GLP-1 Providers With Lab Testing Included: 8 Verified Programs (2026)

By the Weight Loss Provider Guide editorial team — an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers

Last verified: April 29, 2026 · Next review: July 29, 2026

This page is for informational purposes and is not medical advice. We may earn a commission when readers click affiliate links. Affiliate compensation never changes the verified facts below or our editorial assessment of which provider best fits each search intent.

GLP-1 providers with lab testing included — comparison matrix of Ro, Enhance MD, MEDVi, Henry Meds, LifeMD, Noom Med, Sesame, and Lemonaid lab policies.
Six of the eight lab-included providers at a glance. Clicking this image opens Ro, the top pick for FDA-approved meds with labs. April 2026 — verify before enrolling.

The short answer (read this first, scroll for proof)

For GLP-1 providers with lab testing included, eight programs verify some form of lab coverage in 2026: Ro, Enhance MD, MEDVi, Henry Meds, LifeMD, Noom Med, Sesame Care, and Lemonaid Health. That's the full list of major programs we could verify with public language stating labs are bundled, covered when ordered, or included on a schedule. Eden, SHED, Hims, Hers, PlushCare, Calibrate, Found, and Form Health either don't include labs in the program fee, only require them while billing separately, or don't routinely require them at all.

If you want FDA-approved Wegovy®, Zepbound®, or Foundayo™ with labs and insurance support handled for you, Ro is the strongest fit — $39 the first month, then $149/month or as low as $74/month with annual prepay, with provider-ordered metabolic testing through Quest included in the membership when ordered. Medication is billed separately.

If you want self-pay compounded care with a published every-6-month metabolic lab schedule, Enhance MD is the cleanest pick — labs and medication built into a flat plan that doesn't change as your dose increases.

If you want the broadest cash-pay menu (injectables and oral tablets) with no membership fee and labs covered through LabCorp, Quest, or Bioreference, MEDVi is the answer.

What we actually verified: Provider pricing, FAQ pages, lab policy pages, state availability, and lab partner (Quest, LabCorp, Bioreference) for every provider in the matrix below — captured directly from each provider's site between April 26 and April 29, 2026. Sources cited per section. Pricing changes frequently; confirm before you enroll.

There are real catches with every provider on this list — state restrictions in New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Hawaii; medication billed separately on most plans; "included if ordered" language that means low-risk patients may never get labs at all. We unpack each one below so you can decide before you pay.

Looking for the opposite — a fast start without baseline blood work? See our GLP-1 Without Blood Work guide instead.

The 8 GLP-1 providers with lab testing included (and what "included" means at each)

Most "best GLP-1 provider" listicles treat lab testing as a one-line bullet. The actual buyer question is harder: Is the lab included in the program fee, billed separately through Quest or my insurance, or simply not required at all? The three answers point to three different programs. Here's the breakdown.

Table 1. GLP-1 provider lab-inclusion comparison matrix. Verified directly from each provider's public site, April 26–29, 2026.
ProviderLabs Included?Lab PartnerWhen Labs HappenState ExceptionsMedication Included?Starting PriceBest For
Ro⚠ ConditionalProvider-ordered, in membershipQuest (or $75 at-home kit; free where Quest unavailable)Provider discretionAt-home kit shipped free where Quest isn't availableNo (separate)$39 first month
then $149/mo or $74/mo annual
FDA-approved meds + insurance navigation
Enhance MD✓ IncludedEvery 6 months on plan cardQuest DiagnosticsInitial + every 6 monthsNone publishedYes (in plan price)Core: $49 first / $212/mo
Advanced: $99 first / $280/mo
Elite: $189 first / $322/mo
Self-pay with scheduled lab monitoring
MEDVi✓ IncludedCovered when ordered; mandatory by month 4LabCorp, Quest, Bioreference (NY/NJ/RI)Mandatory by month 4 + at dose escalationRouted through Bioreference in NY/NJ/RIYes (compounded plans)Plan-dependentBroad cash-pay menu, no membership fee
Henry Meds⚠ ConditionalCovered if orderedQuest (in-person or at-home)Most patients don't need labs at intakeNot in AL, AK, AR, HI, LA, MS, MO, SC, WVYes (all-inclusive monthly)From $179/moLowest predictable monthly price
LifeMD⚠ ConditionalEligible labs in most statesQuest or LabCorpWhen clinically appropriateNY, NJ, RI billed directlyNo (separate)From $75/mo annualClinical oversight in most states
Noom Med⚠ ConditionalFirst labs on certain programsQuest, LabCorp (independent lab not covered)First labs at intake on covered programsNY, NJ, RI excludedPlan-dependentPlan-dependentCoaching-first with labs in the app
Sesame Care⚠ ConditionalYes — in Success by SesameProvider-dependentInitial + ongoingProvider-dependentNo (separate)From $99/mo (or $59/mo annual)Provider-choice, branded medication path
Lemonaid Health⚠ ConditionalOne annual lab orderQuestOnce per yearNY, NJ, RI, HI not availableNo (separate)$49/mo membershipSimple, once-a-year monitoring
Below: programs that require or allow labs, but bill them separately — NOT "included" for this page's purposes
Calibrate— Billed separatelyRequired, billed through insuranceQuest / LabCorpRequired at start; billed separatelyInsurance-dependentNo (separate)$199/mo (3-mo min)Insured/employer-benefit members
Form Health— Billed separatelyRequired, billed through insuranceInsurance-coordinatedBaseline + clinician-directedInsurance-dependentNo (separate)Insurance-billedHigh-touch insurance-based monitoring
PlushCare— Billed separatelyRequired, billed separatelyLab-of-recordBefore prescribingInsurance-dependentNo (separate)$19.99/mo + $129/visitDoctor relationship + insurance
Found— Billed separatelyConditional — billed separately if orderedQuest / LabCorpIf risk flaggedInsurance-dependentNo (medication often separate)$99–$149/moInsurance-friendly with coaching
Eden— Billed separatelyNot required at intakeIf ordered: separateProvider discretionAR, LA, MS, NM (compounded)Yes (medication included)$149 first month, $249/moSpeed of access, flat-dose pricing
SHED— Billed separatelyNot required at intakeIf ordered: separateIf orderedMostly nationwideYes (medication)$199–$499/moOral / sublingual format options
Hims— Billed separatelyNot required at intakeOptional uploadNone routinelyMostly nationwideNo (separate from membership)Membership $39 first / $149/mo + Wegovy pill from $149/moMainstream branded, fast access
Hers— Billed separatelyNot required at intakeOptional uploadNone routinelyMostly nationwideNo (separate from membership)Membership $39 first / $149/mo + Wegovy pill from $149/moMainstream branded, fast access

