GLP-1 Providers That Ship Discreetly: 8 Checks Before You Pay [2026]
By the Weight Loss Provider Guide Editorial Team — an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers.
For people comparing GLP-1 providers that ship discreetly, Eden is the strongest broad self-pay starting point right now — Eden publicly states its packaging has no external labels about its contents and ships free, temperature-controlled, directly to your door. If you specifically want needle-free formats and want to avoid the obvious clue of a refrigerated insulated box arriving at your home, SHED is the better fit. If you need an FDA-approved brand-name medication with insurance support, Ro is the route.
Here's what most “discreet GLP-1 shipping” pages won't tell you: discreet doesn't mean invisible. Refrigerated medication still arrives in an insulated box with a cold pack. One of the most popular brands ships in a box with their brand letter printed on the side. Most providers can't ship GLP-1s to a PO Box at all. And the box on your doorstep is only one of five places your privacy can leak. Below is what's actually verifiable about each provider — and exactly what to ask before you pay.
What we actually verified
Next scheduled verification: July 2026.
The fast verdict — best discreet GLP-1 provider by use case
| If you want… | Best fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Broad self-pay GLP-1 + plain unmarked packaging | Eden | Public "no external labels about contents" language, free temperature-controlled shipping, no membership fee |
| Needle-free formats that skip the cold-chain box entirely | SHED | Drops, lozenges, and tablets that ship at room temperature in a smaller mailer |
| FDA-approved brand-name (Wegovy, Zepbound, Foundayo) | Ro | Same cash-pay pricing as LillyDirect®, NovoCare®, and TrumpRx; insurance concierge included |
| Fast 2-day shipping with transparent logistics | Yucca Health | UPS 2-Day Air or equivalent, published cold-chain policy, BNPL options |
| Familiar mainstream brand (with the honest trade-off disclosed) | Hims / Hers | FDA-approved Novo Nordisk GLP-1 access since March 2026 — but note the "h" on the box |
Do GLP-1 providers ship discreetly?
Answer: Yes — most legitimate GLP-1 telehealth providers publicly commit to some form of discreet or direct-to-door shipping. But the strength of that commitment varies provider by provider, and “discreet” rarely means “invisible.” Eden, SHED, MEDVi, and Hims/Hers all explicitly use the words “discreet” or describe packaging that does not name the medication. Yucca and Ro publicly commit to direct-to-door delivery and clean logistics but use less explicit privacy language.
The GLP-1 packaging comparison — what's verified, what isn't
Answer capsule: Across the eight major GLP-1 telehealth providers, packaging discretion varies more than the marketing suggests. Eden publicly states there are no external labels about its contents. Hims publicly states its box usually has a single letter “h” on one side. Most other providers describe direct-to-door delivery without naming the exact exterior wording. Almost no provider can ship cold-chain GLP-1 injectables to a PO Box.
| Provider | Public packaging language (verified) | Outside mentions medication? | Ships to PO Box? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eden | "Discreet" packaging with "no external labels about its contents" (Eden) | No, per Eden | No (cold-chain restriction) | The broad most-discreet default |
| SHED (oral drops/lozenges/tablets) | Drops do not require refrigeration, per SHED | No | No — SHED's help center states partner pharmacies cannot ship to PO Boxes | Avoiding the cold-chain clue at home |
| SHED (injectable) | Discreet doorstep delivery, per SHED | No | No | Needle option with discreet doorstep delivery |
| Yucca Health | UPS 2-Day Air or equivalent, insulated cold-chain packaging, per Yucca | Discreet packaging language not explicitly published; ask support | No (residential or business address required, per Yucca) | Fast async value path |
| Ro (cash-pay direct ship) | Direct-to-door shipping for cash-pay routes (Ro) | Outside-box discretion language not explicitly published; ask support | No (cold-chain restriction) | FDA-approved direct delivery |
| Ro (with insurance) | Sends prescription to your preferred pharmacy for pickup (Ro) | N/A — pharmacy pickup | N/A | Insurance route — counter pickup, no home delivery |
| Hims / Hers | "Discreet" but most shipments arrive in a brown corrugated box with the letter "h" on one side (Hims support) | Yes — single brand letter "h" on exterior | No — explicitly excluded for GLP-1 weight-loss meds | Familiar consumer brand |
| MEDVi | "Fast & discreet shipping," per MEDVi | Outside-box wording not explicitly published; ask support | No (cold-chain restriction) | See FDA warning letter disclosure below before choosing |
Sources used: Eden (tryeden.com guide and shipping policy pages), SHED (tryshed.com help center and product pages), Yucca Health (tryyucca.com shipping policy), Ro (ro.co pricing and FAQ), Hims & Hers Support Center, MEDVi (medvi.org), and FDA's published warning letters database.
