Eden Semaglutide Cost: What You Actually Pay in 2026

By Weight Loss Provider Guide Editorial Team · Last verified

Independent comparison resource. If you sign up through a link on this page, we may earn a commission. It doesn't change your price, and we only recommend providers we'd be comfortable using ourselves. All Eden prices confirmed on tryeden.com April 17, 2026.

The short answer

$129 first month · $209/month after (3-month plan)

Or $149 first month / $229/month on the monthly plan. That price includes the provider visit, the prescription (when prescribed), 24/7 messaging, and free expedited shipping — and it doesn't go up when your dose does. Over a full year on the 3-month plan, you're looking at roughly $2,428 total.

First month (3-mo plan)

$129

Ongoing (3-mo plan)

$209/mo

Annual total

~$2,428

Check current Eden pricing & eligibility →

Free 3-minute intake. No charge until a licensed provider prescribes.

Woman using Eden's telehealth app on her phone with semaglutide medication delivered to her home — Eden GLP-1 home delivery program

Eden GLP-1 program — provider review, medication, shipping, and 24/7 messaging in one flat monthly price.

What Does Eden's Semaglutide Actually Cost Right Now?

Eden offers compounded semaglutide on two billing structures. As of April 17, 2026, the 3-month plan runs $129 for the first month and $209/month after (first cycle paid upfront or financed through BNPL). The monthly plan runs $149 for the first month and $229/month after. All pricing verified against tryeden.com's live GLP-1 treatment page on April 17, 2026.

Every Eden semaglutide plan bundles the provider consult, ongoing check-ins, unlimited 24/7 in-app messaging, and free expedited shipping into one price. No membership fee. And because of Eden's “same price at every dose” guarantee, the number you pay in month two is the same in month twelve — even if your dose has been increased.

The full Eden semaglutide cost matrix

PlanFirst monthOngoing3-mo total12-mo totalBilling
Compounded semaglutide — 3-month plan$129$209/mo~$547~$2,428Paid upfront or via BNPL each cycle
Compounded semaglutide — monthly plan$149$229/mo~$607~$2,668Month to month
Wegovy® (FDA-approved, pen)$1,695/mo~$5,085~$20,340Month to month
Ozempic® (FDA-approved)$1,399/mo~$4,197~$16,788Month to month

Math: 3-month annual = $129 + ($209 × 11). Monthly annual = $149 + ($229 × 11). All figures verified against tryeden.com/treatment/glp-1-treatments on April 17, 2026.

Why you're seeing different Eden prices across the internet

  • Eden's live treatment page shows $129 first month / $209 after on the 3-month plan today.
  • Eden's own January 2026 blog post still lists the older $149 / $249 numbers — indexed but not updated.
  • US News Health (updated March 2026) shows $149 / $229 monthly.
  • ConsumerAffairs still quotes $296/month monthly or $276/month quarterly from an earlier era.

Simple rule: the number in Eden's live treatment page and checkout is the number you pay.

3-Month Plan vs Monthly Plan: Which Is Cheaper, and What's the Catch?

The 3-month plan is cheaper on paper — roughly $240 less over a year than the monthly plan — but you pay for that savings with an upfront commitment. Eden's 3-month plan requires the first cycle to be paid upfront (or financed through BNPL), meaning your day-one cash outlay is closer to $547 than $129. The monthly plan costs more long-term but lets you test the process one month at a time.

Cost comparison over real timeframes

Timeframe3-month plan totalMonthly plan totalYou save on 3-month
3 months~$547~$607~$60
6 months~$1,174~$1,294~$120
12 months~$2,428~$2,668~$240

Pick the monthly plan if:

  • You want to try Eden one month at a time before committing cash upfront.
  • Your HSA/FSA balance is small and you can't prepay a full 3-month cycle.
  • You're not 100% sure you'll stay on semaglutide long-term.
  • You want maximum flexibility while price-comparing providers.

Pick the 3-month plan if:

  • You've decided semaglutide is a fit and plan to stay on it 6–12+ months.
  • You want the lowest per-month rate Eden currently publishes.
  • You're comfortable with the upfront commitment (or using BNPL).
  • You're willing to trade flexibility for a lower monthly number.