Sources: Ro pricing/lab kit from ro.co/weight-loss/pricing and ro.co/weight-loss/how-it-works. Enhance MD tier pricing and "Metabolic Lab Testing Every 6 Months" from enhance.md plan cards and FAQ. MEDVi lab partners from medvi.org/welcome. Henry Meds from henrymeds.com/glp-1-weight-management. LifeMD lab policy from lifemd.com/faq. Noom Med from noom.com/support/faqs. Sesame from sesamecare.com/service/online-weight-loss-program. Lemonaid from support.lemonaidhealth.com. Eden from tryeden.com. Hims/Hers from hims.com/weight-loss and forhers.com/weight-loss.

What "labs included" actually means (the most important thing on this page)

"Lab testing included" sounds like one thing and means at least four different things across these programs. Read this section before you pay anyone, because the difference between included if your provider orders it and scheduled every six months no matter what is the difference between getting one lab in your first year and getting three.

1. Included if the provider orders it

Providers: Ro, Henry Meds

The membership covers metabolic testing, but the provider decides whether you need it based on your intake form, age, and risk factors. A clean intake from a 35-year-old with no comorbidities may never trigger an order. The membership pays for the option, not the guarantee. This is fine for most low-risk patients and aligns with how internal-medicine clinicians actually practice. It is not the same thing as a structured monitoring schedule.

2. Included on a published schedule

Providers: Enhance MD only

Enhance MD is the only major provider in this category. The public GLP-1 plan card lists "Metabolic Lab Testing Every 6 Months" as a feature of every tier — Core, Advanced, and Elite — bundled with a same-price-at-every-dose guarantee. If you specifically want a structural re-test you don't have to remember to ask for, this is the model.

3. Included once per year

Providers: Lemonaid Health

Lemonaid Health takes this approach. One Quest lab order is built into the annual membership. It's the cleanest, simplest version of "included," and it works for shoppers who want light annual monitoring without paying for clinical infrastructure they won't use.

4. Included only at certain labs in certain states

Providers: LifeMD, Noom Med

LifeMD includes eligible testing at Quest or LabCorp — but explicitly bills New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island residents directly because state insurance and lab-service rules block the bundled model. Noom Med uses the same pattern with the same three states excluded, plus an exclusion for "independent lab" use outside the Quest/LabCorp network. If you live in NY, NJ, RI, or Hawaii, the word "included" on the homepage is not what applies to you.

The bucket that's not on this list — required but billed separately

Calibrate, Form Health, PlushCare, and Found all order labs and frame their programs as clinically rigorous, but the lab itself is billed through your insurance or by Quest directly. The advertised monthly fee is not your all-in cost. We list these in the matrix above so you can see who falls into which bucket, but they don't qualify as "included" for the purpose of this page.

The reason this distinction matters is dollars. Quest's published direct-to-consumer Weight Loss Journey Baseline Panel currently lists at $139 and includes a lipid panel, comprehensive metabolic panel, TSH, and HbA1c. Premium panels with fasting insulin and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein run higher. Across a year of treatment with two re-tests, that's $200 to $400+ of out-of-pocket cost the headline price didn't tell you about.

Which lab-included provider should you choose?

The provider that fits you depends on three things: whether you want FDA-approved or compounded medication, whether you have insurance you're trying to use, and whether you live in a state with lab restrictions. Pick the one that matches your situation below — each section names the next step, the specific tradeoff, and who should pick a different provider instead.

1

Ro — Best for FDA-approved GLP-1s with insurance support

The short answer

Ro is the only major lab-inclusive GLP-1 program built around FDA-approved brand-name medications. The Body membership starts at $39 for the first month and $149/month after that, or as low as $74/month with an annual plan paid upfront. Provider-ordered lab testing through Quest is included in the membership when ordered. Medication is billed separately and depends on your insurance and which medication you're prescribed.

