What Pharmacy Does Embody Use? 4 Named Partners and How to Verify Yours (2026)
By the Weight Loss Provider Guide Editorial Team · Published · Last verified:
What pharmacy does Embody use? Embody is not a pharmacy. It's a telehealth brand that sends your prescription to an outside compounding pharmacy — one that mixes a medicine for a single patient instead of manufacturing it in bulk. Embody actually names its pharmacy partners on its own site: RedRock Pharmacy, Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding Pharmacy, and Triad Rx. That's more transparent than most weight-loss telehealth brands, which only say "licensed pharmacy." But naming four pharmacies doesn't tell you which one fills your order. And two things deserve a closer look before you pay: we found a phone number on Embody's site that doesn't match one pharmacy's own website, and one of the four named pharmacies is tied to an FDA record and a live lawsuit. None of that is a reason to panic — it is a reason to check the pharmacy on your own label.
| Quick question | Straight answer |
|---|---|
| Is Embody itself a pharmacy? | No — it's a telehealth brand run by Modern Metabolic Medicine, Inc. |
| How many pharmacy partners does Embody name? | Four |
| Does Embody tell you which one fills your order? | No — there's no public map by state or order |
| Is the compounded medicine FDA-approved? | No — compounded drugs are not FDA-approved finished medicines |
| Best next step | Match the pharmacy on your label to its own license and contact info |
By the Weight Loss Provider Guide editorial team — an independent comparison resource. Last verified: . Research method: public-record and document review. We are not a medical provider. Affiliate disclosure: we may earn a commission if you start care through a provider link, at no extra cost to you — it doesn't change what we found or wrote.
What pharmacy does Embody use, exactly?
Embody names four partner pharmacies right on its website: RedRock Pharmacy, Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding Pharmacy, and Triad Rx. Embody says it is not the pharmacy, and that your prescription may be filled by one of these independent companies. What Embody does not do is tell you, ahead of time, which pharmacy will fill your specific order.
Here's the setup, in plain terms. When you order from Embody, more than one company touches your prescription:
- Embody (run by Modern Metabolic Medicine, Inc.) is the storefront — the website, the intake form, the support team.
- The clinical network — named on Embody's pages as OpenLoop Health and CareGLP Affiliated P.C.s — supplies the licensed clinicians who review your intake and prescribe.
- The pharmacy is a separate, independent company that prepares and ships your medicine. That's the name you'll see on your vial.
So "Embody" is never the name on your medication. One of the four pharmacies is. Here's what's public about each — and, just as important, what isn't.
| Named partner | What Embody lists | What we confirmed | What's still open |
|---|---|---|---|
| RedRock Pharmacy | St. George, UT address; phone 801-433-9500 | A real compounding pharmacy with two Utah locations, serving different states from each | The phone Embody lists doesn't match Red Rock's own site (see below); which location fills your order |
| Health Warehouse | Florence, KY; phone 800-748-7001 | A mail-order/digital pharmacy; address and phone match its own site | Whether it compounds your injection or only dispenses/ships it |
| Precision Compounding Pharmacy | Bellmore, NY; phone 516-833-6262 | A compounding and telehealth-fulfillment pharmacy; contact matches | Which role and which states apply to your order |
| Triad Rx | Daphne, AL; phone 251-380-7630 | A community/compounding pharmacy with an FDA history and a pending lawsuit (details below) | Whether it fills your specific injection |
Source: Embody's own website footer, plus each pharmacy's public site.
The contact mismatch we found on Red Rock
Embody lists RedRock Pharmacy's St. George location with the phone number 801-433-9500. But Red Rock's own website lists that same address with a different number: 435-703-2900. This is a contact-detail mismatch, not proof that anything is wrong — the number could be old or a central line. It matters because if you call the number on Embody's site expecting that Red Rock location, you may not reach the number Red Rock currently publishes.
| Source | St. George location | Phone listed |
|---|---|---|
| Embody's site | 1240 E 100 S #220, St. George, UT 84790 | 801-433-9500 |
| Red Rock's own contact page | 1240 East 100 South, Suite 220, St. George, UT 84790 | 435-703-2900 |
Red Rock's site also lists a second location in Springville, UT (801-839-5080) that serves most states, while the St. George location serves California and Nevada. Neither number matches what Embody lists.