What still needs direct confirmation per provider: the exact sender name on the shipping label, the exact billing descriptor on your credit card statement, and the exact wording on shipping notifications. We give you the script for asking in the privacy stack section below.

What “discreet packaging” actually means — and what it doesn't
Answer capsule: Discreet packaging means the outside of the box doesn't name the medication or the treatment category. It does not mean the box is small, anonymous, signature-free, or invisible to a roommate or partner who handles your mail. Refrigerated GLP-1 medication arrives in an insulated box with a cold pack — that box is recognizable as “medical-ish” even when it's perfectly unbranded.
The marketing definition
“We ship to your door in a plain box with no medication name.”
The privacy-conscious definition
“Nobody who sees this box could figure out what's inside.”
The first one most providers can deliver on. The second one almost no provider can fully promise — because the physics of cold-chain shipping (insulated foam box, gel ice packs, “Keep Refrigerated” warning) creates clues even when the brand is invisible.
If your real privacy requirement is the second definition, you have two paths:
- 1Choose a needle-free format that doesn't need refrigeration. Compounded oral GLP-1 drops, lozenges, and sublingual tablets ship at room temperature in a smaller mailer — no insulated box, no ice pack, no refrigeration sticker. SHED is the specialist. The clinical tradeoff is real and we cover it below.
- 2Choose a discreet provider and accept that the package will look medical. Plain, unbranded, but insulated. Eden, Yucca, and Ro all fit this profile with a plain outer box that doesn't name the medication.
Provider 1: Eden — best broad pick for discreet GLP-1 shipping
Answer capsule: Eden is the strongest default recommendation for privacy-conscious GLP-1 shoppers because it combines public “discreet” packaging language with no external labels about contents, free temperature-controlled delivery, no membership fee, and broad availability.
The shipping language is in writing
Eden's own pages state that the package is discreet with no external labels about its contents, and that medications go out in temperature-controlled boxes with cold packs when needed. That's a publicly committed promise on the company's own site.
No membership fee adds up
Some competitors charge $39–$149/month for the membership and extra for medication. Eden's monthly price includes the consultation, the prescription, the medication, and the shipping. There's nothing on top.
Reasonably fast standard delivery
Eden's guide describes typical delivery in 3–5 business days after prescription approval and payment, though Eden's support center notes that custom compounding can take up to 10 business days and pharmacy processing generally takes up to 7 business days. Plan accordingly.
Honest disclosure
Eden's pages confirm the box is plain and the contents aren't named on the outside, but Eden does not publicly publish the exact sender name that appears on the shipping label, and Eden's support center states Eden cannot accommodate hold-at-location or package redirect requests once a package has been processed. If your privacy plan depends on intercepting the package mid-route, that won't work with Eden.
Eden best for:
- ✓Most readers who want verified discreet-shipping language
- ✓People who can be home for cold-chain delivery
- ✓People who don't want a membership fee on top of medication
Eden not for:
- ✗People who can't accept a refrigerated package (consider SHED's oral options)
- ✗People who need carrier hold-at-location flexibility
- ✗People who specifically want the FDA-approved brand-name path with insurance (consider Ro)
Provider 2: SHED — best for needle-free formats that avoid the cold-chain clue
Answer capsule: SHED is the strongest specialist option when avoiding the obvious refrigerated-medical-package clue at your home matters. It's the only major provider that publicly offers compounded GLP-1s in non-refrigerated formats — drops, lozenges, and dissolving tablets — alongside injectable options.
The structural advantage
A refrigerated injectable shipment, no matter how plain the outer box, is recognizable. It's roughly the size of a large hardcover book, it's insulated, it has gel packs, and it usually has a “Keep Refrigerated” sticker somewhere on it. That's the giveaway many readers are actually trying to avoid.
