Quick answer
LIV Body and TMates both offer GLP-1 telehealth, but they package medication, support, and pricing differently. The right choice depends on whether you weight cost, clinical touch, or formulation flexibility highest.
Side-by-side comparison
| Feature | LIV Body | TMates |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Compounded GLP-1 with four NAMED dispensing pharmacies and a named medical group (OpenLoop Health) | Compounded GLP-1 with hands-on clinical touch |
| Medication type | Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide — once-weekly injection; program run on a telehealth funnel (go.livbody.com) with care by OpenLoop Health clinicians | Compounded GLP-1 with bundled clinical support |
| Pricing model | 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) | Monthly subscription, dose-tier pricing |
| Semaglutide price | 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 | From $158/mo (compounded semaglutide, 12-month plan; $249/mo month-to-month); medication and visits included |
| Tirzepatide price | Compounded — advertised 'Starting at $279' on the medication card; ongoing rate not consistently listed, confirm at enrollment | From $167/mo (compounded tirzepatide, 12-month plan; $297/mo month-to-month) |
| Key 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'). | The $158 headline is the compounded SEMAGLUTIDE plan (12-month term; $249/mo month-to-month). Tirzepatide costs more ($167/mo on a 12-month plan, $297 month-to-month) — confirm your product and term at checkout |
When to choose LIV Body
- 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)
Check current LIV Body pricing →
When to choose TMates
- You want a compounded program with clinical check-ins built in
- You'd rather pay one bundled monthly fee than line items
- You want responsive messaging with prescribers
- You're comfortable with a longer onboarding intake in exchange for support
Check current TMates pricing →
Full reviews
Frequently asked questions
Is LIV Body cheaper than TMates?
TMates starts lower on semaglutide (From $158/mo (compounded semaglutide, 12-month plan; $249/mo month-to-month); medication and visits included). TMates starts lower on tirzepatide (From $167/mo (compounded tirzepatide, 12-month plan; $297/mo month-to-month)). Higher doses can shift the picture, so confirm pricing at the dose you're likely to use long-term.
Which is better for semaglutide or tirzepatide — LIV Body or TMates?
TMates starts lower on both semaglutide and tirzepatide based on listed entry pricing. That said, the right pick is the program whose support model and formulation match what you actually need.
Are LIV Body and TMates compounded or brand-name?
LIV Body offers compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide — once-weekly injection; program run on a telehealth funnel (go.livbody.com) with care by openloop health clinicians. TMates offers compounded glp-1 with bundled clinical support. If you specifically want brand-name Wegovy or Zepbound, lean toward whichever explicitly supports brand access; if compounded is fine, both can typically meet that need.
Can I switch from LIV Body to TMates?
Yes — switching between LIV Body and TMates is straightforward in most states. You typically finish your current month, complete a new intake with the other provider, and they handle the prescription. Watch for overlap on auto-renewal billing and confirm any dose-tier or formulation differences with the new clinician before your next shipment.
Compare LIV Body and TMates to other programs
- LIV Body vs ShedRx · TMates vs ShedRx
- LIV Body vs Direct Meds · TMates vs Direct Meds
- LIV Body vs Sprout Health · TMates vs Sprout Health
- LIV Body vs Mochi Health · TMates vs Mochi Health
- LIV Body vs Henry Meds · TMates vs Henry Meds
- LIV Body vs Calibrate · TMates vs Calibrate
- LIV Body vs Embody · TMates vs Embody
- LIV Body vs Found · TMates vs Found
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 as of May 2026 and may change. Numbers like 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 and $158/mo (compounded semaglutide, 12-month plan; $249/mo month-to-month); medication and visits included are starting tiers, not your guaranteed long-term cost.
