By Daniel Park, MS, Health Content Specialist. Medically reviewed by Dr. Anika Rao, MD, Board-Certified Internal Medicine.
Rachel, a 47-year-old marketing director in Scottsdale, told me she'd already been through two async telehealth platforms before landing at Lavender Sky Health. "I filled out a questionnaire, got a prescription in 36 hours, and nobody ever asked about my thyroid history or the fact that I'd been on HRT for two years," she said. Her first video consult at Lavender Sky lasted 38 minutes. The clinician asked about her perimenopause symptoms, her levothyroxine dose, and her sleep patterns before they even discussed tirzepatide. "It felt like an actual doctor's appointment. Which sounds like a low bar, but it wasn't what I'd been getting."
That anecdote captures the core proposition here. Lavender Sky Health is a women-focused weight management and metabolic health platform that wraps compounded tirzepatide inside a structured clinical program with live visits, named providers, and (in higher tiers) dietitian access. It sits at the higher-touch, higher-cost end of the compounded GLP-1 telehealth market. Whether that's worth the premium depends entirely on what you actually need.
This article is part of the FormBlends best tirzepatide telehealth providers comparison and the compounded tirzepatide complete guide.
The short version
- Lavender Sky Health offers compounded tirzepatide as one piece of a broader hormonal health and weight management program.
- The clinical model is synchronous: live video visits with named clinicians, not a chatbot.
- Pricing runs $349 to $499 per month all-in, depending on plan tier. Upper range for compounded GLP-1 telehealth.
- Pharmacy partners are more transparent than most competitors; dispensing pharmacy appears on the medication label.
- Best fit for patients who want medication integrated into an ongoing clinical relationship with behavioral support. Not ideal if you just want a prescription shipped to your door with minimal interaction.
How the program actually works
The intake is more thorough than what you'll see at the lean async platforms. Lavender Sky collects a full medical history that covers hormonal factors, menstrual and reproductive history, current medications, and weight trajectory. This makes sense given the platform's focus on women's metabolic health, but it also means the onboarding takes more time.
After intake, you get a live video visit with a clinician. Not an NP working off a decision tree (at least, that's not how it's presented). If approved, compounded tirzepatide ships from a partner 503A pharmacy.
Here's the thing that separates this model from the subscription-box competitors: dose escalation isn't auto-approved through a portal. It's reviewed at follow-up visits. You talk to someone. They ask how you're tolerating the dose. They look at whether you're hitting your targets. Then they decide whether to bump you up.
Ongoing care includes follow-up clinician visits, dietitian sessions in some plans, patient portal messaging, and educational content. Structurally, it's closer to traditional obesity medicine practice than to "telehealth startup that happens to sell tirzepatide."
What you'll pay
Lavender Sky Health pricing as of early 2026:
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Take the Assessment →- Monthly all-in: roughly $349 to $499 depending on plan tier
- Multi-month pre-paid: lower per-month rate (specific discounts vary)
- Initial consultation: included in the program or charged separately depending on plan
- Dietitian access: included in higher tiers, not available in the base plan
Those numbers include both the clinical program and the medication. Yes, it's more expensive than the lean async platforms. But you're also bundling services those platforms either charge separately for or simply don't offer. Whether that bundling represents value or bloat depends on whether you'll actually use the clinical and behavioral components.
My honest take: if you're going to skip the dietitian sessions and message the portal once a quarter, you're paying a premium for structure you won't touch. Save your money.
Pharmacy sourcing and transparency
Lavender Sky Health works with state-licensed 503A compounding pharmacy partners. The platform has historically named some of these partners in its program materials, which puts it ahead of a lot of competitors on transparency. The dispensing pharmacy appears on the medication label (this should be standard everywhere, but it isn't always obvious).
Certificates of analysis are typically available on request. If you're going to sign up, request one. It takes two minutes and tells you something about whether the platform takes quality control seriously.
The women's health angle: real or marketing?
This is worth examining honestly. Lavender Sky Health frames its entire program around women's metabolic and hormonal health, particularly for patients in perimenopause and menopause. The intake reflects this; the educational content reflects this; the clinician expertise (reportedly) reflects this.
But here's the boring truth about tirzepatide itself: the clinical evidence base comes from SURMOUNT-1 (Jastreboff et al., NEJM 2022) for obesity and SURPASS-2 (Frias et al., NEJM 2021) for type 2 diabetes. Results for women in these trials are reported as subgroup analyses. Mean weight loss patterns are broadly similar across sex, though some metabolic markers differ. Tirzepatide doesn't work differently in women because Lavender Sky says it does.
What is different is the clinical context. A woman in perimenopause whose weight gain intersects with shifting estrogen levels, thyroid function changes, and sleep disruption has a more complicated clinical picture than a 32-year-old man who wants to lose 30 pounds. The program framing addresses that complexity. The molecule is the same; the wraparound care is the differentiator.
That's a meaningful distinction, even if the marketing sometimes blurs it.
What you get (and what you don't)
Included:
- Synchronous clinician evaluation and ongoing visits
- Compounded tirzepatide medication shipped monthly
- Dietitian access (higher tiers)
- Patient portal with clinical messaging
- Educational programming on metabolic and hormonal health
- Dose escalation reviews at visits
Not included:
- Insurance billing for the compounded medication
- 24-hour clinical line (response times are business hours, which is a real limitation if you have side effects on a Saturday night)
- Lab work (sometimes ordered through the program, but often handled by the patient's PCP)
State availability covers most of the U.S., determined by clinician network licensure. Verify shipping to your state at checkout.
