Coby Health Compounded Tirzepatide Review (2026): Flat $299 Pricing, Weekly Check-In Texts, and Pharmacy Sourcing to Verify Up Front
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This article is part of the GLP Winner provider review series. At the time of writing, the provider reviewed here, Coby Health, is a GLP Winner partner, which means we have a commercial relationship with them. The review itself was written by a real patient who went through Coby Health's full process, from intake through prescription, and who received their GLP-1 medication under a clinician's care.
Some details about the reviewer are not shared to protect their privacy. GLP Winner pays the reviewer for their time. Coby Health did not pay for this review, did not see it before publication, and did not direct the reviewer's conclusions. We also review non-partner providers, including direct competitors of our partners, because the point of the series is to help you make a better decision for your own situation, not to push you toward any one company.
Have questions or concerns? Reach out to the team here.
Who is reviewing
I am a woman in my 50s from Michigan who has been on compounded tirzepatide for 6 months and is at a 5 mg/week dose. I found Coby Health while I was comparing providers and signed up to get my compounded tirzepatide shipped to my door. This is a review of my experience with Coby Health in my own words.
TL;DR
Coby Health is a telehealth provider that delivered fast (under three business days) with transparent pricing ($299 for 5mg) and unusually quick support, but the pharmacy isn’t named until you ask and there’s no real community, so it’s a better fit for GLP-1 patients not looking for community interactions, busy moms, or people not wanting to navigate an overly complex process. The text check ins and speed can keep up with busy lives and answer questions quickly.
The intake is asynchronous messaging only and there are no labs required. The pharmacy sourcing was not disclosed until I asked for it. Greenwich Rx is the pharmacy. The two things that set Coby Health apart: Coby Health sends weekly check-in texts, and it requires a follow-up about two weeks after you start with another short asynchronous medical questionnaire. As someone 6 months into my GLP-1 journey, this worked for me and I really appreciated the follow-up to make sure I am doing well.
Intake, timeline, and early impressions
Was the signup fast? Yes. The online questionnaire took me about nine minutes on my phone, in one sitting. The form ran roughly 15 to 20 questions on medical history, contraindications, and allergies, with a lighter pass on lifestyle, mental health and eating. No labs were requested or required. ID verification was a picture of my government ID.
My prescriber is an MD licensed in Michigan, named on the prescription. I never spoke with them over phone or video, but I did get a message from them when I was approved. I could not pick or change the medication, which is normal for an asynchronous provider. I was approved and a prescription was sent to the pharmacy without any back-and-forth first, it took about 90 minutes to be approved. Here is the part that is different from other telehealths, and that I appreciated:
- Weekly check-in texts. Coby Health sends a short text to check that everything is okay. It is light, but it is more proactive and helped remind me to check in with myself too, the responses help connect you with support if you need it in addition to always being able to use the portal.
- A required two-week follow-up. About two weeks after starting, Coby Health has you complete another short medical-questionnaire-style form, asynchronously. It is not a live consult, but it is a real check-in on how the medication is going, and I really appreciated that.

A portal message about the next appointment and how to get in touch.
Shipping, packaging, and temperature control
Was shipping fast? Yes. I placed the order Wednesday at 4:30 PM and the package was on my counter Friday at 5 PM, under three business days. Tracking was clear the whole way, with a link and an ETA.
The outer package was a plain padded envelope with no external branding, with a styrofoam box inside, so it was discreet. Inside the styrofoam box there was the medication pack with instructions, wipes, and syringes. The cold packs were mostly frozen on arrival and read 43°F at the surface. The safe transport range for unopened GLP-1 medication is 36°F to 46°F, so it arrived within range.

How it lands: a sealed FedEx pack on the doorstep. This is the order arriving.

The box opens to a Read First card on top, telling you to check the portal for your current dose before injecting.

Inside the FedEx mailer: the cooler box stamped Refrigerate Upon Arrival.

A closer look at the vial next to the prescription bottle and the Read First dosing card.
The vial was labeled compounded tirzepatide + B12, 10 mg / 0.5 mg per mL, 2 mL multi-dose, a reddish liquid. The beyond-use date was 8/2026, with the standard 28-day discard window from first puncture. The label listed it as a sterile injectable, and the patient name and prescriber matched my intake. The dispensing and compounding pharmacy named on the paperwork was Greenwich Rx. Coby Health says a certificate of analysis (COA) is available on request.

A 2 mL multi-dose vial, labeled for subcutaneous injection. One vial covers several weekly doses.
What came in the box:
- 1 multi-dose vial (2 mL)
- 10 insulin syringes (1 mL)
- 10 alcohol prep pads
- 1 single-page printed instruction sheet
- 1 generic compounded-tirzepatide patient information leaflet

The injection supplies: 31-gauge Easy Touch syringes, alcohol pads, the Greenwich Rx card, and the Read First sheet.

