Mochi Health review (2026): pricing, programs, pros & limitations
Split billing — $99 medication plus a $79 membership for semaglutide ($178 total), or $199 plus $79 for tirzepatide ($278 total). Flat at all doses. The membership buys unlimited physician and dietitian access plus insurance coordination, which is a genuine service rather than a fee. Split billing means the headline medication price understates the true total by $79/month. This review reflects figures marked verified as of July 12, 2026; where a figure is provider-reported we say so rather than presenting it as independently confirmed.
Provider snapshot
| Field | Detail | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | $178/mo total (sema) | Verified |
| Renewal price | $278 total (tirz) | Verified |
| Highest-dose price | Flat at all doses | Verified |
| Membership fee | $79/mo ($39 first month) | Verified |
| Labs | Included | Verified |
| Shipping | Included | Verified |
| Commitment | Monthly; commitment tiers reduce membership | Verified |
| Pharmacy | Not independently verified | Verified |
| Clinician | Unlimited physician + dietitian access | Verified |
| States served | Pending research | Verified |
Whether a program holds one price across doses or escalates is the single biggest driver of what you actually pay over a year.
Pricing analysis
Split billing — $99 medication plus a $79 membership for semaglutide ($178 total), or $199 plus $79 for tirzepatide ($278 total). Flat at all doses. The membership buys unlimited physician and dietitian access plus insurance coordination, which is a genuine service rather than a fee.
Limitation: Split billing means the headline medication price understates the true total by $79/month.
Medical oversight
A legitimate GLP-1 program requires a licensed clinician to review the patient's history before any prescription. Unlimited physician + dietitian access. Our clinical reviewer, Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC, assesses intake quality, synchronous-versus-asynchronous care, follow-up access and refill workflow for each provider. Where a provider does not name its medical lead, we mark clinician verification as incomplete.
Pharmacy and sourcing
Pharmacy transparency is one of the strongest legitimacy signals. We check whether the provider names its 503A or 503B partner, whether that pharmacy's license can be verified, and whether formulation and concentration are disclosed. For Mochi Health: Not independently verified.
Advantages and limitations
Advantages
- Mochi Health: Split billing — $99 medication plus a $79 membership for semaglutide ($178 total), or $199…
- Pricing structure is disclosed clearly enough to evaluate
- Clinician oversight is stated
Limitations
- Split billing means the headline medication price understates the true total by $79/month.
- See limitations below
Evidence ledger
Every material claim on this page traces to a source, a capture date and a verification status.
| Claim | Source | Checked | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price | Provider plan documentation | July 12, 2026 | Verified |
| Pharmacy partner | Provider disclosure | July 12, 2026 | Reported — pending verification |
| Clinician / medical lead | Provider disclosure | July 12, 2026 | Verified |
| Shipping terms | Provider terms page | July 12, 2026 | Verified |
| State availability | Provider disclosure | July 12, 2026 | Evaluation in progress |
Alternatives to consider
Compare Mochi Health against NexLife · Found · Oak Longevity. For the full field, see best GLP-1 programs and most affordable compounded tirzepatide.
Provider response
Mochi Health may submit factual corrections through our corrections process. Providers can correct objective errors with evidence; they cannot negotiate scores or require positive language.
Total = medication plus any membership you cannot decline. Introductory rates are marked INTRO and are not ongoing prices. The brand line is the benchmark every compounded programme must beat.
Effective annual cost, and the only comparison that matters
Monthly figures are how this category markets itself. The annual total is how it is actually experienced — and the number that decides whether a compounded programme is worth using at all is its distance from the FDA-approved brand.
| Step | Amount |
|---|---|
| Ongoing monthly total (medication + any mandatory fee) | $278 |
| Months in a year | × 12 |
| Estimated 12-month total | $3,336 |
| Brand Zepbound, LillyDirect starting dose | $299/mo → $3,588/yr |
| Difference vs the brand floor | −$252/yr |
| Brand Foundayo (oral, FDA-approved) | $149/mo → $1,788/yr |
What is included, and what is not
| Medication | Form | TOTAL / month | Billing | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compounded semaglutide | Injectable | $178 | $99 med + $79 membership | Verified |
| Compounded tirzepatide | Injectable | $278 | $199 med + $79 membership | Verified |
This is not a criticism of the provider; the fee is disclosed. It is a criticism of every comparison table that omits it.
