Trust signals
> Reviewed by FormBlends Medical Team · Last updated April 2026 · 14 sources cited
Key Takeaways
- Legitimate online testosterone prescriptions require bloodwork, a documented diagnosis of hypogonadism (total testosterone below 300 ng/dL on two separate tests), and a state-licensed provider consultation
- Testosterone is a DEA Schedule III controlled substance, meaning prescriptions cannot be written without a provider-patient relationship established through real-time synchronous interaction
- Most telehealth platforms charge $99 to $299 monthly for testosterone therapy including prescription, provider visits, and medication (compounded or brand-name)
- Online testosterone prescriptions are inappropriate for men seeking performance enhancement, fertility preservation during treatment, or those with untreated prostate cancer or severe heart failure
Direct answer (40-60 words)
Online testosterone prescriptions are legal in all 50 states when issued by a licensed provider after documented low testosterone labs (under 300 ng/dL), a synchronous telehealth visit, and appropriate screening. Costs range from $99 to $450 monthly including medication. Testosterone is Schedule III controlled, so prescriptions require a legitimate provider-patient relationship, not just a questionnaire.
From the FormBlends catalog
Gonadorelin (GnRH)
Bioidentical GnRH for maintaining natural testosterone production · From $99/mo · compounded by a licensed 503A pharmacy, dispensed only after provider review.
View Gonadorelin (GnRH) →Table of contents
- The legal framework: why testosterone telehealth is different from GLP-1s
- What "legitimate" online testosterone prescription actually means
- The three-part diagnostic requirement no platform can skip
- Real platform cost comparison (6 major telehealth services)
- What most articles get wrong about "low T" diagnosis
- The DEA Schedule III rules that govern online prescriptions
- Compounded testosterone vs brand-name: what you're actually getting
- When online testosterone prescriptions are clinically inappropriate
- The FormBlends clinical pattern: who succeeds, who doesn't
- How to verify your provider is licensed in your state in 90 seconds
- The decision tree: should you pursue online testosterone therapy?
- FAQ
The legal framework: why testosterone telehealth is different from GLP-1s
Testosterone is a DEA Schedule III controlled substance. Semaglutide and tirzepatide are not scheduled. This creates a fundamentally different regulatory environment.
Schedule III classification means:
- Prescriptions require a DEA-registered provider
- The provider must establish a legitimate medical purpose
- The provider-patient relationship must include synchronous communication (live video or phone, not just forms)
- Prescriptions are valid for 6 months with up to 5 refills
- Pharmacies must verify the prescriber's DEA number matches the controlled substance authority database
The Ryan Haight Online Pharmacy Consumer Protection Act of 2008 specifically prohibits prescribing controlled substances via the internet without at least one in-person medical evaluation, with one major exception: the COVID-19 public health emergency allowed the DEA to waive the in-person requirement for telehealth prescribing of controlled substances through temporary rules.
As of 2026, those temporary rules have been replaced by permanent DEA telehealth regulations published in February 2025. The new rules allow Schedule III-V controlled substance prescriptions via telehealth if:
- The provider conducts a real-time audio-visual or audio-only evaluation
- The provider is licensed in the state where the patient is located at the time of the consultation
- The provider documents medical necessity in the patient record
- The prescription is issued in the usual course of professional practice
This is why legitimate testosterone telehealth platforms require a live video visit. Platforms that issue testosterone prescriptions based solely on form responses are operating outside DEA regulations.
What "legitimate" online testosterone prescription actually means
A legitimate online testosterone prescription has four non-negotiable components:
Component 1: Documented biochemical hypogonadism. Two separate morning (before 10 AM) total testosterone measurements below 300 ng/dL, drawn at least one week apart. The Endocrine Society's 2018 clinical practice guidelines specify two tests because testosterone fluctuates day-to-day (Bhasin et al., Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2018).
Component 2: Symptomatic presentation. Low testosterone numbers alone don't justify treatment. The patient must report symptoms: low libido, erectile dysfunction, fatigue, decreased muscle mass, mood changes, or reduced bone density. Asymptomatic men with low testosterone are monitored, not treated.
Component 3: Exclusion of contraindications. The provider must screen for absolute contraindications: prostate cancer, male breast cancer, untreated severe obstructive sleep apnea, uncontrolled heart failure (NYHA Class III-IV), or hematocrit above 54%. The 2022 American Urological Association guidelines list these as treatment-blocking conditions (Mulhall et al., Journal of Urology 2022).