Shipped cold in a styrofoam cooler with Nordic Ice bricks, plus the tirzepatide patient drug information sheet.
What the first dose felt like
This is a maintenance dose for me, and the first injection from Coby Health’s vial felt consistent with shipments I have had from other compounded tirzepatide providers. Nothing unusual in the first week.
The B12 in this vial is cyanocobalamin, which is the red color in the liquid. I did not see additive options during intake and did not choose cyanocobalamin specifically — it was what arrived. When I asked Coby Health support about other additives, they confirmed glycine is available. Coby Health also offers a few separate injectable add-ons that are not compounded into the GLP-1 — NAD+, glutathione, and sermorelin. If you have a preference about your B12 form or want a specific additive on your vial, ask before the prescription is written. Coby Health did tell me you can switch your formulation later, which is worth knowing.
Interactions with the company
Was support responsive? Very. I contacted Coby Health support during the review window and replies came back in about 30 minutes, well under the 2-hour mark and faster than I expected. The portal is the main support channel. On top of that, the weekly check-in texts meant Coby Health reached out to me rather than only waiting for me to come to them.
The portal itself is a basic web dashboard with a dose log, a weight log, a side-effect log, and a support thread. It works, but it is minimal and not unique enough for me to switch from the tracking I already use on my Apple Watch and Oura ring.
Coby Health does have small social media accounts (Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and X), but they are light, so there isn’t much organic patient-to-patient conversation to find when you are doing your own research. On review platforms, Coby Health sits at about 4.7 stars across 67 reviews.

Coby Health offers communication outreach in the first few weeks to make sure you're enjoying your experience.
What prospective patients should pay attention to when evaluating
These are the questions worth asking of any compounded GLP-1 provider, not just Coby Health. The notes after each one are my findings for Coby Health specifically.
Clinical oversight. Did the provider ask real questions about your medical history, contraindications, and prior prescriptions?
Coby Health did, through a checklist-style questionnaire. It did not request labs, and there was no live back-and-forth via video or phone with my prescribing clinician other than messaging before the prescription went out. What it adds beyond a basic async flow is the weekly check-in text and the required two-week follow-up questionnaire.
Cold-chain reliability. Was the product shipped quickly, insulated well, and did it arrive cold?
Mine did, under three business days, two cold packs mostly frozen, 43°F at the surface, inside the safe range.
Transparency around pharmacies. Do you know which pharmacy is dispensing and compounding your medication, and is it licensed in your state?
With Coby Health, only partly. Greenwich Rx compounds and dispenses, but the pharmacy was not named before purchase. I had to ask support for it.
BUD (Beyond-Use Date) and pharmacy compliance. Does the printed BUD give you enough runway?
Mine was 8/2026, with the standard 28-day discard from first puncture which is plenty of room for my dosing schedule.
Communication. Are clinicians reachable and responsive?
Yes. Support replied in about 30 minutes, and the weekly texts and two-week follow-up form meant the provider checked in with me, not just the other way around. If you would know how to reach your provider with a question, Coby Health clears that bar.
My take
Coby Health met my expectations on the things I came for and missed on one I care about:
- Met: fast shipping (under three business days), cold-chain within range, flat $299 pricing that matched at checkout, easy self-serve cancellation, and quick (~30 minute) support combined with proactive weekly check-in texts and a required two-week follow-up questionnaire. I was very happy.
- Missed: The pharmacy was not disclosed before purchase unless asked.
Who Coby Health would be good for
Coby Health worked for me. Fast shipping, flat pricing, easy cancellation, quick support, and a little more proactive contact than a pure messaging-only provider. If you’re a returning GLP-1 patient who’s settled on a dose, who already knows what to look for on a dispensing label, and who wants a reliable refill pipeline with light check-ins rather than hands-on clinical care, you’ll probably feel similarly about it. I think it's also a good fit for busy folks who are looking for a provider that works at a speedy pace and also has check-ins to ensure your journey is going well.
If you’re new to GLP-1s and want a clinician talking to you on video or the phone, Coby Health may not be the best fit. The same goes if you want an active community of other patients. If you want a specific B12 form or additive on your vial, raise it with support before the prescription is written, not after.
Bottom line: Try with a mind to manage your own journey instead of being hand-held. Coby Health is a fast, fairly priced refill pipeline with better proactive contact than most async providers, but verify the pharmacy and ask about your formulation up front if those details are important to you.
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Frequently asked questions
Is Coby Health legit?
Coby Health is a legitimate telehealth provider offering compounded tirzepatide and compounded semaglutide. It requires a real intake, a prescription is written by an MD licensed in your state, and the medication is compounded and dispensed by a pharmacy (Greenwich Rx, in my case).
How much does Coby Health cost?
Coby Health was $299 for the 5mg dose per month and all the dosages matched the pricing on GLPWinner.com. The price I saw at signup matched what was charged at checkout, with no “starting at” bait or surprise upsells.
How fast does Coby Health ship?
My order arrived in under three business days (placed Wednesday afternoon, delivered Friday afternoon) with clear tracking and an ETA.
Does Coby Health require lab work?
No. Coby Health did not request or require labs. Intake was a checklist-style medical questionnaire, with no labs in the prescription process.
Which pharmacy does Coby Health use?
My medication was compounded and dispensed by Greenwich Rx, though yours may vary depending on where you are located. The pharmacy was not named before I purchased it, I had to ask support for it. A certificate of analysis (COA) is available on request.
Does Coby Health have provider check-ins?
Yes. Coby Health sends weekly check-in texts and requires a follow-up about two weeks after you start, which is another short asynchronous medical questionnaire. There is no live consultation, and you can’t pick or change your provider.
Can you cancel Coby Health easily?
Yes. Cancellation was self-serve and took a couple of clicks, with no requirement to call in or retention pressure. The subscription does auto-renew, so cancel before your next cycle if you want to stop.
What’s in the Coby Health vial?
For my provider prescribed medication, the vial included compounded tirzepatide with B12 (cyanocobalamin), at 10 mg / 0.5 mg per mL, in a 2 mL multi-dose vial. Glycine and other additives are available if you ask before the prescription is written, and Coby Health says you can switch your formulation later.
Is Coby Health good for beginners?
It can work, the platform does not have live consultations but the support are very quick to respond with any questions a new patient might have.
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