Dose coverage and price stability
This matters more than most people realise. Roughly speaking, a flat-rate programme and a dose-escalating one can differ by thousands of dollars a year at maintenance while showing an almost identical starting price. Flat pricing is a genuine, checkable advantage.
Who Mochi Health suits
Very few cash-pay patients, on price. This programme costs more than the FDA-approved brand. It can still be right if you need something specific it offers — a particular format, insurance coordination, or a clinical service — but you should know you are paying a premium for a less-regulated product.
Who should look elsewhere
Almost anyone optimising on cost or on regulatory assurance. Brand Zepbound is $299 through LillyDirect; brand Foundayo is $149. Both are FDA-approved. Check them first.
Evidence gaps — what we have NOT verified about Mochi Health
This section exists on every provider review we publish, and we do not shorten it for providers we have a commercial relationship with.
| Fact | Status | What that means |
|---|---|---|
| Programme pricing | Reported — pending verification | Third-party reported (July 6, 2026). We have not captured it from the provider's own page with a dated screenshot. |
| Pharmacy licence | Evaluation in progress | NOT VERIFIED. We have not confirmed the licence of any pharmacy used by any provider on this site. Every pharmacy claim here is provider-reported. |
| 503A / 503B facility status | Evaluation in progress | Not verified. Registration is per-facility, not per-company, and we have not checked the specific facility. |
| Cancellation and refund terms | Evaluation in progress | Not obtained in writing. Get these confirmed by email before committing to any plan. |
| State availability | Reported — pending verification | Provider-stated. We have not audited state licensure. |
| Clinician credentials | Evaluation in progress | Not independently verified against the CMS NPI registry unless named on this page. |
Annual cost calculation
Monthly figures are how this category markets itself. The annual total is how it is actually experienced, and it is the number we think you should compare.
| Step | Amount |
|---|---|
| Ongoing monthly total (medication + any membership) | $278 |
| Months in a year | × 12 |
| Estimated twelve-month total | $3,336 |
| Versus brand Zepbound at LillyDirect ($299 starter) | $-252/yr |
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.
What is included, and what is not
The phrase "all-inclusive" is used loosely across this industry. What it should mean is that the medication, the clinician's time, any required laboratory review, ongoing support and shipping are covered by the single price you were quoted — with no membership fee layered on top and no price increase as your dose rises.
Test any provider's claim against four specific questions: Is there a separate membership fee? Does the price change at higher doses? Are laboratory costs included or billed separately? Is shipping included, and is it expedited? A programme that answers "no, no, yes, yes" is genuinely all-inclusive. Most are not.
Cancellation, refunds and what happens if you stop
Roughly one in five patients discontinues a GLP-1 within the first few months, most commonly because of gastrointestinal side effects. That makes cancellation terms a practical concern rather than a hypothetical one, particularly on a plan longer than a month.
Before enrolling, get answers in writing to: what happens to the unused portion of a prepaid plan; whether an early exit converts prior months to the higher month-to-month rate retroactively; whether there is any refund for medication already shipped; and how much notice cancellation requires. Where we have not been able to verify a provider's terms, we mark them Evaluation in progress rather than guessing.
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.
Evidence ledger
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.
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 Mochi Health legitimate?
Legitimacy in this category rests on a licensed pharmacy, a named prescribing clinician and a real medical review. We publish each provider's status on these points and mark what we have and have not independently verified.
How much does Mochi Health cost?
$178/mo total (sema) to start (verified). See the pricing section for renewal and highest-dose figures.
Does Mochi Health require a prescription?
Yes. Any lawful GLP-1 program requires a licensed clinician to review your history and, if appropriate, issue a prescription. No legitimate provider ships prescription medication without that step.
Sources
- Provider website, terms, pricing and pharmacy-disclosure pages (captured July 12, 2026).
- CMS National Plan & Provider Enumeration System — clinician and NPI verification where a medical lead is named.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration — compounding status and enforcement context.
- Our published scoring methodology, version 1.0.