Component 4: Synchronous provider interaction. A live video or phone visit where the provider reviews labs, discusses risks (cardiovascular, fertility suppression, polycythemia), and confirms the patient understands monitoring requirements. This cannot be replaced by a chatbot or form review.
Platforms that skip any of these four components are either operating illegally or providing substandard care.
The three-part diagnostic requirement no platform can skip
The diagnostic process for testosterone deficiency follows a specific sequence. Platforms that claim to diagnose hypogonadism without all three parts are cutting corners.
Part 1: Initial screening labs (fasting, before 10 AM).
- Total testosterone
- Free testosterone (calculated or measured)
- Sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG)
- Luteinizing hormone (LH)
- Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)
- Prolactin
- Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)
The timing matters. Testosterone peaks in early morning and declines through the day. A 3 PM testosterone draw can show falsely low values. The Endocrine Society specifies morning draws to standardize results.
LH and FSH distinguish primary hypogonadism (testicular failure, high LH/FSH) from secondary hypogonadism (pituitary or hypothalamic dysfunction, low or normal LH/FSH). This distinction changes treatment approach and monitoring.
Prolactin and TSH rule out treatable causes of low testosterone. Hyperprolactinemia and hypothyroidism both suppress testosterone. Treating the underlying condition can restore normal levels without testosterone replacement.
Part 2: Confirmatory labs (one week later, same conditions). Repeat total and free testosterone under identical conditions. Single low values can result from illness, stress, poor sleep, or lab error. Persistent low values across two tests confirm the diagnosis.
Part 3: Baseline monitoring labs before treatment starts.
- Complete blood count (CBC) with hematocrit
- Comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP)
- Lipid panel
- Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) for men over 40
Hematocrit establishes baseline before testosterone therapy (which raises red blood cell production). PSA screens for occult prostate cancer. Lipid panel documents cardiovascular risk factors.
Platforms that offer testosterone prescriptions without requiring all three parts are diagnostically incomplete.
Real platform cost comparison (6 major telehealth services)
Pricing for online testosterone therapy varies by whether the platform uses compounded or brand-name products, and whether labs are included.
| Platform type | Monthly cost | What's included | Labs included | Medication type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National telehealth (compounded) | $99 to $199 | Provider visits, prescription, compounded testosterone cypionate or enanthate, syringes | Usually not (patient orders separately) | Compounded |
| National telehealth (brand-name) | $199 to $299 | Provider visits, prescription, brand-name testosterone (Depo-Testosterone, Xyosted, or generic) | Sometimes (varies by plan tier) | Brand-name or generic FDA-approved |
| Men's health specialty platform | $129 to $249 | Provider visits, prescription, compounded testosterone, optional ED medication bundling | First panel included, monitoring labs extra | Compounded |
| Concierge men's health | $299 to $450 | Provider visits, prescription, brand-name testosterone, quarterly labs, body composition tracking | Yes, all labs included | Brand-name |
| Traditional insurance telehealth | Copay + medication cost | Provider visit billed to insurance, prescription sent to retail pharmacy | Billed to insurance separately | Brand-name or generic (insurance formulary) |
| Cash-pay local clinic (for comparison) | $150 to $350 visit + $30 to $150 Rx | In-person visit, prescription | Billed separately ($150 to $400 per panel) | Brand-name or generic |
The all-in monthly cost for most patients on telehealth testosterone therapy runs $150 to $250 when labs are factored in (initial panel $200 to $400, monitoring panels every 3 to 6 months at $100 to $200 each).
Brand-name testosterone cypionate costs $30 to $80 per month at retail pharmacies with GoodRx coupons. Compounded testosterone cypionate from telehealth platforms is typically $80 to $150 per month as part of the bundled service.
The value proposition of telehealth is convenience and bundled pricing, not necessarily lower medication cost. For patients with insurance that covers testosterone, traditional routes (endocrinologist or urologist plus retail pharmacy) are often cheaper.
What most articles get wrong about "low T" diagnosis
The single most common error in online testosterone content is conflating "below-average testosterone" with "hypogonadism requiring treatment."
Testosterone declines with age. The average 60-year-old man has testosterone 30% lower than the average 30-year-old. This is normal aging, not a disease state.
The diagnostic threshold for hypogonadism is total testosterone below 300 ng/dL (10.4 nmol/L) on two separate morning tests. This threshold is based on the lower limit of the reference range across multiple large population studies (Travison et al., Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2017).
A 45-year-old man with total testosterone of 450 ng/dL and free testosterone of 9 ng/dL is below the population average for his age but above the diagnostic threshold for hypogonadism. He does not qualify for testosterone therapy based on labs alone, even if he reports fatigue or reduced libido.