What's actually included: Initial telehealth consultation, lab testing through Quest at any location (free when ordered) or a $75 at-home blood-collection kit (shipped at no extra charge in states where Quest isn't available), 1:1 nurse coaching, ongoing provider chat access, a connected smart scale, an insurance concierge that handles prior-authorization paperwork, and a free GLP-1 Insurance Coverage Checker before you commit.

Medications available through Ro: Ro carries a deep FDA-approved formulary — Foundayo™ (orforglipron), Wegovy® pen and pill, Zepbound® pen and KwikPen, plus Ozempic® and Mounjaro® where clinically appropriate.

Cash-pay medication pricing varies by medication and dose. Wegovy pill starts at $149 for the first month. Foundayo is similarly priced. Zepbound KwikPen runs $299 the first month and scales to $399–$449/month at higher doses. The membership fee is on top of the medication price.

Who should pick Ro: You want Wegovy, Zepbound, Foundayo, Ozempic, or Mounjaro specifically. You have insurance and want someone to handle the prior-authorization paperwork. You want lab work covered as part of the relationship — not as an option you pay for separately.

Honest tradeoff: The membership fee is separate from the medication cost. If your insurance does not cover the medication and you're paying cash, your real all-in monthly expense is higher than at a compounded provider charging one bundled price. Ro does NOT include the medication in the $149/month. If your priority is the lowest possible cash-pay total cost, MEDVi or Henry Meds win on price — but because Ro doesn't bundle medication, it can offer FDA-approved branded medications at the same prices the manufacturer charges direct, with insurance navigation and lab work included on top.

Compliance note: Wegovy and Zepbound are FDA-approved for chronic weight management under specific BMI and comorbidity criteria. Ozempic and Mounjaro are FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes and may be prescribed off-label for weight loss at provider discretion. Foundayo is FDA-approved orforglipron — a different molecule from semaglutide. None of these are "compounded."

2

Enhance MD — Best for self-pay with scheduled metabolic labs

The short answer

Enhance MD is the only major GLP-1 provider that publicly publishes a structured re-test cadence: every six months across all three program tiers. The flat monthly price doesn't change as your dose increases, and labs at Quest Diagnostics are bundled into every tier — Core (semaglutide), Advanced (tirzepatide), and Elite (combination).

What's actually included: Four weeks of compounded medication, baseline metabolic lab work at Quest (CMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipid panel), a re-test every six months, ongoing provider care and support, supplies (syringes, alcohol pads), wellness coaching, and a 100% money-back guarantee if you're found ineligible during onboarding.

Pricing (verified April 2026):

  • Core (compounded semaglutide): $49 first month, $212/month ongoing
  • Advanced (compounded tirzepatide): $99 first month, $280/month ongoing
  • Elite (combination): $189 first month, $322/month ongoing
  • • Multi-month plans (3-, 6-, 12-month) lower the effective monthly cost

Who should pick Enhance MD: You want monitoring built into the program, not added on. You want predictable pricing that doesn't escalate with your dose. You're comfortable with a compounded-care path. You want the same provider-led relationship for the long haul, not just a prescription mill.

Honest tradeoff: Enhance MD's products are compounded medications. Compounded GLP-1s are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. They're prepared by licensed compounding pharmacies based on individual prescriptions. We don't claim compounded medications are equivalent to FDA-approved branded products — they aren't, regulatorily. If you specifically want Wegovy, Zepbound, Foundayo, or another FDA-approved brand, Ro is the right path instead.

3

MEDVi — Best for broad cash-pay menu with labs covered

The short answer

MEDVi is the broadest cash-pay GLP-1 program with labs included and no separate membership fee. Lab work is covered through LabCorp, Quest, or Bioreference, mandatory by month 4 (no prescription past month 3 without lab results), and required for any dose increase beyond Level 2.

What's actually included: Compounded GLP-1 access in multiple formats — semaglutide injectable, semaglutide tablet, tirzepatide injectable, tirzepatide tablet — at flat plan pricing. Lab work covered when ordered. One-on-one lifestyle coaching, nutrition guidance with meal plans, and fitness support. A required initial video consultation in some states. 24/7 access to specialist support. HSA/FSA accepted.

Lab schedule, in plain English:

  • • If intake flags a risk (thyroid, diabetes, kidney/liver disease, uncontrolled blood pressure, pancreatitis): labs ordered before approval, covered at no additional cost
  • Past month 3: mandatory for refills — no labs, no prescription
  • • Every dose escalation past Level 2 triggers another covered lab order
  • • NY, NJ, RI patients routed through Bioreference instead of Quest/LabCorp

Honest tradeoff: Like Enhance MD, MEDVi's primary GLP-1 menu is compounded — not FDA-approved finished products. If you specifically want FDA-approved branded medication, Ro is the better fit. If you want a published lab schedule rather than risk-triggered labs, Enhance MD is more rigorous. MEDVi's strength is breadth: more formats, deeper menu, no membership fee tax on top of medication.

4

Henry Meds — Lowest predictable price with labs covered if ordered

The short answer

Henry Meds is the most price-predictable lab-inclusive option. Plans start at $179/month for compounded injectable semaglutide, with multiple format options at different price points. Lab work is covered if your provider orders it, but most patients don't need labs at intake. The bundled price covers the visit, medication, supplies, free shipping, and any labs ordered — there's no surprise Quest invoice.

