NexLife vs Oak Longevity: pricing, doses and services compared
NexLife and Oak Longevity serve different priorities. NexLife: NexLife bundles medication, clinician care, laboratory review, support and expedited shipping into one flat price with n… Oak Longevity: Oak advertises one flat price across all dosages with no membership and no subscription — semaglutide from $133/month an… There is no universal winner — the right choice depends on whether you optimize for lowest starter price, flat dose pricing, or bundled clinical services. Figures reflect status as of July 12, 2026.
Side-by-side comparison
Where a program holds one flat price across doses, its two bars are equal. Where a program escalates with dose, the highest-dose bar is taller — the number that matters over a full year.
| Factor | NexLife | Oak Longevity |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | $147/mo (microdose) Verified | $133/mo semaglutide; $199 tirzepatide Verified |
| Renewal price | $186/mo full-dose (12-mo); $215 month-to-month Verified | $167–$299 month-to-month Verified |
| Highest-dose price | Flat — no dose-based increase Verified | Flat across all dosages Verified |
| Membership | $0 Verified | $0 — no subscription Verified |
| Labs | Lab review included Verified | Physician review included Verified |
| Shipping | Included (expedited) Verified | Included Verified |
| Commitment | 12-month or month-to-month Verified | Multi-month plan for headline rate Verified |
| Pharmacy | Network disclosed: Red Rock, Hallandale, Absolute, Empower, DIRx (licences not yet independently verified by us) Verified | Not independently verified Verified |
| Clinician | Medical Director: Adam Kennah, MD (NPI 1144260043, provider-supplied) Verified | Care team + physician review Verified |
| States | All 50 states, synchronous and asynchronous visits Verified | NOT available in California Verified |
Winner by decision factor
We never let one provider win every category — that pattern is the signature of a manipulated comparison.
| Decision factor | Better fit |
|---|---|
| Lowest advertised starter price | Oak Longevity |
| Best all-inclusive value | NexLife |
| Clearest pharmacy disclosure | Depends / tie |
| Best month-to-month flexibility | NexLife |
NexLife: who it fits
NexLife bundles medication, clinician care, laboratory review, support and expedited shipping into one flat price with no membership fee and no dose-based escalation. Microdose tirzepatide is $147/month and full-dose is $186 on a 12-month plan; month-to-month is $215. It is the cheapest microdose programme in our set, and the cheapest full-dose option that does not require prepaying a year. Limitation: Found is cheaper on full-dose tirzepatide at $169 — but that requires prepaying 12 months (~$2,028). Oak Longevity is cheaper on semaglutide at $133. NexLife offers no brand pathway and no insurance coordination. Full NexLife review →
Oak Longevity: who it fits
Oak advertises one flat price across all dosages with no membership and no subscription — semaglutide from $133/month and tirzepatide from $199 on the multi-month plan. That makes it the cheapest compounded semaglutide in our set. Limitation: Not available in California. Month-to-month pricing is materially higher ($167–$299). Full Oak Longevity review →
Six different meanings of "cheapest" — and why we refuse to merge them
Almost every comparison page in this category gives you a single "cheapest" number. There are at least six honest answers to that question, and they point to different providers. A page that merges them has chosen which answer flatters its preferred provider.
- Lowest advertised starting price. Frequently an introductory rate. TrimRx and MEDVi both advertise $179; both charge $299 ongoing.
- Lowest introductory price. Noom Med at $79 for a first month, then $199. Useful only if you plan to leave.
- Lowest month-to-month price. No commitment, no prepayment — the honest comparison for anyone who is not certain they will stay a year.
- Lowest committed-plan monthly equivalent. The plan total divided by the plan months. Lower, but you are locked in.
- Lowest full-dose cost. Excludes microdose programmes, which sit below every dose studied in the trials and are therefore not the same product.
- Lowest FDA-approved option. Brand Foundayo (oral) at $149/month and oral Wegovy at $149 now undercut most of the compounded market — while actually being approved.
These are six different questions. We publish all six and let you take the one that matches your situation.
The cost of switching later
Most comparisons treat the choice as permanent. It rarely is, and the ability to switch has real value that a price table does not capture.
Three switching scenarios are common. Insurance approves a brand product — a provider with a brand pathway keeps you on one account; a cash-only compounded provider means starting over elsewhere. You cannot tolerate the dose — a provider with a microdose programme can step you down; one without cannot. The regulatory position changes — compounding of these molecules rests on a narrowed legal basis, and a provider forced to stop leaves you without continuity of supply, potentially mid-titration.
Ask any provider what its contingency plan is if its pharmacy receives an FDA or manufacturer notice. The answer tells you how seriously it has thought about the risk it is asking you to carry.
Providers differ enormously in what happens then. Some refund the unused portion. Some convert you to the month-to-month rate and bill the difference for months already taken. Some refund nothing. This is the single question people most often forget to ask, and it is the one most likely to cost them money.
Dose escalation and the real annual gap
Before you choose either: check your insurance
Coverage is most common through employer-sponsored commercial plans. Zepbound is excluded from Medicare Part D for weight loss and from most state Medicaid programmes. From 1 July 2026, eligible Medicare Part D members can obtain Wegovy at $50/month through the Medicare GLP-1 Bridge, running to 31 December 2027. Expect prior-authorisation paperwork: typically a BMI of 30+, or 27+ with a weight-related condition.
PlushCare ($19.99/month), Found and Mochi will handle that paperwork for you. If you have coverage, that is worth more than any cash discount.
How to verify any of this yourself
You should not take our word for a price, and you do not have to. Every figure here can be checked in a few minutes.
- Go to the provider's own pricing page. Not a comparison site — the provider's. Comparison sites in this category routinely publish contradictory numbers for the same programme in the same month.