Regulatory picture
Lavender Sky Health has maintained a lower public regulatory profile than the highest-volume direct-response compounded platforms. The clinical-program positioning looks different from the aggressive "get your GLP-1 in 24 hours" marketing that has drawn FDA attention and Eli Lilly litigation across the segment.
That said, any platform prescribing compounded GLP-1s is operating in the same regulatory environment. Active FDA enforcement and ongoing litigation touch the entire category. This isn't a Lavender Sky-specific risk; it's a structural one. Patients should monitor current status independently, regardless of which platform they use.
How it stacks up against the competition
Versus Mochi Health: The closest comparison. Both are higher-touch, program-style platforms. Lavender Sky leans into women's hormonal health; Mochi leans into obesity medicine framing. Pricing overlaps significantly. Choose based on clinical focus.
Versus Henry Meds: Henry Meds is more medication-forward with live access included. Lavender Sky is more program-forward with medication included. Different sweet spots for different patients.
Versus Hims and ShedRx: Different categories entirely. Those are lean async platforms built for low-friction medication delivery. Comparing them to Lavender Sky is like comparing a meal-kit service to a personal chef. Different products for different people.
Versus FormBlends: FormBlends sells compounded tirzepatide with named pharmacy disclosure and synchronous clinical review at transparent all-in pricing. The structural difference is the absence of bundled dietitian and educational programming. Patients who want those services may prefer Lavender Sky; patients who want medication-focused care with pharmacy transparency may prefer FormBlends.
Who should actually consider this
A woman with hormonal or metabolic complexity who wants a structured clinical program with medication as one component, values ongoing clinician and dietitian relationships, and is comfortable with the higher monthly cost. Patients in perimenopause or menopause whose weight management intersects with hormonal factors will find the program framing particularly relevant.
Less ideal for: patients hunting for the lowest possible compounded tirzepatide price, patients who view medication as a transaction, patients who don't want or need structured programming. If you already have a great relationship with your PCP and just need the prescription, this is more infrastructure than you need.
What patients are saying
Independent forum sentiment on Lavender Sky Health skews positive on clinical quality and intake thoroughness. The recurring complaint is price, and the time commitment for visits. Patients who engage with the full program tend to be enthusiastic. Patients who signed up thinking they were getting a prescription service and discovered they'd bought a clinical program tend to be frustrated. (This is a marketing clarity problem as much as anything.)
Frequently asked questions
Is Lavender Sky Health legit?
It's a licensed telehealth platform with synchronous clinical visits, named clinicians, and state-licensed pharmacy partners. In the regulatory and clinical sense, yes.
How much is Lavender Sky Health per month?
All-in monthly cost runs roughly $349 to $499 depending on plan tier and dose. Multi-month pre-paid plans bring the per-month rate down.
Is Lavender Sky Health only for women?
The positioning and marketing center on women's metabolic and hormonal health, but enrollment isn't limited by gender on a clinical basis. Verify current eligibility on the platform.
Does Lavender Sky Health accept insurance?
Compounded medication is cash-pay. Clinical visit portions may be insurance-eligible in some cases; confirm directly with the platform.
Does Lavender Sky Health name its pharmacy partners?
More transparent than most competitors on this front. Some partners are named in program materials, and the dispensing pharmacy appears on the medication label.
Can I cancel Lavender Sky Health anytime?
Cancellation policies vary by plan tier. Multi-month pre-paid plans have specific terms. Read them before you sign up, not after.
Is Lavender Sky Health worth the higher cost over Hims or Eden?
If you'll actually use and value the clinical and behavioral services, yes. If you just want the medication at the lowest cost, the cheaper platforms are more cost-effective. Be honest with yourself about which category you fall into.
Continue the series
- Hub: Best Tirzepatide Telehealth Providers 2026
- Related: Mochi Health Tirzepatide Review
- Related: Ivim Health Tirzepatide Review
- Pillar: Compounded Tirzepatide Complete Guide
Important Safety Information
This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Compounded tirzepatide is not an FDA-approved drug. The FDA does not review compounded medications for safety, effectiveness, or quality before they are sold. Do not start, stop, or modify any prescription medication without speaking with a licensed healthcare provider. If you experience symptoms of a serious reaction, including severe abdominal pain, signs of pancreatitis, vision changes, persistent vomiting, signs of an allergic reaction, or thoughts of self-harm, seek emergency care immediately.
FormBlends is not a medical practice. FormBlends sells only compounded tirzepatide and compounded semaglutide through licensed U.S. pharmacies after a telehealth evaluation by an independent prescriber.
About this article
Written by Daniel Park, MS (Health Content Specialist). Medically reviewed by Dr. Anika Rao, MD (Board-Certified Internal Medicine). FormBlends content is reviewed by licensed U.S. clinicians prior to publication. Provider details are based on publicly available information as of early 2026 and may change. Always verify current pricing and program details on the provider's own site.
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Not FDA-approved. Compounded medications are prepared by licensed pharmacies for individual patients based on a prescriber's clinical judgment. FormBlends is not a medical practice. Individual results vary. Consult a licensed clinician before starting any GLP-1 therapy.