What TRT Costs Online: A 2026 Price Guide

Typical monthly ranges for online testosterone programs, what is usually included, and how to compare lab and medication fees — with every figure attributed and "starting at" only.

By The Testosterone Samples Desk · 9 min read · Updated 2026-06-14

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Online testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) programs are typically reported in third-party reviews to run anywhere from a roughly $25 to $200+ monthly membership or visit fee, with bloodwork and medication often billed separately. Flat all-in clinics have been reported around $199/month, while membership-plus-medication models stack a monthly fee (reported ~$25 to $149) on top of separate medication (e.g., reported ~$28/month for testosterone injections) and periodic lab costs. Because pricing structures differ widely and change often, the most useful thing to compare is the total of membership + labs + medication, not the headline number — and every price below should be confirmed directly with the provider at intake or checkout.

For adults 18+. Prescription products require a consultation with a licensed provider. This page is educational and is a directory of legitimate telehealth options — it is not medical advice. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Testosterone replacement therapy is a prescription treatment that requires evaluation, lab testing, and ongoing oversight by a licensed clinician; it is not available without a prescription, and no legitimate provider ships prescription testosterone without one.

The short version

  • Online TRT cost generally breaks into three parts: a membership or visit fee, lab/bloodwork, and the medication itself. Some clinics bundle all three into one flat monthly price; others itemize each.
  • Reported flat all-in models have been noted around $199/month, while reported membership tiers at some clinics range from roughly $25 to $149/month with medication and labs billed separately — figures cited from third-party reviews and not verified here.
  • Lab work is often the largest variable. Some clinics include a basic panel; others report significant upfront lab costs (reported ~$450 to $1,700 for expanded panels at premium programs).
  • Several established, certified telehealth providers (HealthyMale, DrHouse, Direct Meds, eMed) do not publish a dedicated TRT package price; testosterone-related care, where clinically appropriate, would be handled through a general or men's-health consult, so confirm availability and pricing at intake.
  • Always total membership + labs + medication and confirm current pricing at checkout — 'starting at' figures rarely reflect what an individual pays after labs and a clinician's plan.
ProviderTypeReported monthly feeLabsMedicationNotes
HealthyMale (approved)Men's-health telehealth + VIPPS pharmacyNot published for TRTConfirm at consultOTC DHEA Testosterone supplement listed ~$29; Rx products separateNo dedicated Rx-TRT program or TRT pricing published; core catalog is Rx ED, hair loss, sexual wellness. Confirm at checkout.
DrHouse (approved)On-demand telehealth, 50 statesVisit fee not published on homepageConfirm at consultPrescriptions billed separately; insurance acceptedNo dedicated TRT package; low-T handled via general virtual consult where clinically appropriate. Confirm visit fee and labs.
Direct Meds (approved)US telemedicine, upfront pricingTRT not publicly listedConfirm at intakeTestosterone availability to be confirmed at intakeHomepage features weight loss, longevity, hair, aesthetics; published examples are GLP-1 (~$179–$297/mo). No public TRT price.
eMed (approved)Doctor-led telehealth + at-home testingVaries by programAt-home collection for GLP-1 programNo TRT medication offeredCurrent consumer program is GLP-1 weight management, often employer-provided. No TRT program; confirm eligibility via enrollment flow.
Hone Health (editorial)Dedicated online TRT clinicReported ~$25 / $129 / $149 tiersRetesting reported ~every 90 daysReported ~$28/mo for testosterone injections, billed separatelyEditorial reference only; not an approved partner. Figures from third-party reviews — verify on their site.
Fountain TRT (editorial)Online TRT clinic, no-needle creamReported flat ~$199/mo all-inReported included in flat priceCream protocol reported in flat priceEditorial reference only. Flat all-in model per third-party reviews; verify current pricing.
Maximus (editorial)Online hormone clinic, enclomiphene focusReported ~$166–$206+/moReported significant upfront labs (~$450–$1,700)Enclomiphene-centered protocolsEditorial reference only. Fertility-preserving focus; figures from third-party coverage — verify.
Marek Health (editorial)Functional-medicine hormone optimizationPremium positioning; variesExtensive expanded biomarker panelsPrescribed per planEditorial reference only. Coaching-heavy, premium; specific current pricing varies — verify on their site.