SHED's GLP-1 drops do not require refrigeration per SHED's own guidance. That means the package doesn't need an insulated cold-chain box at your front door — which is the single most recognizable privacy leak in this category.
Important correction
SHED's own help center states that partner pharmacies cannot ship to PO Boxes. The privacy benefit of SHED's oral options is the disappearance of the cold-chain clue at your home — not the ability to redirect the package to a PO Box. Use a residential or business address.
The clinical honesty (this matters)
Compounded oral GLP-1 formulations are not FDA-approved. SHED's own education pages note that injections are the most studied delivery method and show the strongest results. Drops, lozenges, and dissolving tablets are compounded formats that have not been studied in published clinical trials the way injectable semaglutide and tirzepatide have. The privacy benefit is real. The clinical equivalence is not established. Discuss format choice with your prescribing provider before deciding on discretion alone.
SHED best for:
- ✓People who actively don't want needles
- ✓People in shared housing where a refrigerated package would be noticed
- ✓People who want flexibility between injectable and oral formats
SHED not for:
- ✗People who want the most clinically studied delivery method
- ✗People who want FDA-approved medication only
- ✗People who need to redirect shipments to a PO Box
Provider 3: Ro — best FDA-approved discreet shipping path
Answer capsule: Ro is the right choice when you specifically want an FDA-approved brand-name GLP-1 medication delivered privately. Ro publicly offers Foundayo™, Wegovy® pill, Wegovy® pen, Zepbound® pen, and Zepbound® KwikPen, matches the same cash-pay pricing as LillyDirect®, NovoCare®, and TrumpRx, and includes a free GLP-1 Insurance Coverage Checker plus a dedicated insurance concierge that handles prior authorization paperwork.
Cash-pay routes ship directly to door
Wegovy pill, Foundayo, and Zepbound KwikPen are listed as direct-ship cash-pay options on Ro's pricing page. Private package on your doorstep.
Insurance routes = pharmacy pickup
Ro sends the prescription to your preferred pharmacy for pickup once coverage is approved. No box at home — but you're identifiable at the pharmacy counter.
Damaging admission, immediately reframed
Ro is more expensive than the cash-pay compounded providers when you compare the headline membership-plus-medication number. If your single highest priority is the lowest possible monthly cost and you're willing to use a compounded medication, Eden or SHED will save you money. But Ro is the only provider on this page giving you FDA-approved Wegovy pill, Wegovy pen, Zepbound pen, and Foundayo at the same cash price as buying direct from the manufacturer — without you having to navigate manufacturer portals, savings cards, or insurance bureaucracy alone.
Cash-pay routes may ship directly; insurance routes usually mean pharmacy pickup.
Provider 4: Yucca Health — best 2-day shipping with transparent logistics
Answer capsule: Yucca Health is the best fit when shipping speed and logistics transparency matter more than published packaging-discretion claims. Yucca ships every approved order via UPS 2-Day Air or an equivalent carrier service, fills prescriptions through licensed US partner pharmacies, includes free shipping, and publishes one of the clearest cold-chain shipping policies in the GLP-1 telehealth space.
Yucca's published shipping policy spells out:
- ✓UPS 2-Day Air or equivalent carrier service on every order
- ✓Insulated packaging with refrigerants for cold-chain medication
- ✓No weekend or holiday shipping (no package sitting in a warehouse over the weekend)
- ✓Defined reporting windows for delivery problems
- ✓BNPL options at checkout (Klarna, Affirm, Afterpay)
- ✓Residential or business address required (no PO Boxes)
Subscription terms worth knowing
Yucca's new-patient pricing is tied to a six-month prescription term. Subscriptions bill monthly or quarterly and renew 5\u20137 days early until the end of the six-month prescription. Medications cannot be returned or refunded once shipped.
Why Yucca isn't #1 on this page
Yucca's official pages document the logistics in detail, but they don't use the word “discreet” in their shipping language as explicitly as Eden does. If you want the strongest published discreet-packaging promise, choose Eden. If you want the strongest published cold-chain-handled-correctly promise, Yucca wins.