What's actually included: Free initial evaluation (you only pay if prescribed), compounded medication (semaglutide, tirzepatide, or liraglutide; weekly injection, oral tablet, or oral drops), all supplies (syringes, alcohol wipes, sharps container), free 2-day UPS shipping, lab work at Quest in-person or at-home if ordered (covered, no separate bill), unlimited provider messaging, and a 30-day money-back guarantee from signup date.

Pricing (verified April 2026):

  • • Compounded injectable semaglutide: from $179/month
  • • Compounded liraglutide injectable: from $119/month with annual prepay
  • • Semaglutide microdose oral: from $99/month with 3-month prepay
  • • Compounded oral semaglutide: from $164/month with annual prepay
  • • Compounded oral tirzepatide: from $234/month with annual prepay
  • ⚠ Multi-month prepay plans are typically non-refundable — read the terms before prepaying

Honest tradeoff: Henry Meds isn't available in nine states — Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Hawaii, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, South Carolina, and West Virginia. If you live in one of those states, MEDVi is your best lab-inclusive alternative. Independent reviewer testing has also flagged slow titration and prepaid-plan terms that aren't refundable. Stay on month-to-month if you want flexibility.

5

LifeMD — Labs included in most states through Quest or LabCorp

The short answer

LifeMD includes eligible weight-management labs in the program cost when completed at Quest or LabCorp — except for residents of New York, New Jersey, or Rhode Island, who are billed directly because state rules block the bundled model. The Weight Management Program starts as low as $75/month on annual billing, with medication billed separately.

LifeMD is the right fit if you want clinical structure with the convenience of bundled labs in most states. Eligible testing is included when completed at Quest or LabCorp, and at-home kits are available for purchase outside the restricted states. The catch is the medication: like Ro and Sesame, the program fee covers the visit and the labs but not the medication itself, so your real monthly outlay depends on what's prescribed.

Who should not pick LifeMD: If you live in New York, New Jersey, or Rhode Island, the included-labs benefit doesn't apply to you — the labs will be billed to your insurance or directly. If that's your situation, Ro ships its at-home kit at no extra charge in states where Quest isn't available, which is the cleaner workaround.

6

Noom Med — Coaching-first with first labs included

The short answer

Noom Med includes the cost of first labs in certain GLP-1 telehealth programs when labs are taken at Quest or LabCorp. New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and use of an independent lab are explicit exceptions where labs are not included. Program pricing varies by which Noom path you pick.

Noom is the right fit if you want the coaching-first behavioral model in a familiar app and you value first-labs coverage as part of the intake. The lab-inclusion language is precise: first labs, on certain programs, at Quest or LabCorp. If any of those three conditions don't match your situation, you'll be paying out of pocket for the lab regardless of what the homepage says.

Who should not pick Noom Med: If you want labs at every dose change or every six months, this isn't the model — the included labs are typically at the front end. If you want a structured re-test cadence, Enhance MD publishes every-6-month lab work as a feature.

7

Sesame Care — Provider choice with branded medication access

The short answer

Sesame Care's "Success by Sesame" weight-loss subscription includes labs, video visits, dedicated provider care, and ongoing messaging in the membership. Medication is billed separately. Subscription pricing starts at $99/month or as low as $59/month on annual billing.

Sesame's differentiator is that you choose your own provider from the marketplace rather than being assigned one. The Success by Sesame program bundles labs with the subscription, and Sesame's branded-medication access is among the broadest — Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, Mounjaro, Foundayo, Saxenda — at competitive cash-pay pricing including Costco-member rates on some medications. The catch is variability: provider quality and lab-billing practices can vary depending on which provider you choose, so screen carefully and read the provider's reviews on Sesame before booking.

Who should not pick Sesame: If you want a guided, provider-assigned experience without choosing your own clinician, Ro handles that decision for you and includes the same kind of structured care with prior-authorization help.

8

Lemonaid Health — One annual lab order included

The short answer

Lemonaid Health includes one Quest lab order per year in the membership, billed at $49/month. The included lab benefit isn't available to customers in New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, or Hawaii, where regulatory rules block the bundled model. Medication is billed separately.

Lemonaid is the simplest lab-inclusion model in the market: the annual membership covers a single Quest lab order per year. That's it. There's no every-6-month re-test, no dose-escalation lab trigger, no provider-discretion add-ons. If you want light, predictable annual monitoring at a low membership fee, Lemonaid does that one thing well.

Who should not pick Lemonaid: If you live in NY, NJ, RI, or HI, the included lab benefit doesn't apply. If you want more rigorous monitoring than once a year, Enhance MD (every 6 months) or MEDVi (mandatory by month 4 + at dose escalations) are better fits.

Which lab-included GLP-1 path fits you? Decision guide: Ro for FDA-approved meds and insurance help, Enhance MD for scheduled repeat labs, LifeMD for clinical structure, Noom Med for coaching-first, Sesame for provider choice, Lemonaid for simple annual monitoring.
Use your goal to narrow the best lab-included GLP-1 starting option. April 2026 — verify before enrolling.

Do you actually need lab work before a GLP-1?

The short answer

No federal law requires baseline lab work before a GLP-1 prescription, and several major telehealth providers prescribe based on intake questionnaire alone. Clinically, baseline labs (CMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipid panel) are standard in obesity-medicine practice — especially for patients with thyroid history, kidney concerns, or metabolic conditions that wouldn't show up on a self-reported intake form.