Annual prepay — our honest take

Eden offers 6-month and 12-month prepay options at progressively lower monthly rates. We don't recommend these for first-time Eden users. The math looks good on paper, but if you hit side effects, need to switch providers, or need to pause for any reason, you're sitting on prepaid inventory you can't easily recover. Stick with monthly or 3-month for your first cycle.

What's Included in Eden's Semaglutide Price — and What Isn't

Eden's flat monthly price bundles the medication, provider visit, ongoing check-ins, dose adjustments, 24/7 messaging, and free expedited shipping. No membership fee, no dose-change fee, no shipping charge layered on top. That bundled structure is genuinely uncommon in GLP-1 telehealth.
ItemIncluded?Notes
Provider evaluation (intake & prescription)Asynchronous in most states; some states require a video step
Compounded semaglutide medicationDispensed by state-licensed pharmacy in Eden's partner network
Ongoing provider check-ins & dose adjustments✅ No added cost"Same Price at Every Dose" — flat rate regardless of dose level
Unlimited 24/7 in-app messaging (care team)Portal messaging open continuously; response times vary
Free expedited shipping✅ FreePer Eden, home delivery typically 3–5 business days after fulfillment
Membership fee✅ None
Cancellation fee✅ None
HSA / FSA eligibilitySome HSA/FSA cards work directly at checkout; others require receipt claim
Community resources (meal plans, guides)Access to Eden's member content hub
Lab work⚠️ Not includedAt provider discretion — typically not required; billed outside Eden
In-person visitsEden is fully virtual
Insurance billingEden is cash-pay only; not in-network with any carrier

Eden's pharmacy accreditations (displayed on tryeden.com)

LegitScript

Verifies legitimate, transparent telehealth and pharmacy operations

NABP

National Association of Boards of Pharmacy — accredited drug distributor

PCAB

Pharmacy Compounding Accreditation Board — accredited compounding pharmacy

ACHC International

Accredited for healthcare compliance

How Eden semaglutide works — four steps: complete online intake, licensed provider reviews your information, if prescribed medication ships to your door, ongoing messaging support through the portal

How Eden semaglutide works: four-step process from online intake to ongoing messaging support. Source: Eden.

“Same Price at Every Dose” — What It Actually Saves You

Eden's standout pricing policy is that your monthly rate stays flat regardless of your semaglutide dose. Whether you're starting at 0.25 mg, titrating through 0.5 mg and 1.0 mg, or settled at 2.0 mg maintenance, you pay the same monthly number. Several compounded GLP-1 providers charge more at higher dose tiers, so Eden's flat-rate structure can meaningfully reduce cost over a typical titration year.

A typical semaglutide titration at Eden — what “flat-rate” means in practice

MonthTypical doseEden cost (3-mo plan)
Month 10.25 mg$129 (promo first month)
Month 20.25 mg$209/month
Month 30.5 mg$209/month
Month 40.5 mg$209/month
Month 51.0 mg$209/month
Month 6+1.0 mg → up to 2.0 mg maintenance$209/month

At a dose-tiered provider, your monthly cost climbs with each tier. At Eden, $209/month stays $209 from 0.25 mg starter through 2.0 mg maintenance.

The one caveat worth knowing

Eden's “same price at every dose” applies to standard plan pricing, not during promotional months or limited-time discount periods. Your $129 first-month promo isn't locked in for every future month — your ongoing rate is what stays flat. That's still a meaningful structural difference if you end up on a higher dose for the back half of your first year.

Is Eden Cheaper Than Wegovy or Ozempic? The Honest Brand-vs-Compounded Comparison

For compounded semaglutide, Eden is dramatically cheaper than cash-pay brand-name Wegovy or Ozempic — about $209/month vs $1,000+ per month retail. For brand-name semaglutide, Eden is not the cheapest route. Eden lists Ozempic at $1,399/month and Wegovy at $1,695/month, and both sit above what most patients can access through NovoCare® (Novo Nordisk's direct self-pay pharmacy).