Providers 5 & 6: Hims and Hers — the honest disclosure
Answer capsule: Hims and Hers are legitimate FDA-approved GLP-1 providers, especially after the March 2026 Novo Nordisk partnership. The packaging tradeoff: per Hims's own published support documentation, the outside box is brown corrugated cardboard with the single letter “h” printed on one side. It doesn't name the medication. But it's a recognizable brand mark that millions of US consumers have seen in advertising.
From Hims's own support center, “Is your packaging discreet?”
“Packaging is discreet, and most products ship in a brown corrugated box with the letter 'h' on one side.”
It's a small mark. It's not the medication name. But if your roommate, partner, parent, or building doorman is familiar with the Hims & Hers brand — and many are — they may recognize it on sight.
One important indication clarification
Per Hims & Hers's own announcement, Ozempic is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes, not weight loss. If a Hims provider determines it's clinically appropriate to prescribe Ozempic for weight management, that would be off-label use. Wegovy (semaglutide) and Zepbound (tirzepatide) are the FDA-approved options specifically for chronic weight management.
The damaging admission, reframed
Hims & Hers does NOT ship in a fully unmarked box. If maximum invisibility is your priority, Eden or SHED is the better fit. But because Hims & Hers chose to keep their brand mark visible, they've built one of the strongest mainstream telehealth brands in the country, and the post-March-2026 Novo Nordisk partnership gives them broad FDA-approved formulary access (Wegovy pill, Wegovy pen, Ozempic). If brand familiarity is comforting to you, Hims/Hers is a fit. If it's the opposite, scroll back up to Eden.
Provider 7: MEDVi — important disclosure before you decide
Material regulatory disclosure
MEDVi is a broad cash-pay compounded GLP-1 provider with public “fast & discreet shipping” language. However, in February 2026, the FDA issued MEDVi a warning letter citing false or misleading website, labeling, and advertising claims about compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide that, in FDA's view, caused those products to be misbranded.
We recommend you verify this for yourself by searching FDA.gov's warning letters database for “MEDVi” before starting service.
We have a detailed MEDVi shipping time guide if you choose to evaluate them further. Read the regulatory context there before deciding.
The full privacy stack — the four other places your GLP-1 use can leak
Answer capsule: Even with a perfectly unmarked box, four other surfaces can reveal that you're using GLP-1 medication: the return address printed on the shipping label, the billing descriptor that shows up on your credit card statement, the SMS or email shipping notifications sent to your phone, and how the medication itself looks once it's stored in your refrigerator. Each one has a fix.

The return address on the shipping label
Most legitimate compounding pharmacies use a partner pharmacy or fulfillment-center name as the return address — not the medication name. The exact sender name varies by provider and by which pharmacy partner fills your prescription, and most providers don't publish this on their public site.
The fix:
Before paying any provider, open their support chat and ask this exact script: "Before I start, can you tell me what exact sender name appears on the outside shipping label? Does the package mention the medication, weight loss, GLP-1, semaglutide, tirzepatide, refrigeration, or your brand name anywhere on the outside?" The provider's answer (or refusal to answer) tells you everything you need to know.
The billing descriptor on your credit card statement
A package can be perfectly invisible and your statement can still read "EDEN HEALTH" or "MEDVI WEIGHT LOSS" or "RO HEALTH" — visible to anyone with access to that card statement. We did not verify the exact billing descriptor for every provider on this page; ask each provider's support before signup if this matters to you.
The fix:
If your card statement is shared with a partner or family member, consider: a separate credit card used only for healthcare, a virtual card service (Privacy.com or Capital One virtual numbers), or confirming the descriptor with the provider before signup so you know what to expect.
SMS and email shipping notifications
"Your Wegovy shipment is on its way" sent to a phone your partner can see is a leak. Most providers send neutral notifications ("Your order has shipped"), but verify per provider during the onboarding flow.
The fix:
Check whether the provider's notifications can be sent to a specific email address (not your shared family email). Use a phone number that isn't on a shared family plan with notification mirroring enabled. If you can't change the settings, ask whether you can opt out of SMS and rely on the patient portal for tracking.
How the medication looks once it's in your fridge
Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide vials are small — roughly the size of a perfume sample — and don't loudly broadcast the medication name. Most can be tucked into the back of a fridge or inside a small opaque container. FDA-approved Wegovy and Zepbound pens are larger and ship in branded boxes that do say the medication name on the inner packaging.
