Sunlight GLP-1 Reviews 2026: Cost, Complaints & Verdict

By the Weight Loss Provider Guide editorial team · Last verified: May 29, 2026 · Independent research

Affiliate disclosure & not medical advice

We may earn a commission if you start a program through our Sunlight links. It does not change your price and did not change our verdict — including the negatives you will read below. This is not medical advice. A licensed clinician decides whether a GLP-1 is right for you.

Sunlight GLP-1 reviews bottom line: Sunlight is a real telehealth platform that connects eligible patients with licensed clinicians who may prescribe compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide — not the brand-name shots — for a low self-pay price that starts around $159/month for semaglutide and $239/month for tirzepatide. That is a first-month promo rate, billed every 28 days, and the recurring price is the one number you will want to confirm at checkout.

So why is this not an easy yes? Two things on Sunlight's own site are worth knowing before you type in your card number — one about the price, and one about refunds. We will show you both, with receipts, so you know exactly what to check before you decide.

Sunlight GLP-1 at a glance

What you are checkingThe straight answer
Best forSelf-pay shoppers who want an affordable, online, compounded GLP-1 program
Not forPeople who want FDA-approved brand-name meds or want to use insurance
Starting price~$159/mo semaglutide, ~$239/mo tirzepatide (first-month promo; billed every 28 days — confirm the ongoing price)
Medication typeCompounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide (not FDA-approved)
InsuranceNo — self-pay; HSA/FSA cards accepted
Who prescribes itLicensed clinicians in Sunlight's partner medical groups (Sunlight is the platform, not the medical provider)
PharmaciesOpenLoop Health's pharmacy network (RedRock Pharmacy and others)
ReputationAbout 4.3/5 from ~115 Trustpilot reviews; BBB-accredited since October 2025 (listed as "not rated")
The catchAn $80 clinical fee applies if you cancel after a clinician reviews you; refunds stop once your Rx is sent to the pharmacy
First stepCheck your eligibility and today's price on Sunlight

Is Sunlight GLP-1 legit, or a scam?

Sunlight is a real telehealth platform, not a fly-by-night storefront. It publishes full terms, a help center, named medical groups and pharmacy partners, public cancellation and refund rules, and it has a public Trustpilot profile and BBB accreditation. But “legit” is not the same as “FDA-approved” — Sunlight's program is built on compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide, which are not FDA-approved drugs.

Based on what we checked, no — Sunlight is a real, operating company. Here is what we confirmed straight from Sunlight's own pages and public records.

What we verified about Sunlight

What still needs your eyes before you pay

  • ▪ Screenshot the live checkout price (not just the homepage promo)
  • ▪ Confirm the recurring price after the first 28 days
  • ▪ Click the LegitScript seal to confirm it is current
  • ▪ Note the pharmacy listed on your actual prescription

Sunlight clears the “is this real?” bar. The harder questions are what it really costs and what is in the fine print — which is exactly where people get tripped up.

Check your Sunlight eligibility

What does Sunlight GLP-1 cost in 2026?

Sunlight advertises starting prices around $159/month for compounded semaglutide and $239/month for compounded tirzepatide, and that flat price is meant to include your medication, telehealth visits, labs when needed, and shipping. Billing runs automatically every 28 days, and Sunlight's homepage labels the low number a first-month rate — so the price you will actually pay each cycle is the one number to confirm in checkout before you enroll.

This is the part we want you to read slowly, because it is where a good deal can quietly get less good. Here is an original finding — the kind of thing you would only catch by opening several Sunlight pages side by side, which we did:

Where on Sunlight's siteSemaglutideTirzepatideThe wording
Homepage / main landing pages$159$239Says “for the first month”
Sunlight's reviews/FAQ page$179$259No “first month” wording

The "$159" is a first-month promo, not your forever price. Treat it that way.

Sunlight's own pages do not perfectly agree on the price. The only number that counts is the one on your checkout screen, today.

One more billing detail that surprises people

Sunlight bills every 28 days, not once a calendar month — so that is about 13 charges a year, not 12. And billing is separate from shipping, which means you can be charged before your next box arrives.

What the price is supposed to include:

Paying with HSA/FSA? Sunlight accepts HSA and FSA cards along with major credit cards. Keep your receipts in case your plan asks for documentation.