Here's the comparison every other Eden review either avoids or buries:

MedicationThrough EdenThrough NovoCare® directWith insurance + savings card
Wegovy® (pen)$1,695/moFrom ~$199/mo intro; some doses ~$349/moAs low as $25/mo if covered and eligible for savings card
Ozempic®$1,399/mo~$199/mo intro at lower doses; ~$499/mo for 2 mgOften ~$25/mo with Ozempic Savings Card for type 2 diabetes

NovoCare figures reflect Novo Nordisk's self-pay program as published at novocare.com at the time of our April 2026 verification. Offers have date windows, dose limits, and eligibility rules. Confirm directly with NovoCare before committing.

The damaging admission

Eden's brand-name pricing is high. If what you actually want is FDA-approved Wegovy or Ozempic, Eden isn't the cheapest way to get it in 2026. NovoCare's direct self-pay program can run meaningfully less than Eden's cash price for brand-name. And if you have commercial insurance with GLP-1 coverage and the manufacturer savings card, you might pay as low as $25/month — an option Eden can't match because Eden doesn't bill insurance.

Here's the flip side: NovoCare and insurance-based routes don't bundle a provider. If you already have a primary care provider handling your titration, the manufacturer and insurance routes almost certainly win on price. If you don't — or if you want the whole thing in one bundle with 24/7 messaging — Eden's premium is the price of convenience, and some people pay it on purpose.

Where Eden actually wins on price is compounded semaglutide — $209/month flat rate on the 3-month plan, all-in.

If you want compounded semaglutide at a flat monthly price

Eden is one of the strongest options in the category.

Check eligibility on Eden →

If you want brand-name Wegovy or Ozempic for the lowest cash price

Skip Eden. Take our matching quiz — we'll show you whether NovoCare direct, insurance, or a different provider fits your specific situation.

Take the 60-second quiz →

Does Eden Take Insurance? HSA and FSA, Explained

Eden does not accept insurance — not for compounded semaglutide, not for Wegovy, not for Ozempic, not for any GLP-1 prescription. Eden is cash-pay, out-of-network, and not enrolled with Medicare or Medicaid. Eden is HSA/FSA eligible, so you can effectively reduce your cost by using pre-tax dollars. See our full guide on Eden and insurance for more detail.

Cash-pay means cash-pay

If your plan is “I want my insurance to cover this and pay a $25 copay,” Eden isn't the vehicle. You want a primary care provider who can submit brand-name Wegovy for prior authorization, or a telehealth provider that bills insurance directly. See our guide on GLP-1 providers and employer health benefits for that path.

For the right reader — someone paying cash because insurance doesn't cover GLP-1s in their plan, or because compounded is the cheaper honest answer — Eden's cash-pay model is actually a feature. No prior auth denials. No step therapy. No six-week waits. You complete intake, a provider reviews, and if prescribed, the medication ships.

How HSA and FSA change the real cost

HSA and FSA both let you spend pre-tax dollars on eligible medical expenses. Per IRS guidance, prescription medications prescribed for a qualifying medical purpose — including obesity treatment with a GLP-1 — can qualify. At Eden's $209/month ongoing rate on the 3-month plan, the after-tax math works out like this:

Your marginal tax rateAnnual Eden costAnnual after-tax savingsEffective annual cost
12%$2,428~$291~$2,137
22%$2,428~$534~$1,894
24%$2,428~$583~$1,845
32%$2,428~$777~$1,651

Savings estimates assume the full annual spend is HSA/FSA-eligible, multiplied by your marginal federal rate. Actual savings depend on your plan type, state tax, and administrator. Confirm eligibility with your benefits administrator.

Using your HSA/FSA card at Eden

Some HSA/FSA debit cards work directly at Eden's checkout. Others will decline — not because the expense isn't eligible, but because the merchant's category code may not auto-substantiate. If your card declines, pay with a regular card, download the itemized receipt from your Eden portal, and submit a reimbursement claim to your HSA/FSA administrator. If your administrator asks for a Letter of Medical Necessity, you can request one through the Eden portal.

How Eden Cancellation, Auto-Renewal, and Refunds Actually Work

You can cancel Eden any time before your next billing date, and you won't be charged going forward. But the fine print matters: cancellation affects future cycles, not orders already sent to the pharmacy. Eden's subscriptions can auto-renew, prepaid 3-, 6-, and 12-month plans generally continue shipping through the current cycle even after you turn off renewal, and refunds on already-shipped orders are not typically offered. “Cancel anytime” is true — it just doesn't mean “get every dollar back.”