What to do
If Red Rock is the pharmacy on your label, call the number printed on the label and the number on Red Rock's current contact page, and confirm you reach the real pharmacy before relying on the medicine. A mismatch isn't a scandal — but it's exactly the kind of small thing worth clearing up when it's your health on the line.
Does every Embody order come from one of those four pharmacies?
Not necessarily — and Embody doesn't promise it. Embody names four partners but never says the list is complete, and it doesn't publish a map showing which pharmacy serves which state, medicine, or patient. So the four names tell you the likely pool. Only the name on your prescription or label tells you your actual pharmacy — and even that is worth verifying.
Think of it as four levels of proof, weakest to strongest:
- A named partner — one of the four. Useful, but general.
- A name from a forum — a lead, not proof. Skip it.
- Your order's pharmacy — the name on your prescription or vial. Real, but still worth checking.
- Verified — you matched that name, address, and license to official records. That's the goal.
Most articles stop at level one. The value is getting you to level four. That's what the next section does.
How can I tell which pharmacy filled my Embody prescription?
Start with your patient portal, your prescription paperwork, the shipping notice, and the medication label. The pharmacy shown there is your order's pharmacy — but don't stop at the label. Match its name, address, and phone against that pharmacy's own website and your state's Board of Pharmacy record. The FDA has warned that some compounded weight-loss labels have shown fake or wrong pharmacy names, so a label is a starting point, not final proof.
Here's the five-minute check:
- 1Find the name. Log into your Embody portal and look at the prescription, the tracking/shipping notice, and the physical label. The label's "dispensed by" section should show a pharmacy name, address, and phone.
- 2Match it. Search for that pharmacy's own website separately and compare the legal name and address. A matching brand name at a different address is a warning sign, not a green light.
- 3Check the license. Open your state's Board of Pharmacy license lookup (every state has one; the NABP website links to all of them). A pharmacy shipping into your state from another state usually needs a nonresident license in your state. Confirm it exists and is active.
Copy and send this to Embody support if anything is unclear:
"My label names [pharmacy] at [address]. Please confirm in writing that this pharmacy was authorized to fill my prescription, what it did (compound vs. dispense), and that it's currently licensed to ship to [state]."
Tick these off as you go:
- I found the pharmacy name on my order
- I matched the name and address to the pharmacy's own site
- I confirmed an active license in my state
- I cleared up anything that didn't match
Not sure which pharmacy on your label? Confirm it before you use the medicine — it takes five minutes.
Check the pharmacy on your label →No name, birthdate, or medical info needed to check
Does Embody use a 503A or a 503B pharmacy?
Embody says its compounded medicines are prepared by state-licensed 503A pharmacies. A "503A" pharmacy compounds for one patient's prescription and is overseen mainly by state pharmacy boards. A "503B" outsourcing facility makes larger batches under stricter federal manufacturing rules and receives direct FDA inspections. Neither one makes a compounded drug FDA-approved — and that's the part a "503A" label can't change.
| Category | 503A pharmacy | 503B outsourcing facility |
|---|---|---|
| Makes batches for | Individual patient prescriptions | Larger lots (without a patient-specific prescription) |
| Primary oversight | State Board of Pharmacy | FDA (risk-based inspections) |
| FDA product approval | Not FDA-approved | Not FDA-approved |
| GMP manufacturing rules | Exempt (when meeting 503A standards) | Must comply with federal cGMP |
Don't read "503A" as a safety stamp. FDA approval happens for a specific drug product after the agency reviews the evidence and the manufacturing. Compounded medicines skip that product-by-product review. One more honest note: Embody's four partners don't all appear to do the same job. Health Warehouse presents itself mainly as a mail-order/dispensing pharmacy, while Red Rock and Precision describe compounding. So "503A pharmacy" describes the model — it doesn't tell you which company compounded your exact dose.