✅ Who can reasonably skip baseline labs:

  • • Adults under 50 with no comorbidities
  • • BMI in the standard GLP-1 range (27–35) without metabolic syndrome features
  • • Recent normal labs (within 12 months) from your primary-care doctor
  • • No personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, MEN2 syndrome, or thyroid nodules
  • • No history of pancreatitis, gallbladder disease, or kidney impairment
  • • Not on insulin or a sulfonylurea
  • • Not pregnant, breastfeeding, or planning pregnancy

⚠ Who should insist on baseline labs:

  • • Family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2 (absolute contraindication)
  • • Personal history of thyroid nodules
  • • Type 2 diabetes or prediabetes
  • • Kidney disease or eGFR below 60
  • • Pancreatitis or active gallbladder disease history
  • • Labs older than 12 months
  • • Age 50+ with multiple cardiometabolic risk factors
  • • Currently on insulin, sulfonylureas, or a complex multi-medication regimen

If you're in the second group, the labs aren't a bureaucratic step — they're how a clinician catches the condition that would change whether you should be prescribed at all. CDC's January 2026 National Diabetes Statistics Report estimates 115.2 million U.S. adults have prediabetes and 11.0 million have undiagnosed diabetes. A baseline HbA1c is what catches the second group before they start a medication that interacts with their blood sugar regulation.

Which blood tests actually matter before and during GLP-1 treatment?

The short answer

A clinically rigorous baseline panel before starting a GLP-1 includes a comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP), hemoglobin A1C, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), and a lipid panel. Some providers add fasting insulin, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), or a complete blood count (CBC). The purpose is screening for the four conditions GLP-1s most directly affect: blood sugar regulation, kidney function, thyroid function, and cardiovascular risk.
Table 2. Standard pre-GLP-1 lab tests and why they matter.
TestWhat It MeasuresWhy It Matters Before a GLP-1
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP)Kidney function (eGFR, creatinine, BUN), liver enzymes (ALT, AST), glucose, electrolytesGLP-1s can stress kidneys via nausea-related dehydration. Pre-existing kidney disease changes whether you should start.
HbA1c2–3 month average blood glucoseCatches undiagnosed type 2 diabetes or prediabetes — the single most useful baseline test for a GLP-1 decision.
TSH (Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone)Hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, thyroid functionScreens thyroid function, which can affect weight and energy. The medullary thyroid carcinoma / MEN2 contraindication on GLP-1 product labels is history-based — TSH is the function-screening companion to that history check.
Lipid panelTotal cholesterol, HDL, LDL, triglyceridesEstablishes the cardiovascular baseline that should improve as you lose weight. The 6-month re-test documents that improvement.

The premium panel — added by Enhance MD's clinical workflow, Form Health, Calibrate, and some specialty obesity-medicine practices — adds: Fasting insulin (identifies insulin resistance even when HbA1c is still normal), High-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) (tracks systemic inflammation), and CBC (general health screen).

Provider-by-provider lab panel comparison

Table 3. Lab panel coverage by provider. Verified April 2026.
ProviderStandard panel coveredNotes
Enhance MDCMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipid panelRepeated every 6 months
MEDViCMP, A1C, TSH, lipidsWhen clinically ordered; mandatory by month 4
RoMetabolic panel — glucose, cholesterol, thyroid, kidneyWhen provider orders
LifeMDCholesterol panel, HbA1c, CMP, thyroid panelEligible labs included at Quest/LabCorp in most states
PlushCareCBC, CMP, lipids, A1C, TSH, insulinRequired, billed separately
CalibrateRequired metabolic lab work before initial visitBilled through insurance or self-pay

How much do GLP-1 labs cost if they're not included?

The short answer

Quest's published direct-to-consumer Weight Loss Journey Baseline Panel currently lists at $139 and includes a lipid panel, CMP, TSH, and HbA1c. Premium panels with fasting insulin and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein run higher. Across a year of treatment with one or two re-tests, that's $200 to $400+ of out-of-pocket cost the headline monthly price didn't tell you about.

This is why "included" matters. The advertised monthly fee at a non-lab-inclusive provider is the floor of your actual spending, not the ceiling.

Table 4. Lab cost paths, cash pay. Quest price verified April 2026.
Lab cost pathWhat it usually meansCost (cash, no insurance)
Quest Weight Loss Journey Baseline PanelDirect-to-consumer — CMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipids$139 (verified April 2026)
Quest premium panel (fasting insulin, hsCRP added)Comprehensive metabolic + inflammation markersHigher than baseline; varies by add-ons
LabCorp OnDemand Weight Management Baseline ProfileCMP, HbA1c, lipids, TSHLabCorp publishes the profile; current retail pricing varies
At-home blood-collection kitProvider ships kit; you mail back; lab processes$75 (Ro) — varies elsewhere
Insurance-billedLab bills your insurance; you pay copay or deductible$25 copay to full deductible, depending on plan

The math: if you're choosing between a $179/month all-in plan (Henry Meds) and a $145/month plan that bills labs separately, and you'd otherwise pay $139 for an annual panel, the bundled plan can be cheaper after labs are counted. Run the comparison on what you'll actually pay over 12 months, not on the headline.