Why we're spelling this out

Billing and cancellation are recurring themes in negative reviews on Trustpilot, BBB, and Reddit. People signed up, tried to cancel after one bad month, and discovered the already-paid cycle kept shipping. That's in Eden's terms — but it catches people who didn't read them.

The cancellation matrix

ScenarioWhat happensRefund?
Cancel before prescription sent to pharmacyOrder stopped. No charge, or charge reversed.✅ Full refund
Cancel after prescription shipsThat order is yours. Future orders stop.❌ No refund on current month
Monthly plan — cancel mid-monthNext month does not renew. Current shipment still goes.❌ No on current month
3-month plan — cancel after cycle startedAuto-renewal turns off. Current 3-month cycle generally ships.❌ No on remaining cycle
Medical exception (adverse reaction, provider advice)Provider and support review case. Partial refund on unshipped meds may be considered.⚠️ Sometimes — case by case
Eden supply interrupted (shortage, regulatory change)Per Eden terms, prorated refunds may apply for treatment not received.✅ Typically yes, prorated

Practical tip: If you want to stop a cycle, cancel before the ship date. If you hit side effects and your provider recommends stopping, contact support and explain the medical context — that's the path most likely to reach a case-by-case review.

Start with Eden's 3-month plan or monthly plan →

Cancel before your next ship date to avoid the following cycle.

Is Eden Legit? What Trustpilot, BBB, and the Policy Language Actually Show

Eden is a legitimate telehealth platform with published medical leadership, displayed pharmacy accreditation badges, and LegitScript certification. The trust picture is not clean, though. Eden's Trustpilot profile is strong. Eden's BBB profile is weaker. Both are real. We're showing both.

Trustpilot: 4.4/5

3,430+ reviews. Eden replies to ~99% of negative reviews.

Skews toward people who had a normal experience and were invited to review. Strong signal that the platform works for most paying customers most of the time.

BBB: F rating

92 complaints, 69 unanswered. 1.24/5 average customer review score.

Skews toward people who had a problem and went looking for a complaint venue. The recurring pattern is billing and cancellation disputes, not medical-quality complaints.

What verified reviewers actually say

One verified Trustpilot reviewer described the platform by saying “customer service with Eden is superior” (Trustpilot, 2026). Other verified reviewers describe the onboarding as simple, the care team as responsive, and the medication as arriving on time. These are typical of the positive Trustpilot distribution — most people are paying for a routine service, and they received one.

The recurring themes in BBB complaints and ConsumerAffairs one-star reviews cluster around billing and cancellation specifically: pharmacy switches mid-subscription, annual prepay dispute resolution, and difficulty unlinking a payment method. These are operational friction points, not medical-quality complaints.

Individual results may vary. Quoted reviews describe subjective service experiences, not medical outcomes.

Where Eden's Semaglutide Comes From: Pharmacies, Safety, and Compounding

Eden dispenses compounded semaglutide through U.S.-based, state-licensed pharmacies with third-party quality testing through FDA-registered labs. A few terms worth defining:

  • 503A pharmacies are state-licensed pharmacies that prepare compounded medications for an individual patient against a specific prescription.
  • 503B outsourcing facilities are a separate federal category, registered with the FDA, that can produce larger-scale compounded preparations.
  • Compounded medications are prepared by pharmacists for an individual patient's specific need. They are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety or effectiveness.

Named medical leadership

Eden publishes its medical leadership on its website — a baseline trust signal:

  • Dr. Rebecca Emch, VP of Pharmacy Operations (Mercer University School of Pharmacy)
  • Dr. Halland Chen, MD, Chief Medical Innovation Officer (University of Miami Miller School of Medicine; Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
  • Dr. Matthew Bennett, MD, Medical Advisory Board (Upstate Medical University; Cornell University)
  • Dr. William Lee, MD, Medical Advisory Board (University of Pittsburgh)

Why Eden still offers compounded semaglutide in April 2026

The FDA marked the semaglutide injection shortage as resolved on February 21, 2025. FDA then granted enforcement discretion — a grace period — for 503A pharmacies through April 22, 2025, and for 503B outsourcing facilities through May 22, 2025. A federal court upheld FDA's removal of semaglutide from the shortage list in June 2025.