The fix:
Store the vial inside an opaque container labeled something neutral. For pens, transfer the actual pen to a small zippered bag and store the branded outer box elsewhere. Use a sharps container labeled simply "sharps" (available at any pharmacy).
The PO Box problem — and the limited workarounds
Answer capsule: Most major GLP-1 telehealth providers cannot ship to a PO Box. Hims explicitly excludes GLP-1 weight-loss medications from PO Box and General Delivery addresses because of temperature restrictions. SHED's help center states partner pharmacies cannot ship to PO Boxes either. Yucca requires a residential or business address. There are limited workarounds — and the cleanest one is choosing a medication format that doesn't need refrigeration in the first place.
Workaround 1: Choose a needle-free format that doesn't need refrigeration
Cleanest fix availableCompounded oral semaglutide drops, lozenges, and sublingual dissolving tablets ship at room temperature in a smaller standard mailer — no insulated box, no ice pack, no "Keep Refrigerated" sticker. The package looks like a normal supplement order. SHED is the strongest specialist. Note that even though the medication doesn't need refrigeration, SHED's partner pharmacies still require a residential or business address, not a PO Box.
Compounded oral GLP-1s are not FDA-approved and the published clinical trials studying semaglutide and tirzepatide were done with injections. Oral compounded formats may not deliver the same outcomes. Discuss with your provider before choosing format on privacy alone.
Workaround 2: Carrier hold-at-location (provider and carrier dependent)
Not always availableSome carriers allow you to redirect a package to a hold-for-pickup location at the carrier's nearest facility once tracking is created — UPS My Choice, FedEx Hold at Location, USPS Hold for Pickup. You bring photo ID and pick it up at the counter. The privacy benefit: no package ever arrives at your home.
This isn't universally available. Eden's support center specifically states they cannot accommodate hold-at-location or package redirect requests once a package has been processed. Pharmacy partners may have shipper restrictions for cold-chain medication. Confirm with the provider before relying on this workaround.
Workaround 3: Amazon Hub Locker — verify before relying on it
Not verified to workAmazon Hub Lockers exist as a delivery destination, but Amazon's published guidance is primarily for Amazon orders and eligible items. Whether a third-party pharmacy shipment can be addressed to an Amazon Hub Locker depends on the provider's shipping system, the carrier, and Amazon's acceptance policies. Don't assume this works for GLP-1 shipments without confirming it directly with the provider you choose.
Compounded vs FDA-approved — which discreet GLP-1 path is right for you?
Answer capsule: Both compounded and FDA-approved GLP-1 medications can be shipped to your home discreetly, but they are not the same thing. FDA-approved medications (Wegovy, Zepbound, Foundayo) have been reviewed by the FDA for safety, efficacy, and quality. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved, and FDA does not review them for safety, effectiveness, or quality before marketing.
Choose the FDA-approved path (Ro, Sesame, Hims, Hers) if:
- ✓You want medication that has gone through full FDA review for safety, efficacy, and manufacturing quality
- ✓You want the same medication studied in published clinical trials (STEP/SURMOUNT)
- ✓You have insurance that may cover GLP-1 for weight loss or related indications
- ✓You're managing a comorbid condition where documented dose-response matters
Choose the compounded path (Eden, SHED, Yucca, MEDVi) only if:
- ~A licensed prescriber has determined compounded medication is clinically appropriate
- ~You understand the FDA's position on compounded drugs vs FDA-approved options
- ~You specifically want a non-injectable format not available as FDA-approved
- ~You've discussed compounded GLP-1 with your prescribing provider
A note on language
We do not say “same active ingredient” or “clinically proven” when describing compounded medications relative to brand-name Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, Mounjaro, or Foundayo. The FDA has been clear: compounded medications are not FDA-approved, are not generic drugs, and are not reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality before marketing. If a page tells you compounded semaglutide is “the same as” Wegovy, that page is misleading you.
How to keep your GLP-1 delivery private if you share housing — 5-step plan
- 1
Verify sender name with support before you pay
Use the script in the privacy stack section above. Most providers will answer in chat. The few that won't are the ones to walk away from.