State exceptions: New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Hawaii

The short answer

State matters because LifeMD, Noom Med, and Lemonaid Health all carve out lab-inclusion exceptions for New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island, and Lemonaid additionally excludes Hawaii. If you live in one of those states, the "labs included" promise on the homepage doesn't apply to you. MEDVi routes NY, NJ, and RI patients through Bioreference instead of Quest/LabCorp, and Ro ships its at-home kit at no extra charge in states where Quest isn't available.
Table 5. Lab-included status by state for restricted states. Verified April 2026.
ProviderLab-included status in NY, NJ, RIHawaii
Ro✅ At-home kit shipped at no extra charge where Quest unavailable✅ At-home kit available
Enhance MD✅ Quest available✅ Quest available
MEDVi✅ Bioreference covers NY, NJ, RI✅ Standard
Henry Meds✅ At-home kit available❌ Not available in HI
LifeMD⚠ Billed directly✅ Standard
Noom Med❌ Excluded from first-labs benefit✅ Standard
Sesame Care⚠ Provider-dependent⚠ Provider-dependent
Lemonaid❌ Lab testing not available❌ Lab testing not available
If you live in NY, NJ, or RI and you want labs included, your shortlist is Ro, Enhance MD, or MEDVi.
If you live in Hawaii, your shortlist is Ro, Enhance MD, MEDVi, or Sesame.

Find the lab-inclusive provider that works in your state

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What the headline price hides: the real first-year cost comparison

The short answer

The cheapest first-month price is rarely the real cost. Across a full year, the providers with bundled labs and bundled medication usually beat advertised "lower" prices once labs and medication are added in. Compare programs on their twelve-month total, not their introductory rate.

Henry Meds compounded injectable semaglutide at $179/month all-inclusive

$179 × 12 = $2,148

Medication, labs (if ordered), supplies, shipping all in.

Enhance MD Core (compounded semaglutide)

$49 first month + $212 × 11 months = $2,381

Medication, scheduled labs every 6 months, supplies, coaching all in.

Enhance MD Advanced (compounded tirzepatide)

$99 first month + $280 × 11 months = $3,179

Same structure.

Ro Body annual plan + Wegovy pill cash-pay starting dose

$74/month membership × 12 = $888 + Wegovy pill at $149 first month and $199–$299/month ongoing

At entry-level dosing across the year, expect $3,000–$4,500 cash-pay total. Significantly lower with insurance copay.

PlushCare $19.99/month + per-visit fees + cash-pay Wegovy + separate labs

Easily $13,000+ without insurance

With insurance, can drop to $1,500–$2,500/year if Wegovy is covered.

Calibrate $199/month + medication + labs (insurance-billed)

$199 × 12 = $2,388 base, plus medication and labs through insurance

Most insured members report ~$25/month medication copays after meeting deductible.

Can I use my own labs from my primary-care doctor?

The short answer

Most lab-inclusive providers accept recent labs from your primary-care doctor — usually within the last 60 to 90 days, depending on the provider — as long as the panel covers the required tests (typically CMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipid panel). Confirm the exact accepted window with the specific provider before enrolling, because the rule varies.

If your PCP ran a metabolic panel at your last annual physical, you may be able to upload it during intake and skip the in-program lab order entirely. This works at most lab-inclusive providers, but the accepted recency window isn't standardized — Calibrate, for example, has specific upload rules for its required panels, and Noom's first-labs benefit applies to in-program testing rather than uploads. Question 7 in the pre-enrollment checklist below is the exact line to ask.

What happens if my labs flag something concerning?

The short answer

Lab-inclusive providers typically respond in one of three ways: pause the prescription pending follow-up testing, refer you to your PCP or a specialist, or adjust the starting dose. Enhance MD, MEDVi, and Ro all have published protocols for abnormal labs, but the specific response varies by what's flagged and by the clinical judgment of the prescriber.

The most common reasons for a flagged result are an HbA1c that crosses into the diabetic range (which doesn't disqualify you from a GLP-1 — it may actually strengthen the case — but changes the management plan), elevated liver enzymes (often a fatty-liver finding that improves with weight loss), reduced eGFR (kidney function), or a TSH outside the normal range.

A flagged result rarely ends the conversation. It usually adjusts it — different starting dose, slower titration, additional testing, or a referral to your PCP for a non-GLP-1 issue you'd want to know about anyway.

The biggest drawbacks of every lab-inclusive provider (read before you pay)

The short answer

Even the strongest lab-inclusive providers have real tradeoffs: included-if-ordered language that means low-risk patients may never get labs, separate medication billing on most plans, state restrictions that erase the benefit if you live in NY/NJ/RI/HI, and slower onboarding than the questionnaire-only programs.

"Included if ordered" doesn't mean "always included"

Ro and Henry Meds use this language. The provider decides whether you need labs. If you're low-risk and want guaranteed monitoring, this isn't the structural commitment it sounds like. Enhance MD's published every-6-month schedule is the only structural alternative.

Medication is separate on most plans

Ro, LifeMD, Sesame, and Lemonaid all separate the program fee from the medication price. The headline membership fee is not your monthly out-of-pocket.

State exceptions can make "included" meaningless

LifeMD (NY/NJ/RI), Noom (NY/NJ/RI), Lemonaid (NY/NJ/RI/HI), and Henry Meds (9 states unavailable). Verify before paying.

Labs alone don't make a provider legitimate

A program can include labs and still be a poor fit if it doesn't have licensed clinicians, transparent pharmacy sourcing, clear FDA-approved-vs-compounded disclosure, or honest cancellation terms. Lab inclusion is one feature, not the whole picture.

