Available in all 50 statesNo insurance requiredLicensed provider review

GLP-1 programs by Eden

Review Eden's two core compounded GLP-1 paths, compare first-month pricing, and see how the platform frames support, shipping, and provider review before you continue into the assessment flow.

100,000+ active membersSelf-pay monthly plansFree expedited shipping when prescribed

Medication access made simpler

Clear self-pay pricing without depending on insurance approvals.

Compounded semaglutide

Compounded semaglutide

One simple injection per week.

Starting at $149

then $229/mo

Get Started
Compounded tirzepatide

Compounded tirzepatide

One simple injection per week.

Starting at $249

then $329/mo

Get Started

* Prices above match the Eden GLP-1 offer referenced for this build. Final treatment fit and fulfillment still depend on licensed provider and pharmacy review.

100% online review

Start with a digital intake and let a licensed provider decide whether treatment is appropriate.

Free expedited shipping

If prescribed, medication is fulfilled through a licensed pharmacy and shipped directly to your door.

Ongoing support

Eden frames the program around continued guidance rather than a one-time prescription handoff.

Self-pay clarity

No insurance is required, so visitors can compare monthly pricing without relying on coverage approval.

Featured result story

The live offer leans on visible transformation stories

Eden uses before-and-after proof to show how structured GLP-1 support can help people stay consistent over time. The example below mirrors that live-page approach while keeping the message focused on process and support rather than guaranteed outcomes.

45+ lb featured change

Eden presents Melissa as a member who reports losing more than 45 pounds and feeling more confident after finally finding a process she could stick with.

Melissa • Eden member story

BeforeMonth 0
Featured Eden member before treatment
AfterOngoing progress
Featured Eden member after treatment

Featured outcome

45+ lbs

Format

Weekly injection

Support style

Provider-led

How it works

A simple three-step GLP-1 path

Eden's offer is built around a short intake, licensed provider review, and direct shipping if treatment is prescribed.

Complete the intake

Answer the online questions so a licensed provider has the health context needed for review.

Receive provider guidance

The provider decides whether a GLP-1 path fits and what treatment plan makes sense for your profile.

Get medication at home

If prescribed, Eden's pharmacy fulfillment model handles shipment so treatment reaches your door quickly.

Ongoing support

Eden's value proposition is more than the prescription

The live offer repeatedly emphasizes access, messaging, shipping, and a more connected care experience. This section keeps those support promises visible before the external click.

Unlimited support framing stays visible across the offer.

Free expedited shipping is part of the purchase story, not an afterthought.

The program is presented as cancel-anytime rather than a locked long-term contract.

The same provider-review model applies whether someone leans semaglutide or tirzepatide.

FAQs

Questions a self-pay GLP-1 shopper usually asks first

These are the decision-friction questions Eden's offer needs to answer before a visitor clicks into the evaluation flow.

Eden describes its GLP-1 plans as including provider review, a personalized treatment path when appropriate, pharmacy fulfillment, and ongoing support. Exact medication details depend on what the provider prescribes.
No. Eden frames the offer as a self-pay path, so visitors can complete the assessment without depending on insurance coverage.
A licensed healthcare provider reviews the patient's health profile and determines whether treatment is appropriate. Medication choice and prescribing decisions stay with the provider.
Eden says plans can be canceled through the patient portal and that there are no long-term contracts, though pharmacy orders already in progress may require support assistance.
No. Eden states that compounded medications are not reviewed or approved by the FDA for safety or effectiveness.