- 2
Pick a delivery day you can be home
Yucca, Eden, and Ro all give tracking and delivery estimates. Avoid scheduling shipment ahead of a vacation, business trip, or weekend you'll be away. Cold-chain medication has a limited window before insulated packaging stops protecting it.
- 3
Skip PO Box for refrigerated GLP-1s entirely
If your home address itself is the privacy problem, the cleanest fix is a non-refrigerated oral compounded format from SHED that ships in a smaller, non-insulated mailer to a residential or business address. PO Boxes are not an option for major GLP-1 providers — including for SHED's oral formats.
- 4
Use carrier hold-at-location only after confirming with provider AND carrier
Some pharmacy partners require direct-to-recipient delivery for cold-chain medication. Eden specifically states it cannot accommodate this. Confirm before relying on it.
- 5
Plan refrigeration before the package arrives
Clear space in the back of your fridge before shipment day (not the door — temperature swings). Have an opaque small container ready. Know the storage instructions for your specific medication (most are 36–46°F / 2–8°C). If the package arrives warm, with inadequate ice packs, or you're unsure how it was stored: contact the provider/pharmacy before using the medication. FDA has flagged warm shipments as a specific safety concern for injectable GLP-1s.
What it actually costs — intro pricing vs ongoing pricing in 2026
| Provider | Price anchor (verified) | Includes medication? | Includes shipping? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eden | First month as low as $129 on a 3-month compounded semaglutide plan; $149 first month / $249/month thereafter; annual plan as low as $196/month | Yes | Yes (free, discreet) |
| SHED | GLP-1 lozenges starting at $199 (membership and medication terms vary by format) | Yes | Yes (discreet) |
| Yucca Health | Semaglutide as low as $146/month, Tirzepatide as low as $258/month (new-patient 6-month plan) | Yes | Yes (UPS 2-Day Air or equivalent) |
| Ro | $39 first month membership, then $149/month or as low as $74/month with annual prepay | No — medication separate | Yes |
| Sesame Care | Membership as low as $59/month annually | No — medication separate | Varies by route |
| Hims / Hers | $39 first month, $149/month after | No — medication separate | Yes |
| MEDVi | Promotional pricing varies; ongoing ~$299/month compounded semaglutide injection | Yes | Yes |
Verify all pricing at checkout before paying. Provider intro promotions, dose-tier surcharges, and plan length terms change frequently. A “$179 first month” headline is not the same as “$179/month forever” — and most aren't. Pricing verified April 28, 2026. We re-verify monthly and update quarterly.
What to verify before you pay — the 8-question checklist
| Question to verify | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| 1. What exact sender name appears on the shipping label? | Prevents household exposure |
| 2. Does the outer package mention medication, weight loss, GLP-1, semaglutide, tirzepatide, refrigeration, or pharmacy name? | The actual privacy test |
| 3. Is the medication FDA-approved or compounded? | Two completely different regulatory paths |
| 4. What's the first-month price AND the month-two price? | Intro pricing isn't the real number |
| 5. Is medication and shipping included, or charged separately? | Determines true monthly cost |
| 6. What address types can receive shipments — residential, business, PO Box, hold-at-location? | Determines workaround options |
| 7. What happens if the package arrives warm or damaged? | Cold-chain protocol matters |
| 8. Can I pause, cancel, or delay refills before the next charge — and what's the cutoff? | Subscription protection |
Save this list. Open the provider's support chat. Run it. The five minutes you spend will spare you a $300 surprise charge or a package that arrives in a way you didn't expect.
Edge cases that send people back to search — covered here
State availability
| Provider | Availability (verified) |
|---|---|
| SHED | Publicly states all 50 states |
| Hims / Hers | Publicly stated as not available in all 50 states — confirm during intake |
| Eden, Yucca, Ro, Sesame, MEDVi | Verify availability for your state during the intake form |
Insurance changes the privacy model
If you use insurance for an FDA-approved GLP-1 through Ro, the prescription typically goes to your preferred pharmacy for in-person pickup. No discreet box arrives at home — but you're identifiable at the pharmacy counter. Pick the model that fits your privacy situation.