However, 503A compounding has always had a separate pathway: a state-licensed pharmacy can compound for an individual patient when the prescriber documents a clinically significant difference from the FDA-approved product for that specific patient. The practical result as of April 2026: compounded semaglutide is still available through some telehealth providers operating under the 503A patient-specific framework. The regulatory landscape remains actively contested.

The compounded disclaimer that matters

Compounded medications are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety or effectiveness. A compounded version of a medication is not the same thing as an FDA-approved brand. GLP-1 medications have important safety considerations and contraindications — if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2, disclose that to the prescribing provider during intake. The provider decides whether treatment is appropriate, not a checkout page.

State Availability: Where Eden Ships

Eden's current website states that its GLP-1 programs are available in all 50 states. Some older third-party sources have listed Eden as unavailable in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and New Mexico, but Eden's present homepage language reflects nationwide availability. The reliable check is Eden's own intake flow — enter your state during the 3-minute intake, and if Eden can prescribe in your state, you'll move through to the next step. We re-verify the state list quarterly against Eden's live site.

How to Start With Eden Semaglutide: The Actual Timeline

Getting started with Eden takes about 15 minutes of your time and typically produces a prescription decision within 24–48 hours. You don't pay anything until a licensed provider prescribes — the consult itself is free.

1

Complete the intake quiz ~3 minutes

Eden's intake asks for your weight, height, medical history, medications, allergies, and goals. Be accurate — shortcuts here just produce a slower review later.

2

Provider review 24–48 hours typical

A licensed healthcare provider reviews your file. In some states, you may be asked to complete a brief asynchronous video or chat step. Providers message you through the Eden portal with any questions.

3

Prescription and payment Day 2–3 if prescribed

If the provider prescribes, you select your plan (monthly or 3-month) and complete payment. This is the first money that changes hands. If you're not prescribed, you're not charged for the medication cycle.

4

Pharmacy compounding and shipping 3–5 business days after fulfillment

Your prescription routes to Eden's partner pharmacy. Compounded prescriptions can take additional preparation time before they ship.

5

Ongoing care Throughout your subscription

From the portal, message your care team 24/7, request dose adjustments, manage refills, pause shipments, and cancel. Refills ship automatically on your plan cadence unless you change it.

What to have ready before you start intake

  • • A list of your current medications (names and doses).
  • • Any known drug allergies.
  • • Your most recent weight and height.
  • • A brief summary of any major medical conditions (diabetes, cardiovascular, thyroid, pregnancy plans).
  • • A valid ID and payment method (you won't be charged until prescribed).
Start your Eden intake — see if you qualify →

Free consult. Prescription only after a licensed provider reviews your file. Cancel before your next ship date to stop the following cycle.

Eden Semaglutide Cost — Frequently Asked Questions

Eden's compounded semaglutide costs $129 your first month on the 3-month plan and $209/month after, or $149 first month on the monthly plan and $229/month after. Brand-name Wegovy through Eden is $1,695/month; Ozempic is $1,399/month. All prices verified against Eden's live treatment page on April 17, 2026.

Yes — the 3-month plan saves roughly $240 over 12 months compared to the monthly plan. The tradeoff is that the 3-month plan requires the first cycle paid upfront (about $547) or financed through buy-now-pay-later. The monthly plan costs more long-term but has a lower first-month cash outlay.

No. Eden's "same price at every dose" guarantee keeps your monthly rate flat whether you're at a 0.25 mg starter dose or a 2.0 mg maintenance dose. Per Eden's terms, this flat-dose pricing applies to standard plan rates and may not apply during promotional months.

No. Eden is cash-pay only for all GLP-1 medications — compounded semaglutide, brand-name Wegovy, and brand-name Ozempic. Eden is HSA/FSA eligible, and some HSA/FSA cards work directly at Eden's checkout.