Reported/typical online TRT-related pricing structures. Figures are 'starting at'/typical and, where noted, sourced from third-party reviews — verify current pricing directly with each provider. Inclusion is not an endorsement; approved partners and editorial references are labeled.

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How online TRT pricing is structured

Most online testosterone programs price one or more of three components, and the cheapest-looking option is not always the cheapest once everything is added up:

  • Membership or visit fee — a recurring monthly charge for clinician access, messaging, and program management, or a one-time visit fee for a consult. Reported membership tiers at dedicated TRT clinics have ranged from roughly $25 to $149/month in third-party reviews.
  • Labs / bloodwork — baseline testing to evaluate whether therapy is appropriate, plus periodic retesting (reported around every 90 days at some clinics). Labs can be included in a flat price or billed separately, and expanded panels at premium programs have been reported as high as ~$450 to $1,700 upfront.
  • Medication — billed separately in itemized models (reported around $28/month for testosterone injections at one clinic) or folded into a flat all-in fee (reported around $199/month at a no-needle cream clinic).

The number that matters is the sum. Compare membership + labs + medication across a full year, not the advertised starting price.

Flat all-in vs. itemized membership models

Two broad models dominate online TRT pricing. A flat all-in model rolls the consult, labs, and medication into a single recurring price — Fountain TRT has been reported around a flat ~$199/month for a no-needle cream protocol, which makes budgeting simple but can cost more for someone who needs minimal medication. An itemized membership model charges a lower base fee (Hone Health has reported tiers of roughly $25, $129, and $149/month) and then adds medication and labs on top; this can be cheaper for low-dose plans but harder to predict.

Neither model is universally cheaper. As one way to frame it: a low monthly membership with separately billed labs and medication can quietly exceed a higher flat fee once a quarterly lab draw and ongoing prescription are included.

Why labs are the biggest variable

Bloodwork is where online TRT costs diverge the most. A program focused on a single, narrow panel will cost far less than a functional-medicine platform that runs expanded biomarker testing. Maximus has been reported with significant upfront lab costs in the ~$450 to $1,700 range for its enclomiphene-oriented protocols, while Marek Health is positioned as a premium, coaching-heavy option with extensive lab work. By contrast, a clinic that includes a basic panel in a flat fee keeps the lab cost predictable.

Testing is not optional for legitimate care. Hone Health is reported to retest roughly every 90 days, reflecting the clinical reality that testosterone therapy is monitored over time by a clinician — which is also a recurring cost to budget for.

What the established approved providers actually offer

Several well-known, certified telehealth providers do not advertise a dedicated TRT package or publish TRT pricing, and it would be inaccurate to quote a TRT price for them:

  • HealthyMale — an established US men's-health telehealth provider and VIPPS-certified online pharmacy operating since 1999 (Tempe, AZ; LegitScript/HIPAA). It lists a 'Testosterone Support' category, but the actual product there is an over-the-counter DHEA Testosterone 50mg wellness supplement listed around $29 — not prescription TRT. Its prescription catalog centers on ED, premature ejaculation, hair loss, and prostate/sexual-wellness products via licensed online physician consultations, with many Rx products advertised as including a doctor visit. No prescription-TRT program or TRT pricing is published; 'starting at' framing only, and you should verify at checkout.
  • DrHouse — a real, operating on-demand telehealth platform (LegitScript-approved, HIPAA-compliant, available in 50 states, insurance accepted). It offers virtual visits, online prescriptions/refills, urgent and primary care, and a men's-health category. TRT is not listed as a dedicated program; low testosterone would be addressed through a general virtual consult where clinically appropriate. Specific visit and lab prices are not published on the homepage — confirm directly.
  • Direct Meds — a real, fast-growing US telemedicine company (LegitScript-certified, HIPAA-compliant; Bluffdale, UT) with an upfront, no-hidden-fee pricing model. Company materials and third-party reviews describe testosterone among its categories, but the current live homepage features weight loss, longevity, hair, pain, and aesthetics, with published examples being GLP-1 medications (semaglutide ~$179–$297/mo; tirzepatide ~$224–$399/mo). Testosterone availability and pricing should be confirmed at intake.
  • eMed — an established telehealth company known for at-home diagnostic testing and a structured, doctor-led program. Its current consumer-facing offering is GLP-1 weight management (often provided through employers/organizations). eMed does not currently advertise a TRT program; it is included here as an approved partner for general men's-health/metabolic telehealth, not as a TRT clinic. Confirm eligibility through the program enrollment flow.