Intro pricing vs the real ongoing price
The pattern: introductory pricing on the first month, then the price normalizes. Ro: $39 first month → $149/month (or $74/month with annual prepay). MEDVi: lower intro → $299/month compounded semaglutide injection. Hims/Hers: $39 first month → $149/month after. Calculate your annual cost using the post-intro price, not the headline.
Dose escalation surcharges
GLP-1 protocols start at a low dose and titrate up over months. Some providers charge the same price at every dose; others add a surcharge as the dose increases. Verify dose-tier pricing in the support chat before you pay.
Cancellation cutoffs
Cancellation rules vary. Some providers let you pause via the patient portal in seconds; others require you to cancel before pharmacy processing or before the next refill charge to avoid being billed. Yucca has specific refund and renewal limits tied to its six-month plan terms. Confirm the exact cutoff for your provider before signup.
How we ranked GLP-1 providers that ship discreetly — our methodology
| Factor | Weight | What it measures |
|---|---|---|
| Discreet shipping evidence | 35% | Public provider/support evidence of plain packaging, sender name, outside-package wording, and verifiability |
| Shipping logistics quality | 20% | Carrier, speed, tracking, cold-chain handling, weekend/holiday limits, warm-package protocol |
| Cost transparency | 15% | First-month, ongoing, membership, medication inclusion, shipping fees, refill timing, cancellation rules |
| Medication-route fit | 15% | FDA-approved vs compounded, oral vs injection, insurance support, state availability |
| Trust and regulatory clarity | 15% | FDA disclosures, pharmacy/source transparency, recent enforcement actions, support clarity |
What we did not use:
- —We did not use star ratings (no genuine first-party ratings exist for this page)
- —We did not weight providers by affiliate payout
- —We did not use testimonials to support clinical efficacy claims
- —We did not blur compounded medications with FDA-approved medications
What real users say about GLP-1 shipping and privacy
“I'm hoping it's discreet, I don't want to tell my roommates I'm doing it.”
— Reddit, r/glp1 community thread on packaging (used as voice-of-customer language for the privacy concern, not as proof of any provider's behavior)
This is the underlying intent behind almost every search for “GLP-1 providers that ship discreetly.” It isn't really about the box. It's about not being asked to explain something you're not ready to talk about. That's the part this page exists to solve.
Frequently asked questions
Do GLP-1 providers ship discreetly?▼
What does a GLP-1 package actually look like when it arrives?▼
Can GLP-1 medications be shipped to a PO Box?▼
How can I receive my GLP-1 medication without my family seeing?▼
Will my credit card statement say "weight loss" or "GLP-1" on it?▼
Are oral compounded GLP-1 medications as effective as injectable?▼
Is signature required at delivery for GLP-1 medications?▼
What happens if my GLP-1 package arrives warm?▼
Can I cancel before my next refill ships?▼
Does Hims really put a logo on the box?▼
Is MEDVi safe to use?▼
Which provider is best if I just want this to be over?▼
How we built this page
How we verified: We checked each provider's published shipping pages, support center articles, pricing pages, third-party reviewer reports from 2025\u20132026, public Trustpilot and BBB review patterns, and FDA enforcement records (including the February 2026 warning letter referenced in the MEDVi disclosure). Where a specific detail wasn't publicly documented, we noted that you should confirm directly via the provider's support chat using the script published in this article.
What we plan to verify next: Firsthand unboxing photos, support-chat transcripts confirming sender name and billing descriptor for the top 3 providers, and a state-by-state availability lookup table.
Refresh cadence: Quarterly. Pricing spot-checked monthly. Emergency updates triggered by FDA enforcement actions, major provider policy changes, or new branded GLP-1 launches.
Next scheduled review: July 2026.
Still not sure which GLP-1 program is right for you?
You've read enough. The next step is figuring out which one of these actually fits your living situation, your medication preference, and your budget — without you having to compare ten things at once.
Eden is the broad discreet pick
No external labels about contents, free temperature-controlled shipping, no membership fee. Verified public packaging language.
Check Eden Pricing and Availability →Not sure? Take the 60-second quiz
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Get My Personalized GLP-1 Match →Related guides on Weight Loss Provider Guide
Weight Loss Provider Guide is an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers. We are not a medical provider, do not write prescriptions, and do not provide medical advice. All medical decisions should be made with a licensed healthcare provider familiar with your full medical history.