What FDA and legal records are tied to Embody's pharmacies?
We're putting this before the good stuff on purpose — an honest negative makes everything after it easier to trust. One of Embody's four named pharmacies, Triad Rx, has an FDA warning-letter history (later closed) for sterile-compounding problems. And Triad Rx, along with the OpenLoop network that Embody runs on, is a defendant in a pending class-action lawsuit over a different compounded product. Embody itself is not named in that lawsuit, and the case is not about an Embody order — but a pharmacy Embody names as a partner is involved, so you should know the facts.
Triad Rx: the FDA record, start to finish
We're giving you the whole timeline, including the parts in Triad's favor, because half a story is worse than none.
| Date | Event | Source |
|---|---|---|
| July 2017 | FDA inspected Triad Rx in Daphne, Alabama | FDA.gov |
| February 5, 2019 | FDA issued warning letter citing "serious deficiencies… for producing sterile drug products, which put patients at risk" | FDA.gov, CMS #569659 |
| December 2022 | FDA inspected Triad again; issued Form 483 list of observations | FDA.gov |
| May 3, 2023 | FDA closed the 2019 warning letter — violations "appear to be adequately addressed"; Triad "no longer produces sterile drug products" | FDA.gov closeout letter |
| 2023 | FDA referred 2022 findings to Alabama Board of Pharmacy; said it did "not intend to take further action at this time" | FDA.gov state referral |
What this means: the closeout is genuinely good news — the older sterile-production problems appeared fixed, and Triad stepped away from sterile products. It does not show any current violation, and it does not prove Triad fills your Embody injection. But it's a real, documented history, and if a company is going to touch your medicine, you deserve to see it.
The lawsuit, scoped accurately
In November 2025, a consumer filed a proposed class-action lawsuit — Day v. OpenLoop Health — in federal court in Delaware. It names OpenLoop Health Inc., Triad Rx Buyer LLC, and Triad Rx Inc. as defendants. The complaint claims they marketed and sold compounded oral tirzepatide tablets as an effective weight-loss medicine when, it alleges, the pills have "no demonstrated mechanism of absorption or efficacy." The suit brings federal racketeering (RICO) and state consumer-fraud claims. (Sources: Fierce Healthcare; Chimicles Schwartz Kriner & Donaldson-Smith.)
Now the parts that matter for you, weighed honestly:
- This is about oral tirzepatide pills, not Embody's injections or its semaglutide.
- The plaintiff bought through MEDVi, a different storefront. MEDVi is not a defendant, and neither is Embody.
- These are allegations, not proven facts. The defendants dispute the case. A court hasn't decided it.
- But Triad Rx is one of the four pharmacies Embody names in its own footer, and Embody runs on the same network. That's the honest connection — no more, no less.
Separately, OpenLoop is also facing a proposed class action over a reported data breach affecting patient records. Since Embody's clinical care runs through OpenLoop, that's worth knowing if privacy is a concern.
We'd rather lose your click than hide any of this. If reading it made compounded telehealth feel like the wrong fit, that's a completely reasonable line to draw — and there's a better route for you below.
Is compounded GLP-1 even legal in 2026?
Yes — but only in narrow situations, and the rules are tightening. After the FDA declared the tirzepatide (reevaluated December 19, 2024) and semaglutide (resolved February 21, 2025) shortages over, wide compounding of copies became largely off-limits. A 503A pharmacy can still compound these medicines for an individual patient when a prescriber documents a real clinical reason the commercial version won't work. This is general FDA policy — not a ruling on any specific Embody prescription.
- The shortages ended in 2024–2025. That flipped the legal switch that had allowed wide compounding during the shortage.
- Wind-down deadlines passed in 2025. Routinely compounding an "essentially a copy" of an approved drug is now generally restricted.
- Adding a vitamin doesn't automatically make it "personalized." The real 503A standard is whether a prescriber documents a meaningful difference for that specific patient.
- April 2026: The FDA proposed excluding semaglutide, tirzepatide, and liraglutide from the outsourcing-facility list — a step that, if finalized, would further limit large-scale compounding. Not final as of mid-2026.