More monitoring usually means slower onboarding

Enhance MD's required upfront Quest visit takes a few business days longer than a questionnaire-only program that issues a prescription in under an hour. If speed matters more than oversight, the lab-inclusive path may not be for you.

Prepay plans are usually non-refundable

Henry Meds and several others offer 6- and 12-month prepay plans at lower per-month rates, but those terms are not refundable mid-cycle. Stay on month-to-month if you want flexibility, and read the cancellation language before any prepay.

Our GLP-1 Without Blood Work guide is the right starting point if speed matters more than oversight.

What to ask before you pay (the 8-question pre-enrollment checklist)

The short answer

Before paying any provider, ask whether labs are required, whether they're included or billed separately, which lab partner they use, whether your state has exceptions, how often labs are re-run, what happens if labs flag a problem, whether you can use existing labs, and what the refund policy is if you're not approved. Save the answers — if a provider gives a vague answer to any of these, that's the answer.
  1. 1Do you require labs before prescribing? If yes, are they included in my monthly fee or billed separately?
  2. 2Which lab partner do you use, and is it in network with my insurance?
  3. 3What specific tests are covered? (CMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipid panel, fasting insulin, hsCRP?)
  4. 4How often do you re-test during the first year? Is each re-test included?
  5. 5If my labs flag something, what happens — referral, dose change, paused prescription?
  6. 6Will I receive my actual lab results, or just a yes/no on prescription eligibility?
  7. 7Can I use recent labs from my primary-care doctor instead of doing new labs through your program?
  8. 8What's the refund policy if I'm not approved — full refund, partial, or nothing?

Save the answers in writing through the provider's support chat or first telehealth visit. Most lab-inclusive providers will accept recent labs from your primary-care doctor that cover the required panel — exact recency rules vary. If your PCP just ran a metabolic panel, ask the provider whether they'll accept it before paying for new labs.

What real customers say about lab-backed GLP-1 care

The short answer

Verified customer reviews from Trustpilot and provider-published testimonials show the same pattern: patients value attentive providers, clear lab communication, and the elimination of surprise costs. They consistently complain when programs are opaque about pricing or when labs aren't actually run despite being marketed as a feature.

Disclosure: The quotes below are real, attributable, and shown only to demonstrate user-experience themes. They are not evidence of typical weight-loss results, medical efficacy, or program safety. Individual results vary.

"My doctors are very attentive and hands on, available whenever I need them."

Mary D., reviewing Form Health (Form Health site)

"Very responsive and easy to work with."

Ro customer on Trustpilot

"Everything was great, except for the $300 a month charge."

Form Health customer on Trustpilot — illustrating the surprise-cost theme that comes up across non-bundled programs

The pattern across reviews on Trustpilot, BBB, and ConsumerAffairs is consistent on one point: patients on bundled lab-inclusive plans rarely complain about lab billing because there's nothing to complain about. Patients on non-bundled plans (Calibrate, Form Health, PlushCare) frequently report sticker shock at the all-in cost. The bundled model isn't always cheaper — but it's almost always more predictable.

How we verified this page (methodology)

The short answer

Between April 26 and April 29, 2026, our editorial team independently visited the public-facing pricing, FAQ, lab-policy, and Terms pages for each of the providers in the matrix above. We documented whether labs are required, whether they're included in the program fee, which lab partner is used, which tests are covered, the cadence of re-testing, the publicly stated monthly cost, and state availability.

What we verified:

  • Provider pricing, captured directly from each provider's website
  • Lab inclusion status from each provider's published FAQ, customer-support pages, Terms of Service
  • Lab partner (Quest, LabCorp, Bioreference, or other)
  • State availability per provider's published state list
  • Whether medication is included in the program fee or billed separately
  • FDA-approved vs. compounded medication offerings

What would change the rankings:

  • A provider changes its lab-inclusion policy (we re-check quarterly)
  • State exception language changes
  • FDA enforcement actions on compounded GLP-1s
  • Pricing changes (we re-check Ro and Enhance MD monthly)
  • A provider publishes a clearer or more rigorous lab schedule

Editorial independence. Weight Loss Provider Guide may earn a commission when readers click an affiliate link to a featured provider. Affiliate compensation is used as a tie-breaker only when evidence and reader fit are otherwise comparable. The lab-inclusion verdicts above are based on verified provider policy, not affiliate economics. Eden, SHED, Hims, and Hers — providers we have affiliate relationships with — do not appear in our top recommendations on this page because their lab policies don't match this search intent.

Are compounded GLP-1 providers with labs included safe?

The short answer

Lab work can improve monitoring of any GLP-1, including compounded ones, but lab inclusion does not turn a compounded medication into an FDA-approved finished product. Compounded GLP-1s are prepared by licensed compounding pharmacies based on individual prescriptions and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. Choose a compounded provider only after understanding the regulatory distinction.

The regulatory reality

Wegovy and Zepbound are FDA-approved for chronic weight management under specific BMI and comorbidity criteria. Foundayo is FDA-approved orforglipron, approved by the FDA on April 1, 2026. Ozempic and Mounjaro are FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide products — what compounded providers like Enhance MD, MEDVi, and Henry Meds offer — are not FDA-approved finished products. We don't claim compounded medications are equivalent to branded FDA-approved drugs in the regulatory sense, and we don't claim they're "clinically proven" or use the "same active ingredient."