Generally yes, when prescribed by a licensed provider for a qualifying condition (obesity, overweight with weight-related conditions, or type 2 diabetes). Both compounded semaglutide and Eden's provider fees typically qualify as eligible medical expenses per IRS guidance. Some Eden users pay with an HSA/FSA card directly; others pay with a regular card and submit the itemized receipt for reimbursement. Confirm eligibility with your administrator.

Yes, before your next billing date. Cancellation stops future charges. Already-shipped orders are not typically refundable. Prepaid 3-, 6-, and 12-month plans generally continue shipping through the current cycle even after auto-renewal is turned off. Log into the Eden portal to cancel.

Once a prescription is routed to the pharmacy, that order is typically yours and can't be canceled or refunded. You can still cancel future refills, but the in-progress order proceeds. The practical advice is: if you want to stop a cycle, cancel before the ship date.

No. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety or effectiveness. Compounded semaglutide is prepared by state-licensed pharmacies against individual patient prescriptions where a prescriber has documented a clinically significant difference. If you want FDA-approved semaglutide specifically, that's Wegovy or Ozempic — which Eden also sells, though not at the lowest available cash price.

Eden's current site states GLP-1 programs are available in all 50 states. Older third-party sources have listed certain states as excluded; the reliable check is entering your state during Eden's intake, which indicates service availability before payment.

For compounded semaglutide, yes — Eden's $209/month flat rate is dramatically below typical cash-pay brand-name pricing. For brand-name Wegovy or Ozempic specifically, Eden's cash prices ($1,695 and $1,399/month) are above what most patients pay through NovoCare self-pay ($199–$499/month range depending on dose and offer). If brand-name is your goal, Eden isn't your cheapest path.

Eden's intake and provider review are free. Per Eden's public process, payment for the medication cycle happens after a provider prescribes. If a provider determines semaglutide isn't appropriate for you, you're not charged for the medication.

What We Actually Verified for This Page

Every number and claim on this page was checked against a primary or authoritative source. Here's what we pulled and when:

What we verifiedSourceDate checked
Eden compounded semaglutide live pricing (3-month and monthly)tryeden.com/treatment/glp-1-treatmentsApril 17, 2026
Eden brand-name Wegovy and Ozempic pricingtryeden.com/treatment/wegovy, /treatment/ozempicApril 17, 2026
Eden "same price at every dose" and no-membership-fee languagetryeden.com FAQ and Terms of ServiceApril 17, 2026
Eden cancellation, auto-renewal, and refund languagetryeden.com Terms of ServiceApril 17, 2026
Eden state availability languagetryeden.com homepageApril 17, 2026
Eden pharmacy accreditation badges (NABP, PCAB, ACHC, LegitScript)Displayed on tryeden.comApril 17, 2026
Eden medical leadership names and credentialstryeden.com (about/team pages)April 17, 2026
Trustpilot rating and review counttrustpilot.com/review/tryeden.comApril 17, 2026
BBB profile, rating, and complaint countbbb.org Eden profileApril 17, 2026
NovoCare direct self-pay pricing for Wegovy and Ozempicnovocare.com and novocare.com/eligibility/wegovy-savings-card.htmlApril 17, 2026
FDA semaglutide shortage resolution and compounding enforcement datesfda.gov drug shortage statements and 2025–2026 compounding policy updatesApril 17, 2026
FDA 2026 guidance on non-FDA-approved GLP-1 marketingfda.gov press announcementsApril 17, 2026
HSA/FSA eligibility for prescribed medicationsIRS Publication 502April 17, 2026

If any of these change, this page gets updated and the “Last verified” date at the top advances with it. We re-check pricing monthly and regulatory status quarterly.

Still not sure if Eden is the right path?

If you've read this far and you're still not sure whether Eden fits — maybe your insurance actually does cover GLP-1s, maybe brand-name is a better fit, maybe you're not sure semaglutide is the right molecule — you don't have to guess.

3-minute intake. Free consult. No charge until a licensed provider prescribes.

Weight Loss Provider Guide is an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers. We publish pricing and policy details as verified on the dates shown, update them on a monthly and quarterly cadence, and disclose when we earn a commission. We rank providers based on what the evidence says fits the reader making the specific search.