Is Embody's pharmacy setup a red flag?
A multi-pharmacy telehealth network is not automatically a red flag — plenty of legitimate brands work this way. The real test is whether you can identify your pharmacy, confirm its license, understand exactly what's in your vial, and reach a pharmacist or clinician when something's off. Naming four partners helps with the first step. It doesn't remove the rest of the checks.
✓ The honest positives
- Names pharmacy partners with addresses and phones — more specific than "licensed pharmacy"
- States plainly that it is not the pharmacy
- Carries LegitScript certification (publicly verifiable)
- Pricing is shown up front; dose increases don't raise price
⚠ The honest limits
- No public map of which pharmacy serves your state or order
- A phone mismatch on the Red Rock listing
- Triad Rx has an FDA history and a pending lawsuit
- Compounded medicines are not FDA-approved
Embody may fit you if…
- You're paying cash and a licensed clinician agrees compounded medicine is appropriate
- You understand compounded is not FDA-approved, and you'll verify your pharmacy
- You're comfortable with online care and shipped medicine
- The current price works for your budget
Choose a different route if…
- You want an FDA-approved medicine (brand-name Zepbound or Wegovy)
- You want to use insurance or need prior-authorization help
- You want a local pharmacy you can walk into
- You won't move forward without knowing your exact pharmacy before you pay
If that first list sounds like you — cash-pay, comfortable with compounded, and ready to verify:
Prescription required; approval isn't guaranteed; compounded medicines are not FDA-approved.
See if you qualify with Embody and check current pricing →If the second list sounds like you, don't force it. If you want an FDA-approved medicine with insurance help, we'd point you to Ro — FDA-approved GLP-1 options including Zepbound and Foundayo, free insurance coverage checker, and prior-authorization support. Ro Body membership starts at $39 for the first month, then $149/month (or ~$74/month annual).
Can the pharmacy Embody uses change my price?
Embody's current plans are priced by medicine and plan length, and Embody says your price does not go up as your dose changes. As of July 2026: compounded semaglutide injections at $79/month, compounded tirzepatide injections at $129/month, and compounded semaglutide gum at $229/month, with lower monthly rates on longer plans. Confirm the exact total, billing schedule, and your state on the live checkout before you pay, and save a screenshot.
| Medicine | Starting monthly rate | Plan lengths |
|---|---|---|
| Compounded semaglutide injection | $79/month | 4, 12, 24, or 52 weeks |
| Compounded tirzepatide injection | $129/month | 4, 12, 24, or 52 weeks |
| Compounded semaglutide gum | $229/month | Confirm availability at checkout |
Ask this before you pay:
"Is the price at checkout my final price no matter which pharmacy is assigned to me? If it can change, what exactly changes it, and can I decline before the pharmacy fills it? What is the exact date I must cancel by to avoid the next charge?"
For the full cost, complaint, and cancellation breakdown, see our complete Embody review and Embody GLP-1 cost guide.
What if my label names a pharmacy that isn't on Embody's list?
Don't assume it's fake, and don't assume it's fine. Pause. Verify the pharmacy through your state board and its own official contact page, then ask Embody and the prescribing clinician to confirm in writing that it was authorized to fill your prescription.
Reasons a different name could show up (possibilities, not excuses):
- The pharmacy network changed.
- A partner uses a different legal or "doing business as" name.
- One pharmacy compounded and another dispensed.
- Your state required a different pharmacy.
- The public list is simply out of date.
Send this to Embody support:
"My label names [pharmacy], which isn't on your listed partners. Please confirm whether it was authorized for my prescription, whether it compounded or only dispensed it, and its current license info for [state]."
Save your evidence — a portal screenshot, the redacted label, the shipping sender, your receipt, and any written reply.
What should I check on the label and package before using it?