Our honest take on the money: the entry price is low and the bundle is fair. Just do not fall in love with “$159” until the recurring charge on the checkout page is a number you are happy to pay for several cycles — because GLP-1 weight loss is a months-long process, not a one-month thing. If a low ongoing price is your top priority, it is worth comparing GLP-1 costs without insurance before you commit.

Want to see your actual price, not the headline price? Start the intake and check your current Sunlight pricing — it takes a few minutes, and you will see your price and the refund terms before you decide. Just do not submit payment until the recurring amount works for you.

See your Sunlight price now

What we actually verified about Sunlight GLP-1

This is the table we wish existed when we started. It puts what Sunlight claims next to what we confirmed from primary sources and what you still need to check in checkout — so you do not have to open seven tabs to make one decision.

What you care aboutWhat Sunlight saysWhat we verifiedWhat it means for you
Starting price"Get started for $159"Homepage shows $159/$239 "for the first month"; other pages show $179/$259Treat $159 as a promo; confirm the recurring price
Billing cycleFlat monthly priceBilled automatically every 28 days; billing is separate from shipping~13 charges/year; a charge can land before your next box
Medication typeCompounded semaglutide & tirzepatideConfirmed — and Sunlight discloses these are not FDA-approved or evaluatedA compounded, self-pay route, not brand-name Wegovy/Ozempic
Who provides careA technology platformConfirmed — Sunlight is not the medical provider; clinicians/pharmacies do the work"Sunlight connects you with a clinician," not "Sunlight prescribes"
PharmaciesPartner pharmaciesOpenLoop Health network; RedRock named in termsA real trust signal; check the pharmacy on your label
InsuranceSelf-pay, no insuranceConfirmedGood for cash-pay; wrong fit if you need insurance
CancellationCancel anytime, month-to-monthConfirmed — but an $80 clinical fee applies after a clinician reviews youTrue, but timing decides your refund and fee
Refund cutoffRefund depends on prescription statusFull refund if found ineligible; no refund once your Rx is sent to the pharmacyDecide before the prescription goes out
ShippingShips from a partner pharmacy~24-hr review; typically 3–5 business days to arriveCan run longer if a video visit, labs, or a weekend is involved
LabsIncluded when requiredA1C, TSH, CMP, lipid panel; recent prior labs (within 24 months) may countMore oversight than bare-bones sites — possibly an extra step
ReputationStrong patient results~4.3/5 on Trustpilot (~115 reviews); BBB-accredited but "not rated"Useful as experience signals, not proof of medical results
Regulatory backdrop(Not emphasized)FDA proposed (Apr 30, 2026) to bar large-scale bulk compounding of these drugsThe compounded path is tightening — confirm availability is current

What do real Sunlight GLP-1 reviews say?

Sunlight reviews land at "mixed-positive." On Trustpilot it averages about 4.3 out of 5 across roughly 115 reviews, with most people happy and a vocal minority unhappy. Happy reviews mention an easy process, kind clinicians, and an affordable price. Unhappy ones cluster around two themes — slow or missing prescriptions and billing or cancellation problems.

What happy customers tend to say

  • ▪ Simple sign-up, courteous clinicians
  • ▪ Affordable compared with brand-name costs
  • ▪ Real weight loss reported
  • ▪ Better blood pressure and cholesterol numbers

Individual experiences. Sunlight notes results are self-reported and vary.

What unhappy customers tend to say

  • Delayed or missing prescriptions. One reviewer: "It has been 1 month and still no medication." Sunlight even has a help-center page titled "Why was I charged without receiving medication?"
  • Billing and cancellation snags. Reports of being charged after cancellation; Sunlight replied publicly and processed refunds, but the risk is real.
  • Communication and scheduling friction. Slow responses or confusion about dosing or appointments.

What does Sunlight's BBB profile show?

Sunlight.com, LLC is BBB-accredited (since October 2025) but listed as "not rated," because the BBB says it does not yet have enough information to assign a letter grade.

One BBB complaint describes an $894 charge attempted at signup while the provider could not locate the customer's intake form. “Accredited but not rated” is normal for a young company — it means there is not enough history yet, not that the BBB found a problem.