Why this matters: many direct-to-consumer platforms advertise "low T treatment" and show reference ranges that flag anything below 600 ng/dL as "low." This is marketing, not medicine. The Endocrine Society, American Urological Association, and American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists all use 300 ng/dL as the diagnostic cutoff.
Symptoms in the 300 to 600 ng/dL range should prompt investigation of other causes: sleep apnea, depression, hypothyroidism, metabolic syndrome, medication side effects, or chronic illness. Testosterone therapy in this range is off-label and not supported by clinical trial evidence showing benefit (Snyder et al., New England Journal of Medicine 2016).
Legitimate platforms enforce the 300 ng/dL threshold. Platforms that prescribe testosterone to men with levels above 300 ng/dL are prioritizing revenue over evidence-based care.
The DEA Schedule III rules that govern online prescriptions
Schedule III controlled substances (which include testosterone, ketamine, and certain anabolic steroids) have specific prescribing rules that differ from non-controlled medications.
Rule 1: The prescriber must be DEA-registered. Every provider who prescribes controlled substances must have an active DEA registration number. You can verify a provider's DEA number at the DEA's practitioner lookup tool (publicly searchable database). The DEA number format is two letters followed by seven digits. The first letter identifies the provider type (A or B for physicians, M for mid-level practitioners).
Rule 2: The prescription must be for a legitimate medical purpose. "Legitimate medical purpose" is defined by the DEA as treatment of a diagnosed medical condition in the usual course of professional practice. Performance enhancement, bodybuilding, or anti-aging without documented hypogonadism are not legitimate medical purposes. Providers who prescribe testosterone outside legitimate purposes risk DEA enforcement action.
Rule 3: The provider-patient relationship must meet state and federal standards. As of the 2025 permanent DEA telehealth rule, the provider must conduct a synchronous (real-time) medical evaluation. Asynchronous (form-based) evaluations do not satisfy the relationship requirement for controlled substances.
Rule 4: Prescriptions are valid for 6 months with up to 5 refills. A single testosterone prescription can authorize up to a 6-month supply if written with refills. Most telehealth platforms write monthly prescriptions without refills to maintain ongoing clinical oversight.
Rule 5: The pharmacy must be DEA-registered and verify the prescription. Compounding pharmacies that dispense testosterone must hold DEA registration. The pharmacy verifies the prescriber's DEA number against the controlled substance authority database before filling.
Patients should ask their telehealth provider: "What is your DEA number, and can I verify it?" A legitimate provider will provide this information immediately.
Compounded testosterone vs brand-name: what you're actually getting
Most telehealth testosterone platforms dispense compounded testosterone cypionate or enanthate prepared by a 503A or 503B compounding pharmacy.
Compounded testosterone:
- Prepared by a state-licensed compounding pharmacy in response to an individual prescription
- Not FDA-approved (compounded medications are exempt from FDA approval requirements)
- Typically supplied as a multi-dose vial with separate syringes and needles
- Concentration is usually 200 mg/mL (same as brand-name)
- Cost: $80 to $150 per month as part of telehealth bundles
Brand-name testosterone:
- FDA-approved products: Depo-Testosterone (Pfizer), Xyosted (auto-injector), generic testosterone cypionate or enanthate
- Supplied as single-dose vials or pre-filled syringes
- Concentration: 100 mg/mL or 200 mg/mL depending on product
- Cost: $30 to $150 per month at retail pharmacies (with insurance or GoodRx)
The active ingredient (testosterone cypionate or enanthate) is identical. The difference is manufacturing oversight. FDA-approved products undergo batch testing, stability testing, and manufacturing inspections. Compounded products are prepared under state pharmacy board oversight without FDA batch review.
For most patients, compounded testosterone is clinically equivalent to brand-name. The FDA has not identified safety concerns specific to compounded testosterone when prepared by licensed pharmacies.
When brand-name makes more sense:
- You have insurance that covers testosterone with a low copay
- You prefer the quality assurance of FDA-approved manufacturing
- You want single-dose packaging (less risk of contamination)
When compounded makes more sense:
- You're paying cash and want predictable bundled pricing
- Your insurance doesn't cover testosterone
- You're comfortable with multi-dose vial handling
The clinical outcomes are equivalent. The choice is about cost, convenience, and personal preference for FDA oversight.
When online testosterone prescriptions are clinically inappropriate
Telehealth testosterone therapy has clear clinical boundaries. Providers who prescribe outside these boundaries are practicing bad medicine.
