 sema card vs $249/month program FAQ); dose-tier pricing not shown — confirm at enrollment.

Does LIV Body accept insurance?

No. LIV Body operates as cash-pay only. If you want insurance-billed brand-name GLP-1, see our list of GLP-1 programs that accept insurance.

What states does LIV Body serve?

LIV Body serves Not available in all 50 states — confirm your state at signup.

Is LIV Body compounded or brand-name?

LIV Body prescribes compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide via state-licensed compounding pharmacies. Compounded medication is legal under FDA guidance during drug shortages and for individual patient prescriptions, but is not individually FDA-approved.

What's the catch with LIV Body?

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'). Avoid if: you want a single published price, a stated 503a/503b pharmacy status, a published state list, or a brand-name (non-compounded) glp-1.

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 reflects publicly listed entry tiers verified on 2026-07-16 and may change.