The FDA's stated concern

The FDA has issued public warnings about unapproved GLP-1 products, including products falsely labeled for "research use only" or "not for human consumption." The FDA has also clarified that companies cannot claim non-FDA-approved compounded products are generic versions, the same as FDA-approved drugs, or clinically proven to produce the same results. Legitimate compounded medications are prepared by 503A or 503B-registered compounding pharmacies under provider prescription.

What lab inclusion actually adds

Lab work helps the prescribing provider screen for contraindications and monitor your response to treatment. It doesn't change the medication's regulatory status, supply chain, or pharmacy quality controls. If your priority is FDA-approved branded medication, Ro is the right path on this page. If you're comfortable with compounded care under provider supervision, the bundled-lab providers above add a layer of oversight that questionnaire-only compounded providers don't.

Final verdict: which lab-inclusive GLP-1 provider is best?

The short answer

For most readers who want FDA-approved medication and insurance navigation, Ro is the strongest fit. For self-pay readers who want a published every-6-month lab schedule, Enhance MD is the cleanest pick. For the broadest cash-pay menu with labs covered through three lab networks, MEDVi wins. For lowest predictable monthly price, Henry Meds. State, insurance, and medication preference can change the answer — the matching quiz below narrows it down based on your specifics.
Table 6. Situation-to-provider match for lab-inclusive GLP-1 care. April 2026.
Your situationBest first pick
FDA-approved Wegovy/Zepbound/Foundayo + insurance helpRo
Self-pay + scheduled labs every 6 monthsEnhance MD
Broad cash-pay menu, oral or injectable, labs coveredMEDVi
Lowest predictable price, all-inclusive monthlyHenry Meds
Clinical structure, labs in most statesLifeMD
Coaching + app + first labsNoom Med
Provider choice + branded medicationSesame Care
Simple once-a-year lab orderLemonaid Health
You live in NY, NJ, RI, or HIRo, Enhance MD, or MEDVi
You want fastest start with no labsSee GLP-1 Without Blood Work guide

Frequently asked questions

Which GLP-1 providers include lab testing in the price?

Eight major providers we verified in April 2026 include lab testing in some form: Ro, Enhance MD, MEDVi, Henry Meds, LifeMD, Noom Med, Sesame Care, and Lemonaid Health. The flavor of "included" varies — Ro and Henry Meds include labs if the provider orders them, Enhance MD includes a published every-6-month re-test, Lemonaid includes one annual lab, and LifeMD/Noom include labs at Quest or LabCorp except in NY, NJ, and RI. Calibrate, Form Health, PlushCare, and Found require labs but bill them separately.

Does Ro include lab testing?

Yes. Ro states that provider-ordered metabolic testing through Quest is included in the Body membership when ordered. Membership starts at $39 the first month and $149/month after, or $74/month with annual prepay. An at-home kit is available for $75 or shipped at no extra charge in states where Quest isn't available. Medication is billed separately.

Does Enhance MD include lab testing?

Yes. Enhance MD's public plan cards list "Metabolic Lab Testing Every 6 Months" as a feature of all three tiers (Core, Advanced, Elite), conducted at Quest Diagnostics. Pricing is flat at every dose.

Does MEDVi include labs?

Yes. MEDVi's customer-support page lists Quest, LabCorp, and Bioreference as lab partners (Bioreference covers NY, NJ, and RI). Labs are covered when ordered, mandatory by month 4, and required at any dose increase past Level 2. There's no separate membership fee.

Do you need blood work before starting a GLP-1?

Not always. No federal law requires baseline lab work, but baseline labs (CMP, HbA1c, TSH, lipid panel) are standard practice in obesity-medicine clinics — especially for patients with thyroid history, kidney disease, prior pancreatitis, type 2 diabetes, age 50+ with comorbidities, or labs older than 12 months.

How much do GLP-1 labs cost without insurance?

Quest's Weight Loss Journey Baseline Panel currently lists at $139 and includes CMP, HbA1c, TSH, and lipids. Premium panels with fasting insulin and hsCRP run higher. Annual out-of-pocket lab cost at a non-bundled provider can run $200–$400+.

How often should you get labs while on a GLP-1?

Every 6 months is the most common cadence for weight loss — and the only one published as a structural feature on a major provider's plan card (Enhance MD). Patients with diabetes may have more frequent monitoring depending on clinician direction.

What labs are needed before starting Wegovy or Zepbound?

Most clinical workflows start with a baseline CMP, HbA1c, TSH, and lipid panel before starting any GLP-1, including FDA-approved Wegovy or Zepbound. Some providers add fasting insulin and high-sensitivity CRP for a complete metabolic picture.

Can I use my own labs from my primary-care doctor instead of doing labs through a GLP-1 provider?

Most lab-inclusive providers accept recent labs (typically within 60 to 90 days, varying by provider) from your PCP, as long as the panel covers the required tests. Confirm with the specific provider before enrolling.

Are compounded GLP-1 medications FDA-approved?

No. Compounded GLP-1 medications are not FDA-approved finished products. They're prepared by licensed compounding pharmacies based on individual prescriptions. If you specifically want an FDA-approved option, choose a provider that prescribes Wegovy, Zepbound, Foundayo, Ozempic, or Mounjaro — Ro and Sesame Care offer these.