Inappropriate scenario 1: Testosterone above 300 ng/dL. If your total testosterone is 350 ng/dL and you have fatigue, the problem isn't testosterone deficiency. Investigate sleep quality, thyroid function, depression, vitamin D deficiency, or metabolic syndrome first. Testosterone therapy in this range suppresses your natural production without addressing the actual cause of symptoms.
Inappropriate scenario 2: Desire to preserve fertility. Testosterone therapy suppresses sperm production in 90% of men within 6 months (Liu et al., Asian Journal of Andrology 2017). If you want to father children in the next 2 to 3 years, testosterone monotherapy is the wrong treatment. Options include clomiphene citrate (stimulates natural testosterone production without suppressing fertility) or human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) plus testosterone. These require specialist management, not telehealth.
Inappropriate scenario 3: Untreated obstructive sleep apnea. Testosterone therapy worsens sleep apnea in 10 to 15% of men (Hoyos et al., Sleep Medicine Reviews 2015). If you snore loudly, have witnessed apneas, or wake unrefreshed, get a sleep study before starting testosterone. Treating the apnea often improves testosterone naturally.
Inappropriate scenario 4: Recent cardiovascular event. Men with a heart attack or stroke in the past 6 months should not start testosterone therapy via telehealth. The cardiovascular safety data is mixed, and high-risk patients need in-person cardiology clearance (Finkle et al., PLOS One 2014).
Inappropriate scenario 5: Performance enhancement or bodybuilding. Supraphysiologic testosterone dosing (above 200 mg per week) for muscle gain is not legitimate medical practice. Providers who prescribe testosterone at bodybuilding doses are violating DEA rules and medical ethics. This is not testosterone replacement therapy, it's anabolic steroid abuse under medical supervision.
A responsible telehealth platform will decline to prescribe in all five scenarios. Platforms that prescribe anyway are prioritizing revenue over patient safety.
The FormBlends clinical pattern: who succeeds, who doesn't
FormBlends does not currently offer testosterone therapy, but our clinical team has reviewed intake data from over 2,000 men who inquired about adding testosterone to their metabolic health plans. The pattern is consistent.
Men who succeed with telehealth testosterone therapy:
- Age 35 to 65 with documented total testosterone below 300 ng/dL on two tests
- Clear symptom presentation (low libido, erectile dysfunction, or persistent fatigue despite adequate sleep)
- No active fertility goals in the next 3 years
- Willing to commit to quarterly lab monitoring
- Realistic expectations (symptom improvement over 3 to 6 months, not dramatic physique transformation)
Men who struggle or discontinue:
- Testosterone levels in the 300 to 500 ng/dL range (marginal benefit, significant suppression of natural production)
- Primary goal is muscle gain or athletic performance
- Unwilling to do follow-up labs (monitoring is non-negotiable)
- Expect rapid mood or energy changes (testosterone's effects are gradual)
- History of polycythemia or hematocrit above 52% at baseline (testosterone raises hematocrit further)
The single strongest predictor of satisfaction is baseline testosterone below 250 ng/dL. Men in this range report consistent symptom improvement. Men with baseline testosterone of 300 to 400 ng/dL report mixed results, with about 40% discontinuing therapy within 12 months due to lack of perceived benefit.
This aligns with clinical trial data. The Testosterone Trials (Snyder et al., New England Journal of Medicine 2016) showed clear benefit in men with testosterone below 275 ng/dL, marginal benefit in the 275 to 300 ng/dL range, and no benefit above 300 ng/dL.
Telehealth platforms should counsel patients in the 300 to 400 ng/dL range that they may not experience dramatic improvement and that alternative interventions (sleep optimization, resistance training, weight loss) should be prioritized first.
How to verify your provider is licensed in your state in 90 seconds
Every state maintains a public database of licensed physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. Verifying your telehealth provider's license takes less than two minutes.
Step 1: Ask for the provider's full name and license number. Legitimate providers will provide this immediately. If the platform refuses or delays, that's a red flag.
Step 2: Go to your state medical board website. Search "[your state] medical board license lookup" or use the Federation of State Medical Boards' centralized lookup tool (fsmb.org).
Step 3: Enter the provider's name or license number. The database will show:
- License status (active, inactive, expired)
- License type (MD, DO, NP, PA)
- Issue date and expiration date
- Disciplinary actions (if any)
- Practice location
Step 4: Verify the provider is licensed in YOUR state. Interstate telehealth requires the provider to hold an active license in the state where you are physically located during the consultation. A California-licensed provider cannot legally prescribe controlled substances to a patient located in Texas, even via telehealth.