The takeaway: most people have a smooth experience, but the failure mode is real — complaints center on logistics, billing, cancellation, and prescription delays, not on the medication itself. Protect yourself on cancellation and shipping, which we will show you exactly how to do below.

Is Sunlight GLP-1 FDA-approved?

No. Sunlight's program uses compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide, which are not FDA-approved medications. The FDA does not review compounded drugs for safety, effectiveness, or quality before they are sold. That is the single most important fact to understand before you choose Sunlight.

The catch, stated plainly

Sunlight does not give you FDA-approved, brand-name medication. “Compounded” means a licensed pharmacy mixes the medication to order, rather than selling a sealed, FDA-approved product. The FDA does not review compounded drugs for safety, effectiveness, or quality the way it does brand-name drugs, and the FDA's view is that compounding is meant for patients whose needs cannot be met by an FDA-approved product.

If FDA-approved, brand-name medication is your priority, Sunlight is not your best first stop — and you should look at an FDA-approved GLP-1 path instead. But here is the flip side, and it is the reason people choose Sunlight on purpose: because Sunlight focuses on compounded medication, it can offer a starting price near $159/month — a fraction of typical brand-name cash prices, which often run $1,000+ per month without insurance.

TermWhat it means
Compounded medicationMade-to-order by a pharmacy; not an FDA-approved finished product
FDA-approved semaglutide productsOzempic, Wegovy, and Rybelsus. Sunlight's compounded semaglutide is not those products
FDA-approved tirzepatide productsMounjaro and Zepbound. Sunlight's compounded tirzepatide is not those products
2026 regulatory updateFDA proposed (April 30, 2026) to exclude semaglutide, tirzepatide, and liraglutide from the 503B bulk compounding list — meaning large-scale compounding of these drugs could be barred

Can I cancel Sunlight? Is there a fee? What about refunds?

Sunlight is month-to-month with no long-term contract. But two specific numbers in the cancellation policy catch people off guard: the $80 clinical fee and the point at which refunds become unavailable. Both are in Sunlight's published terms — here is exactly how they work.

Stage in the processWhat happens if you cancel or are found ineligible
Clinician finds you ineligibleFull refund
You cancel after clinician reviews your intake$80 clinical fee applies (waived if clinician says meds are not suitable for you)
Prescription written and sent to pharmacyNo refund available

How to cancel

Cancel through your patient portal or by calling Sunlight's patient care team. Sunlight lists phone support 7 days a week, 8 a.m.–8 p.m. ET. On a monthly plan, your medication keeps coming through the end of your current billing cycle. Cancel before your next prescription is written if you want to stop future charges.

Copy-paste this when you cancel

"Hi Sunlight, I'd like to cancel. Please confirm: Has my intake been reviewed? Has a prescription been written or sent to the pharmacy? Will the $80 clinical fee apply, and will future billing now stop? Please send written confirmation."

Getting cancellation confirmed in writing is what separates the people who get refunded from the people who post angry reviews.

Now that you can see the refund cutoff and the $80 fee, comfortable moving forward? Check your eligibility — and remember to cancel before the prescription stage if you change your mind.

Check your Sunlight eligibility

How fast does Sunlight ship?

Sunlight says most prescriptions are reviewed within about 24 hours, and medication typically arrives within 3 to 5 business days once processed. Timing can run longer if your history needs a video visit, if labs are required, or if a weekend falls in the middle.

StepTypical timingWhat can slow it down
Submit intakeSame dayMissing info on your form
Clinician review~24 hoursA medical history that needs a video visit
Prescription sentAfter approvalMissing labs or prior-dose records
Pharmacy processingAfter the RxWeekends, pharmacy backlog
Delivery~3–5 business days after processingWeekends, weather, carrier delays

Your arrival checklist

  • Confirm the pharmacy name on the label
  • Confirm your name, the medication, the concentration, and the dose are correct
  • Read the storage instructions and check the expiration / use-by date
  • Check whether the package arrived warm — cold packs should still be doing their job
  • Ask whether it is compounded from semaglutide base, not a salt form (semaglutide sodium or acetate)
  • If the packaging, label, or temperature looks wrong, do not use it — contact the pharmacy or clinician first (the FDA specifically warns against using injectable GLP-1s that arrive warm)

Does Sunlight require lab work?

