What this page helps you sort
Use this page when price is the blocker. Separate the first-month offer from the ongoing monthly math: care fee, medication cost, refill or review step, shipping, labs, and whether medication is included. If HSA/FSA matters, confirm whether the offer can be paid with those funds and what receipt details are required before comparing offers.
Look at the full monthly setup, not just the starter price.
The useful cost question is not what a provider charges on day one. It is what you are likely to pay once the first-month offer ends, the care fee repeats, medication is billed, and any refill review, shipping, labs, or pharmacy or delivery details are added back in. Some programs look inexpensive because the first month is subsidized, the starting dose is cheaper, or support fees are separated from the medication quote. Others look expensive until you factor in what is bundled and how often you pay.
Review real monthly costCheck what can change after the first month.
A starter price may not be the recurring price. The next bill may separate care membership, medication, refill review, labs, shipping, or pharmacy processing. A monthly payment plan can still leave medication or refill costs outside the visible number, and "no membership fee" does not automatically mean the medicine is included.
Check renewal pricingAsk whether labs, shipping, refill review, and follow-up are part of the quote.
The same advertised monthly price can mean different things. One program may include clinician follow-up and shipping. Another may quote a care fee while medication, labs, or refill review are billed separately. Before you treat two prices as comparable, check what the number includes and what could appear later.
Compare what is includedCheck card use and receipts before you pay.
Some programs publish whether HSA or FSA cards can be used directly. Others tell you to pay another way and request reimbursement, and some do not publish enough detail. Before signup, check direct card use, itemized receipt or invoice access, and what your benefits administrator requires. Do not assume reimbursement is guaranteed.
Save payment detailsSeparate the membership fee from the medication cost.
Two programs can advertise similar starting prices and still work very differently. One may bundle medication, clinician support, shipping, and refills into one rate. Another may charge a membership fee while medication is billed through a pharmacy or a separate invoice. A third may run everything through insurance and leave the out-of-pocket math unresolved until later. If you compare only the headline number, you miss the setup that determines what you really pay over time. Use the Compare Tool when you need to sort bundled programs, membership-plus-medication setups, and insurance-based care side by side.
Compare price setups