Confirm the patient name, prescriber, pharmacy, medicine and strength, instructions, lot/batch, use-by date, storage directions, and package condition all match your prescription. If anything doesn't match, the pharmacy won't verify, or the shipment arrived warm or damaged, contact the pharmacist and your clinician before using it. The FDA has warned specifically about wrong strengths and dosing errors with compounded GLP-1s.
| Situation | What to do |
|---|---|
| Injectable arrives warm or without proper refrigeration | Do not use it. Contact the pharmacy and clinician for replacement or handling instructions |
| Package broken, leaking, or unlabeled | Do not use until the pharmacy and clinician resolve it |
| Label strength doesn't match your instructions | Do not guess or do the math yourself — call the pharmacist |
| Pharmacy name or number won't verify | Use your state board and get written confirmation first |
| No one will answer a medicine question | Escalate to the clinician; consider a different route if it stays unresolved |
We're deliberately not putting a dose calculator on this page. Strength and unit questions are medical questions for your pharmacist or clinician, not a web tool.
What do Embody customers say about shipping and support?
Customer reviews are mixed, and they can't tell you anything about whether the medicine is safe or works — read them only for delivery, billing, and support patterns. Some customers report fast approval and shipping; others report trouble reaching a clinician before their first dose, or billing and cancellation headaches.
We're not going to invent glowing quotes or attach a made-up star score. If you want to read real reviews, go to the source — Embody is listed on Trustpilot under its joinem.co profile — and read them yourself. Whatever the reviews say about speed or service, it doesn't change the pharmacy facts above, which is what actually protects you.
For the full complaint and cancellation analysis, see our complete Embody review and Embody shipping time guide.
Our verdict on Embody's pharmacy disclosure
Our take: a conditional pass on transparency. Naming four pharmacy partners with contact details is more open than the industry norm — but it isn't the whole job. Embody doesn't map a pharmacy to your order, one listing (Red Rock) has a phone mismatch, and one partner (Triad Rx) carries an FDA history and a pending lawsuit. The right reader can move forward after verifying the pharmacy on their own label, confirming an active state license, and clearing any medicine or shipment questions.
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Does Embody name its pharmacy partners? | Yes — four, with addresses and phones |
| Does it assign a pharmacy to your state or order publicly? | No |
| Can you verify your own order's pharmacy? | Yes — via your label, the pharmacy's site, and your state board |
| Did we find a contact mismatch? | Yes — Red Rock's St. George phone |
| Does a named partner have an FDA history? | Yes — Triad Rx (warning letter closed 2023) |
| Is a named partner in a lawsuit? | Yes — Triad Rx and OpenLoop (allegations only; Embody not named) |
| Is a "503A" pharmacy the same as FDA approval? | No |
This is a reasonable option for a specific person: cash-pay, comfortable with compounded medicine, and willing to do a five-minute verification. It's the wrong option for anyone who needs FDA-approved medicine or insurance support. We'd rather you land in the right place than the one that pays us.
If you've done the checks and it's a fit:
Check current state availability and start your Embody intake →How we researched this page
We compared Embody's current website and product pages against each named pharmacy's own materials, FDA warning-letter and enforcement records, court reporting and the plaintiff's filing, and state-license verification guidance. We used online forums only to understand what questions people ask — not as proof of any fact. We did not enroll, receive medicine, or test any product, and we did not verify any individual patient's prescription.
How much weight to give each source, high to low:
- FDA and state Boards of Pharmacy — regulatory, licensing, and enforcement facts.
- Embody's own site and terms — what the brand states, including its named partners.
- Each pharmacy's own pages — pharmacy identity, contact info, and self-described role.
- Court filings and reputable reporting — the lawsuit.
- Review sites — service patterns only.
Who: the Weight Loss Provider Guide editorial team. How: public-record and document review, plus a verification method you can repeat yourself. We do not add a "medically reviewed by" line unless a qualified professional actually reviews the page and agrees to be named.
Frequently asked questions
- What pharmacy does Embody use?
- Embody names four partner pharmacies on its own site: RedRock Pharmacy, Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding Pharmacy, and Triad Rx. Embody isn't a pharmacy itself and doesn't say which partner fills your order — so the pharmacy on your label is your answer. Verify it there.