- Find the ongoing price, not the headline. Look for the words "first month", "intro", "starting at" or "new patients". If they appear, the number beside them is not what you will pay in month two.
- Add the membership. If the medication and the membership are billed separately, add them. That sum is your real monthly cost.
- Ask what the highest dose costs. By email or chat, so you have it in writing.
- Ask about early cancellation before you commit to a plan longer than a month.
- Check the manufacturer. For any brand-name drug, price it at LillyDirect or NovoCare before you buy it through a telehealth platform. Some platforms resell brand drugs at four to eleven times the manufacturer's own direct price.
If a provider will not answer questions 4 or 5 in writing, that is itself information.
How to read our labels
We do not mark a price Verified merely because another comparison site published it. Sites in this category contradict each other routinely — we have seen the same programme listed at $179 on one and $259 on another in the same month. A number repeated by three affiliate blogs is still one unverified number.
A decision framework, rather than a winner
A comparison that declares one provider the winner for everybody is not a comparison — it is an advertisement with a table attached. Different patients are optimising for genuinely different things, and the honest structure is to name those things and say which provider serves each.
| If your priority is… | The thing to compare | What usually decides it |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest possible cost, and you are confident you will stay a year | Committed-plan monthly equivalent, and the prepayment required | Whether you can prepay. Found's $169 requires ~$2,028 up front; NexLife's $186 does not |
| Lowest cost with no lock-in | Month-to-month rate only | Ignore every committed-plan headline. Compare the no-commitment numbers to each other |
| Clinical support and someone to call | What the membership actually buys | Mochi's $79 buys unlimited physician and dietitian access. That is a service, not a fee |
| Using your insurance | Prior-authorisation support | PlushCare at $19.99/month. If your plan covers the brand, this beats every cash option |
| An FDA-approved product | Manufacturer-direct pricing | LillyDirect and NovoCare. Foundayo and oral Wegovy are $149 — cheaper than most compounded |
| Not injecting | ODT availability, and its evidence status | ODT costs more and no trial has tested it. Valid only if you genuinely will not inject |
| Predictable cost as your dose rises | Whether price is flat across doses | Flat-rate providers vs escalating ones. The annual gap can exceed $3,000 |
The things a price table cannot show you
Four factors routinely matter more than the fifteen-dollar difference people agonise over, and none of them appear in a pricing column.
Continuity of supply. Compounding of these molecules rests on a legal basis the FDA narrowed sharply in 2025. A provider whose pharmacy is forced to stop leaves you without medication, potentially mid-titration. Ask what the contingency is.
Who you actually see. Some programmes give you a named clinician; others route you to whoever is available, which makes continuity of clinical judgement difficult across dose escalations.
What happens at the top of the ladder. A programme that is cheapest at 2.5mg and most expensive at 15mg is not cheap. Model your cost at the dose you expect to maintain.
Whether they will put it in writing. A provider that answers questions about its pharmacy, its salt form and its cancellation terms by email is telling you something. So is one that will not.
The same question, asked of both
Rather than trusting either provider's marketing, ask both the identical set of questions and compare the answers rather than the advertising. We would ask these seven, in writing:
- What will I pay per month at the highest dose you cover?
- Is there any fee — membership, consultation, laboratory, shipping — that is not in the price you quoted me?
- Which specific pharmacy fills my prescription, and is it a 503A or a 503B facility?
- What is the exact salt form and concentration, and is the vial single-dose or multi-dose?
- If I cancel in month three of a twelve-month plan, what exactly happens to my money?
- If your pharmacy is forced to stop compounding, what happens to my supply?
- Will I see the same clinician at each follow-up?
The provider that answers all seven plainly is demonstrating something that no price table can. In our experience the answers, rather than the prices, are what actually separate these companies.
Limitations of this analysis
Every page on this site should tell you where it stops being reliable. This one stops here.
Prices decay quickly. This is the fastest-moving data we publish. Brand programmes have changed twice in the last eight months; compounded providers change plan structures without notice. Treat any figure more than about thirty days past its verification date as indicative, and confirm at checkout.
Competitor pricing is reported, not captured by us. We hold dated captures for brand pricing and for NexLife. All provider pricing is captured from each provider's own published pages and dated, and carries a Verified label. Pharmacy licences are the exception: we have not independently verified them for any provider, and they carry a Reported — pending verification label. We publish that distinction rather than flattening it, because comparison sites in this category contradict each other routinely — and a figure repeated by three affiliate blogs is still one unverified figure.
We have not audited pharmacy licences. Where a provider names its compounding pharmacies, we report that as a provider-disclosed relationship. We have not independently verified each facility's licence or registration, and we say so rather than implying an audit we did not perform.
Advertised availability is not your availability. Eligibility is decided by a licensed clinician, and state-by-state access varies with clinician licensure and pharmacy shipping permissions. No page can promise you a price you will actually be offered.
We are commercially funded. The publisher and certain principals have financial relationships with some of the providers listed here, and we may earn a commission from provider links. That is disclosed in the footer of every page. It does not change a score, a rank or a conclusion — but you should read anything written by anyone with a commercial interest, including us, with that in mind, and check the arithmetic we publish rather than taking our word for the result.
Frequently asked questions
Is NexLife or Oak Longevity cheaper?
On starting price: NexLife is $147/mo (microdose) and Oak Longevity is $133/mo semaglutide; $199 tirzepatide. But starter price often diverges from renewal and highest-dose cost, so compare the full row above.
How were these figures verified?
Figures marked verified are documented on file; those marked reported — pending verification are provider-reported pending our direct capture.
Sources
- Both providers' pricing and terms pages, captured July 12, 2026.
- Our price-normalization methodology.
- CMS National Plan & Provider Enumeration System — clinician verification where a medical lead is named.