If a dedicated, transparently priced online TRT program is your goal, the editorial references in the comparison table (Hone Health, Fountain TRT, Maximus, Marek Health) illustrate how pricing is commonly structured — but those are competitor references, not partners, and their figures come from third-party reviews that should be verified on each clinic's official site.

Reading the fine print before you enroll

Before committing to any online TRT program, confirm these points directly with the provider, since published numbers are often 'starting at':

  • Is the advertised price a membership only, or does it include labs and medication?
  • What is the baseline lab cost, and how often is retesting required and billed?
  • Is the medication included or itemized, and what does it cost monthly?
  • Are there one-time intake or onboarding fees?
  • Is insurance accepted for any portion (DrHouse, for example, accepts insurance)?

A prescription and clinical oversight are required. Be skeptical of any source advertising testosterone, 'free samples' of a prescription product, or shipping without a consultation — legitimate access runs through a licensed provider, a real lab evaluation, and ongoing monitoring.

Questions, answered

How much does online TRT cost per month?

It varies widely by model. Third-party reviews have reported flat all-in clinics around $199/month, and itemized clinics with membership tiers from roughly $25 to $149/month plus separately billed medication (reported ~$28/month for testosterone injections at one clinic) and periodic labs. Several established certified providers do not publish a TRT price at all. Always total membership + labs + medication and confirm current pricing directly, since figures are 'starting at' and sourced from third-party reviews.

Is lab work included in the price?

Sometimes. Flat all-in models often fold a basic panel into the monthly fee, while itemized and premium programs bill labs separately — reported as high as ~$450 to $1,700 upfront for expanded biomarker panels at some premium clinics. Retesting (reported around every 90 days at one clinic) is a recurring cost. Confirm what is and isn't included before enrolling.

Do any of the approved providers list a TRT price?

Not as a dedicated TRT package. HealthyMale lists an over-the-counter DHEA Testosterone supplement (~$29), not prescription TRT, and publishes no TRT-program pricing. DrHouse, Direct Meds, and eMed do not advertise a dedicated TRT program or publish TRT pricing; where clinically appropriate, testosterone-related care would be handled through a general or men's-health consult, so availability and cost should be confirmed at intake.

Can I get testosterone online without a prescription?

No. Testosterone replacement therapy is a prescription treatment that requires evaluation, lab testing, and ongoing oversight by a licensed clinician. Legitimate providers require a consultation and bloodwork and will not ship prescription testosterone without a prescription. Be cautious of any source offering testosterone, 'free samples,' or shipping without a consult.

Is insurance accepted for online TRT?

It depends on the provider. DrHouse, for example, accepts insurance and is positioned as cheaper than urgent care, but many cash-pay telehealth TRT clinics do not bill insurance. Confirm coverage, visit fees, and any out-of-pocket lab and medication costs directly with the provider before enrolling.

Why is this guide so cautious about prices?

Because TRT pricing structures change often and the figures circulating online are typically 'starting at' or sourced from third-party reviews rather than verified at checkout. We attribute every number and recommend confirming the total of membership, labs, and medication directly with each provider. This page is educational and a directory of legitimate options, not medical advice; statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.