Sunlight says lab work is included when needed, at no extra charge, and lists common labs like A1C (average blood sugar), TSH (thyroid), CMP (a metabolic panel), and a lipid (cholesterol) panel. Recent prior lab results — within the last 24 months — may be accepted instead of a new draw.

LabWhat it checksWhy a GLP-1 clinician wants it
A1CYour average blood sugarScreens for diabetes/prediabetes
TSHThyroid functionThyroid history affects GLP-1 eligibility
CMPKidney, liver, electrolytesBaseline safety check
Lipid panelCholesterolTracks heart-health markers

What can delay your approval? A medical history needing a video visit before approval; missing documentation of a prior GLP-1 prescription; and — if you are continuing a dose from another provider — updated labs, since Sunlight requires current results before continuing treatment and does not guarantee approval of the same dose. If you already have recent results, ask whether you can upload them to skip a redraw.

What GLP-1 medications does Sunlight offer?

Sunlight offers compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide. Some Sunlight pages also mention oral options, but the exact product, formulation, pharmacy, and state availability should be confirmed in the intake or with support before you pay.

What to check on your medication label (a 20-second safety habit)

  • Pharmacy name and contact
  • Your full name
  • Medication name, concentration, and dose
  • Storage instructions and the use-by date
  • That it is compounded from semaglutide base, not a salt form

Is Sunlight available in my state?

Sunlight is a nationwide telehealth service, but availability of specific medications and services can vary by state. Telehealth platforms can only operate where their providers are licensed, so access may be blocked in some states.

Confirm availability for your state — and your specific medication — during the intake. This is the kind of thing to verify in the first two minutes of signing up, before you get attached to a price. If Sunlight is not available where you live, our matching quiz can point you to a provider that is.

Who is Sunlight GLP-1 best for — and who should choose something else?

Sunlight is best for self-pay adults who want an affordable, low-friction online GLP-1 program and are comfortable with compounded medication. It is the wrong fit for people who need FDA-approved brand-name drugs, want insurance or prior-authorization help, or cannot accept the refund cutoff and $80 fee.

Your situationYour best move
"I'm paying cash and want the lowest reasonable entry price."Sunlight is a strong candidate — just confirm the recurring price
"I want a flat, all-in price with no surprise fees."Sunlight is a good fit — but verify in checkout
"I need FDA-approved brand-name medication."Look at Ro, Sesame, or a provider with brand-name GLP-1 access
"I have insurance and want to use it."Sunlight is self-pay only — try a provider with PA support instead
"I'm not comfortable with compounded medications."Sunlight is not the right fit; choose a brand-name path
"I need to cancel quickly if I change my mind."Sunlight is okay, but cancel before clinician review to avoid the $80 fee
"I'm not sure yet which path is right for me."Take our free quiz to get a personalized recommendation

How we researched this Sunlight GLP-1 review

We separated four kinds of information: verified commercial facts (pricing, billing, refunds, shipping, labs, pharmacy partners) from Sunlight's own pages; medical and regulatory facts from the FDA; customer sentiment from Trustpilot and the BBB; and our final fit verdict as an editorial judgment based on all of it.

What we used

Sunlight's homepage, pricing pages, terms, and help center; Sunlight's Trustpilot and BBB profiles; FDA guidance on compounded and unapproved GLP-1 drugs including the April 30, 2026 503B bulks proposal; and Ro's published pricing for the alternatives section.

What we did not do

We did not call compounded medication "FDA-approved." We did not treat testimonials as typical results. We did not invent star ratings, fake reviews, or a fake author. We did not add Review or AggregateRating schema — real ratings live on Trustpilot, where they belong. We did not make a medical recommendation.

Sunlight GLP-1 reviews: FAQ

Yes — Sunlight is a real telehealth platform with published terms, a help center, named medical groups and pharmacy partners, a public Trustpilot profile, and BBB accreditation since October 2025. It is not a medical provider itself; it connects eligible patients with licensed clinicians who may prescribe compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved.

Sunlight advertises starting prices around $159 per month for compounded semaglutide and $239 per month for compounded tirzepatide. The homepage labels these first-month rates. Other Sunlight pages show $179 and $259. Billing runs every 28 days — roughly 13 charges per year. Confirm your recurring price in checkout before enrolling.