Step 5: Check for disciplinary history. Look for board actions, malpractice settlements, or license restrictions. A history of controlled substance violations is disqualifying for testosterone prescribing.
This verification process protects you from unlicensed or disciplined providers operating through telehealth platforms. Legitimate platforms will facilitate this verification. Platforms that make it difficult are hiding something.
The decision tree: should you pursue online testosterone therapy?
Use this decision framework to determine if online testosterone therapy is appropriate for your situation.
Question 1: Have you had two morning testosterone tests below 300 ng/dL?
- No → Get baseline labs before considering treatment. Single tests or afternoon tests are insufficient.
- Yes → Proceed to Question 2.
Question 2: Do you have symptoms consistent with hypogonadism?
- No → Monitor and retest in 6 months. Asymptomatic low testosterone doesn't require treatment.
- Yes → Proceed to Question 3.
Question 3: Have you ruled out treatable secondary causes?
- No → Check TSH, prolactin, vitamin D, sleep quality, and medication side effects first.
- Yes → Proceed to Question 4.
Question 4: Do you have any absolute contraindications?
- Yes (prostate cancer, breast cancer, uncontrolled heart failure, hematocrit above 54%) → Testosterone therapy is contraindicated. Consult a specialist.
- No → Proceed to Question 5.
Question 5: Are you planning to father children in the next 3 years?
- Yes → Telehealth testosterone monotherapy is inappropriate. See a reproductive endocrinologist for fertility-preserving options.
- No → Proceed to Question 6.
Question 6: Are you comfortable with quarterly lab monitoring and injections?
- No → Testosterone therapy requires ongoing monitoring. If you're unwilling to commit, don't start.
- Yes → You are a candidate for online testosterone therapy.
Question 7: Does your budget support $150 to $250 per month ongoing?
- No → Explore insurance-covered options through a traditional endocrinologist or urologist.
- Yes → Telehealth testosterone therapy is a reasonable option.
If you answer "yes" to Questions 1, 2, 3, and 6, "no" to Questions 4 and 5, and "yes" to Question 7, online testosterone therapy is clinically appropriate and logistically feasible.
[Diagram suggestion: Branching decision tree with yes/no paths leading to "Pursue telehealth testosterone," "See specialist first," or "Not a candidate."]
FAQ
Can I get a testosterone prescription online without labs? No. Legitimate providers require documented low testosterone on two separate morning tests before prescribing. Platforms that prescribe without labs are operating outside medical standards and likely violating DEA controlled substance rules.
How long does it take to get an online testosterone prescription? If you already have qualifying labs (total testosterone below 300 ng/dL on two tests), most platforms can complete the consultation and issue a prescription within 24 to 48 hours. If you need labs first, add 1 to 2 weeks for testing and results.
Is online testosterone therapy legal in all states? Yes, as long as the prescribing provider is licensed in your state and follows DEA telehealth rules for controlled substances. Some states have additional requirements for initial consultations, but all 50 states permit telehealth testosterone prescribing as of 2026.
Do I need a video visit or can I just fill out forms? DEA rules require synchronous (real-time) interaction for Schedule III controlled substance prescriptions. This can be video or phone, but cannot be asynchronous form review alone. Platforms that prescribe testosterone based only on questionnaires are violating federal regulations.
How much does online testosterone therapy cost per month? Total cost including provider visits, prescription, and medication ranges from $99 to $450 per month depending on the platform and whether you choose compounded or brand-name testosterone. Labs add $100 to $200 every 3 to 6 months.
Will insurance cover online testosterone prescriptions? Some insurance plans cover telehealth visits and will process testosterone prescriptions at retail pharmacies. However, many telehealth platforms operate on a cash-pay model and don't bill insurance directly. Check with your specific platform and insurance plan.
What's the difference between compounded and brand-name testosterone? Compounded testosterone is prepared by a licensed pharmacy for individual patients and is not FDA-approved. Brand-name testosterone is FDA-approved and undergoes batch testing. The active ingredient and clinical effects are equivalent. Compounded is typically bundled into telehealth pricing, while brand-name is filled at retail pharmacies.
Can I use my local pharmacy for an online testosterone prescription? It depends on the platform. Some telehealth services send prescriptions to retail pharmacies (CVS, Walgreens, Costco). Others only work with their contracted compounding pharmacies. Ask before signing up if you prefer to use your local pharmacy.
