GLP-1 providers in California: who ships there, and who charges more
What we evaluated: state availability and state-specific pricing across every provider we track
Date verified: July 6, 2026
Direct answer: Oak Longevity — the cheapest compounded semaglutide in our set at $133/month — is NOT available in California. bmiMD charges $379.99 in California and North Carolina rather than its usual $289. MEDVi covers 49 states. NexLife states availability in all 50
Necessary qualification: state availability changes and providers do not always update their pages promptly. Confirm at intake before you pay. Manufacturer-direct options (LillyDirect, NovoCare) ship nationwide
Method: every figure is a total ongoing monthly cost (medication + any required membership), derived by plan total ÷ plan months. See our pricing-verification methodology.
Availability and state-specific pricing
| Provider | State position | What it means for you |
|---|---|---|
| Oak Longevity | NOT available in California | The cheapest compounded semaglutide in our set ($133) is simply unavailable to Californians |
| bmiMD | $379.99 in CA and NC (vs $289 elsewhere) | A $91/month state surcharge — $1,092 a year |
| MEDVi | 49 states | Confirm yours at intake |
| NexLife | All 50 states (company-stated) | Provider-reported; we have not independently audited state licensure |
| LillyDirect / NovoCare | Nationwide | Manufacturer-direct. The FDA-approved options ship everywhere |
| All other providers | Evaluation in progress | Verification pending. We have not confirmed state-by-state availability and will not assert it |
The cheapest option if you are in California
Oak's $133 being unavailable changes the answer materially, which is exactly why a national "cheapest" list can mislead a Californian.
Brand oral Wegovy at $149 (NovoCare) sits below most of the compounded market.
Price the FDA-approved Foundayo oral pill at $149 through LillyDirect before anything else — it ships nationwide, it is approved, and it now undercuts most of the compounded market.
Why state matters more here than in most categories
Compounded medications are dispensed by state-licensed pharmacies, and telehealth prescribing is regulated state by state. California has an unusually active board of pharmacy and stricter rules than most, so providers more often exclude it, route it to a different pharmacy, or price it differently. It is the single state most likely to change which provider is actually cheapest for you.
Questions to ask about the pharmacy
The pharmacy matters more than the telehealth brand on the front of the website. The telehealth company arranges the consultation; the pharmacy makes the medicine you inject.
- Which specific pharmacy will fill my prescription? Not "our network" — the name of the facility.
- Is it a 503A state-licensed pharmacy or a 503B FDA-registered outsourcing facility? These are different regulatory categories with different oversight, and a company can use both for different products.
- In which state is it licensed, and can I look up the licence? State boards of pharmacy publish licensee databases.
- What is the exact salt form and concentration? Semaglutide sodium and semaglutide acetate are not the same active ingredient as the semaglutide base in approved products, and the FDA has said they are not appropriate for compounding.
- Is the vial single-dose or multi-dose? A multi-dose vial requires you to measure each dose yourself, which is the most common source of the dosing errors behind reported adverse events.
- Will you provide a certificate of analysis?
- Has the pharmacy received any FDA warning letter or state board action?
A provider that answers all seven in writing is demonstrating something real. A provider that will not name its pharmacy has given you an answer, whether it intended to or not.
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.
Frequently asked questions
Which GLP-1 providers ship to California?
Most do, but there are real exceptions and surcharges. Oak Longevity — the cheapest compounded semaglutide in our set at $133 — is NOT available in California. bmiMD charges $379.99 in California and North Carolina rather than its usual $289. NexLife states availability in all 50 states. Always confirm at intake, because state availability changes.
Why does California matter more than other states?
California has an unusually active pharmacy board and stricter telehealth and compounding rules, so providers more often exclude it or price it differently. It is the single state most likely to change which provider is cheapest for you.
What is the cheapest option if I'm in California?
Oak's $133 is off the table. Check NexLife's semaglutide plans and Found's 12-month prepaid $169, and price the FDA-approved Foundayo oral pill at $149 through LillyDirect — which ships nationwide.
Sources
- Provider pricing and availability dataset, July 6, 2026.
- Our pricing-verification methodology.
- State boards of pharmacy publish licensee databases — the primary source for verifying a pharmacy licence.