No. Sunlight uses compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide — not FDA-approved drugs. The FDA does not review compounded medications for safety, effectiveness, or quality before they are sold. If you want FDA-approved brand-name medication (Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, Mounjaro), look at a brand-name provider instead.

No. Sunlight is a self-pay program with flat pricing. It accepts HSA and FSA cards and major credit cards. If you need insurance coverage or prior-authorization support, a brand-name or insurance-focused provider is the better path.

Yes, Sunlight is month-to-month and you can cancel through your patient portal or by calling patient care 7 days a week, 8 a.m.–8 p.m. ET. An $80 clinical fee applies if you cancel after a clinician has reviewed your intake, treatment history, or check-in form. The fee is waived if the clinician determines the medication is not suitable for you.

Refunds depend on timing. If a provider determines you are not eligible for treatment, you receive a full refund. Once a prescription has been written and sent to the pharmacy, refunds are no longer available per Sunlight policy.

Sunlight says most prescriptions are reviewed within about 24 hours and medication typically arrives within 3 to 5 business days after processing. A required video visit, labs, or a weekend can extend this timeline.

Sunlight says lab work is included when needed at no extra charge. Common labs include A1C, TSH, CMP, and a lipid panel. Results from within the last 24 months may be accepted instead of a new draw.

Sunlight fills prescriptions through OpenLoop Health's pharmacy network. Its terms name RedRock Pharmacy, and the network has also included Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding, and Triad Rx. Always confirm the pharmacy printed on your own prescription label.

Do not use it. The FDA advises against using injectable GLP-1 medication that arrives warm or was not kept cold during shipping. Contact the pharmacy or your clinician before administering anything that did not arrive properly cold.

Sunlight is the better fit if you specifically want an affordable, self-pay compounded GLP-1 program and are comfortable with non-FDA-approved medication. Ro and Sesame are better if you want FDA-approved brand-name medication, insurance or prior-authorization support, or a provider that is less likely to have compounding availability change under FDA regulatory shifts.

Still deciding?

If Sunlight's self-pay compounded model, low entry price, and refund terms match what you want, your next step is simple.

Not sure whether you need compounded, brand-name, insurance-covered, oral, or budget-first care? Take our free 60-second matching quiz and get a personalized action plan.

Start the quiz

Looking for FDA-approved brand-name alternatives?

If brand-name medication, insurance support, or prior-authorization help matters to you, these are the paths most worth comparing:

Sources

  1. Sunlight — homepage, pricing & platform disclosure: sunlight.com
  2. Sunlight — Welcome guide (billing every 28 days, $80 fee, refunds, shipping, labs): sunlight.com/help-center/welcome-to-sunlight/
  3. Sunlight — General Billing: sunlight.com/help-center/billing/
  4. Sunlight — Terms and Conditions (platform model; RedRock Pharmacy): sunlight.com/terms-and-conditions/
  5. Trustpilot — Sunlight.com reviews: trustpilot.com/review/sunlight.com
  6. Better Business Bureau — Sunlight.com, LLC: bbb.org/us/wa/kirkland/profile/health-and-wellness/sunlightcom-llc-1296-1000187565
  7. FDA — Concerns with unapproved GLP-1 drugs: fda.gov/drugs/postmarket-drug-safety-information-patients-and-providers/fdas-concerns-unapproved-glp-1-drugs-used-weight-loss
  8. FDA — Proposal to exclude semaglutide, tirzepatide, and liraglutide from the 503B bulks list (Apr 30, 2026): fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-proposes-exclude-semaglutide-tirzepatide-and-liraglutide-503b-bulks-list
  9. Federal Register — 91 Fed. Reg. 23431 (May 1, 2026), docket FDA-2026-N-0817
  10. Ro — Weight Loss Program Pricing: ro.co/weight-loss/pricing/
  11. Sesame — Online weight loss program: sesamecare.com/service/online-weight-loss-program

Weight Loss Provider Guide is an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers. We may earn a commission from the links above, at no cost to you. This article is for general information and is not medical advice; talk to a licensed clinician about whether a GLP-1 medication is right for you.