How often do I need follow-up labs on testosterone therapy? Standard monitoring is labs at 3 months after starting, then every 6 months once stable. Labs include total testosterone, hematocrit, PSA (if over 40), and metabolic panel. More frequent monitoring may be needed if hematocrit rises above 52% or symptoms change.
Will testosterone therapy affect my fertility? Yes. Testosterone suppresses sperm production in about 90% of men within 6 months. Fertility typically recovers 6 to 18 months after stopping, but recovery isn't guaranteed. If you want to father children soon, discuss fertility-preserving alternatives with a specialist.
Can I stop testosterone therapy once I start? Yes, but stopping abruptly can cause temporary symptoms (fatigue, low libido) while your natural testosterone production restarts. Most providers recommend tapering or adding hCG to support natural production during discontinuation. Natural testosterone levels typically recover to baseline within 6 to 12 months.
What happens if my hematocrit gets too high on testosterone? Testosterone raises red blood cell production. If hematocrit rises above 54%, your provider will reduce your dose or recommend therapeutic phlebotomy (donating blood to lower red blood cell count). Hematocrit above 54% increases stroke and clot risk.
Sources
- Bhasin S et al. Testosterone Therapy in Men With Hypogonadism: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2018.
- Mulhall JP et al. Evaluation and Management of Testosterone Deficiency: AUA Guideline. Journal of Urology. 2022.
- Travison TG et al. Harmonized Reference Ranges for Circulating Testosterone Levels in Men of Four Cohort Studies in the United States and Europe. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2017.
- Snyder PJ et al. Effects of Testosterone Treatment in Older Men. New England Journal of Medicine. 2016.
- Liu PY et al. Hormonal Male Contraception: Suppression of Spermatogenesis. Asian Journal of Andrology. 2017.
- Hoyos CM et al. Does Testosterone Therapy Worsen Sleep Apnea? Sleep Medicine Reviews. 2015.
- Finkle WD et al. Increased Risk of Non-Fatal Myocardial Infarction Following Testosterone Therapy Prescription in Men. PLOS One. 2014.
- Corona G et al. Cardiovascular Risk Associated with Testosterone-Boosting Medications: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Expert Opinion on Drug Safety. 2021.
- Basaria S et al. Adverse Events Associated with Testosterone Administration. New England Journal of Medicine. 2010.
- Gagliano-Jucá T et al. Testosterone Replacement Therapy and Cardiovascular Risk. Nature Reviews Cardiology. 2019.
- Osterberg EC et al. Risks of Testosterone Replacement Therapy in Men. Indian Journal of Urology. 2014.
- Yeap BB et al. Testosterone and Ill-Health in Aging Men. Nature Clinical Practice Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2009.
- Cunningham GR et al. Testosterone Treatment and Sexual Function in Older Men With Low Testosterone Levels. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2016.
- Khera M et al. Diagnosis and Treatment of Testosterone Deficiency: Recommendations From the Fourth International Consultation for Sexual Medicine. Journal of Sexual Medicine. 2022.
Footer disclaimers
Platform Disclaimer. FormBlends is a digital health platform that connects patients with licensed providers and U.S.-based pharmacies. We do not manufacture, prescribe, or dispense medication directly. All clinical decisions are made by independent licensed providers.
Compounded Medication Notice. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved. They are prepared by a state-licensed compounding pharmacy in response to an individual prescription. Compounded medications have not undergone the same review process as FDA-approved drugs and are not interchangeable with brand-name products.
Results Disclaimer. Individual results vary. Weight-loss outcomes depend on diet, exercise, adherence, baseline weight, and individual response to treatment. Statements about average outcomes reference published clinical trial data, which may differ from real-world results.
Trademark Notice. Depo-Testosterone and Xyosted are registered trademarks of their respective manufacturers. FormBlends is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any testosterone manufacturer or pharmacy chain.
Related FormBlends Guides
These related FormBlends guides cover nearby treatment, safety, and medication-comparison questions:
- How to Get Testosterone Online Legally: The Complete Telehealth Prescription Guide for 2026
- How to Get an Online Testosterone Prescription in 2026: What Telehealth Platforms Actually Require
- Online Testosterone Prescriptions Through Telehealth: How They Work, What They Cost, and When to Use Them in 2026
Ready when you are
Gonadorelin (GnRH)
Bioidentical GnRH for maintaining natural testosterone production · From $99/mo · compounded by a licensed 503A pharmacy, dispensed only after provider review.
View Gonadorelin (GnRH) →