- What pharmacy does JoinEm use?
- "JoinEm" (joinem.co) is Embody’s website, so the answer is the same four named pharmacies: RedRock, Health Warehouse, Precision Compounding, and Triad Rx.
- Is Embody itself a pharmacy?
- No. Embody is a telehealth brand run by Modern Metabolic Medicine, Inc. Licensed clinicians review your intake and, if appropriate, send your prescription to one of the four independent partner pharmacies to prepare and ship.
- Does Embody use Red Rock Pharmacy?
- Yes — Embody lists RedRock Pharmacy (redrockhomepharmacy.com) as a partner. Note that the St. George phone number on Embody's site (801-433-9500) doesn't match the number on Red Rock's own contact page (435-703-2900), so verify the number on your label.
- Does Embody use Health Warehouse?
- Yes — Embody lists Health Warehouse (Florence, KY) as a partner. Its public materials describe a mail-order/dispensing pharmacy, so it may dispense or ship rather than compound your injection. Confirm the role on your order.
- Does Embody use Precision Medicine (Precision Compounding Pharmacy)?
- Yes — Embody lists Precision Compounding Pharmacy (now presented as Precision Medicine, mypcphealth.com, Bellmore, NY). Its exact role and states for your order aren't published, so verify on your label.
- Does Embody use Triad Rx?
- Yes — Embody names Triad Rx (Daphne, AL) as a partner. Triad has an FDA warning-letter history (issued 2019, closed 2023) and is a defendant in a pending lawsuit over a different compounded product. Read the records above and verify your own label.
- Does Triad Rx make Embody's injections?
- That isn't publicly confirmed. Triad is a named partner, but Embody doesn't map which pharmacy fills which order, and Triad's own current site describes non-sterile compounding. Your label is the only reliable confirmation.
- Does Embody use a 503A or a 503B pharmacy?
- 503A — pharmacies that compound for one patient at a time, overseen mainly by state boards. Neither 503A nor 503B makes a compounded drug FDA-approved.
- Can I choose which pharmacy Embody uses?
- Embody's public pages don't offer a pharmacy choice. If it matters to you, ask support directly before you pay which pharmacy is expected to fill your prescription in your state, and get the answer in writing.
- Can I find out my pharmacy before I pay?
- Not reliably from the public site — there's no pre-order map. Ask Embody support which pharmacy is expected to fill your prescription in your state, in writing.
- Does Embody use the same pharmacy in every state?
- Not necessarily. Partners like Red Rock serve different states from different locations, and Embody doesn't publish a state-by-state map. Confirm your dispenser on your label.
- Are Embody's compounded medicines FDA-approved?
- No. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved finished medicines. The FDA does not review them for safety, effectiveness, or quality before they reach you.
- Is Embody's semaglutide gum still available?
- Yes — as of July 2026, Embody lists compounded semaglutide gum at $229 for a one-month supply and marks it in stock, though the program may not be available in every state. Confirm availability for your state at checkout.
- Why did my medicine come from a different pharmacy than I expected?
- Networks change, and one company may compound while another dispenses. Don't assume the worst — verify the new pharmacy through your state board and ask Embody to confirm it was authorized.
- How do I verify a pharmacy's license in my state?
- Open your state Board of Pharmacy license lookup (linked from the NABP site), search the pharmacy's legal name, and confirm the license is active — including a nonresident license if it ships from another state.
- Which states can't use Embody?
- Embody screens by state during intake, and some states aren't served. Rather than rely on a static list, confirm your state in the live intake before you pay.
Still deciding?
The pharmacy question usually isn't the only one on your mind — price, insurance, which medicine, and whether compounded is even right for you all matter too. Our free 60-second matching quiz gives you a personalized plan based on your state, budget, insurance situation, and whether you want an FDA-approved or compounded path.
Get my personalized GLP-1 action plan →This page is informational and not medical advice. GLP-1 medicines require a prescription and a licensed clinician's judgment. Compounded medicines are not FDA-approved. Always confirm current pricing, availability, and pharmacy licensing before you rely on them.
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