TrimRX Compounded Tirzepatide Review (2026): Flat $279 Pricing, Secret Discounts, a Warm Late Delivery, and a Vial Label That Didn’t Match My Name
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This article is part of the GLP Winner provider review series. At the time of writing, the provider reviewed here, TrimRX, 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 TrimRX’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. TrimRX 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. I saw my daughter have good results and decided to start by myself. I saw a TrimRX ad on TikTok and became a patient. This is a review of my experience with TrimRX in my own words.
TL;DR
TrimRX is a telehealth provider with genuinely transparent flat pricing ($279/month for compounded tirzepatide, the same across every dose tier, and you’re only charged once the prescription is approved), but I felt the support, delivery, and transparency were very lacking. The intake process included a lot of special offers and sales language instead of focusing on clinical intake. One hack I’ll discuss more below is that, if you decline initial offers of products, the price will drop several times. The key is to keep declining while going through the process. Then the vial arrived three days behind the original tracking estimate, warm at 65°F in a plain box, and the patient name printed on the dispensing label was not mine. It was my daughter’s.
The intake is asynchronous messaging only and there are no labs required. The pharmacy was not disclosed before purchase, and when I asked support to name it and send a certificate of analysis (CoA), they responded over a week later to decline providing a CoA. The only place I ever saw a pharmacy named was the vial itself: “Compounded by CasaPharmaRx.”
When I reported the warm and late delivery, I got one automated reply telling me it was fine and then another update about a week later assuring me the medication was safe. For me, this is a provider that is trying to get people to buy as much as possible and then has not figured out how to support patients.
What is the TrimRX intake like?
Was the signup fast? Yes. The online questionnaire took me about 12 minutes on my phone, in one sitting. The form ran roughly 20 questions on medical history and contraindications, with normal questions for a doctor to ask, like health histories and questions about my motivations and goals.
It felt like an old school infomercial: I had already decided to buy it, and I felt like I was being sold a lot in the intake. The flow opens by promising two to three pounds of weight loss per week and asking how fast I want to go. It calls itself the “#1 ranked weight loss program on Yahoo Health” and stacks Forbes, Yahoo, and New York Post logos near the top. Between the medical questions, it also kept serving before-and-after photos of specific people to show the results you could have.
How do you get a TrimRX discount?
Here’s a hack on how to get more TrimRX discounts. At the end of the questions, they had “exclusive offers” for NAD, Sermorelin, and Zofran. They all state initially that they are discounted, but if you said no it would be discounted again and offered to you at a lower price.

The NAD+ add-on. Decline once and the "personal discount" jumps from 30% to 50% off, $209 down to $149.

Sermorelin followed the same script: say no and the price fell from $181 to $129.

Zofran, labeled "Offer 3 of 3," dropped from $69 to $49 once I declined the first price.
Two structural things stood out, and not in a good way:
- There was no ID verification of any kind. Your name goes in at the very end, almost as an afterthought.
- My prescriber is listed as an MD/NP licensed in Michigan and is named on the prescription, but I never saw a bio before approval, never spoke with them, and can’t pick or change them.
If those things are important for you, consider this before you move forward.
How fast does TrimRX ship?
Was shipping fast? No. The original UPS tracking said delivery Friday, and the package didn’t land until the following Monday. It was shipped with UPS Next Day shipping. When it arrived, it was not cold and the temperature measured at 65°F.
The outer package was a plain white cardboard box with a styrofoam insert, and was discreet. Inside was a single multi-dose vial and an ice pack, warm to the touch and reading 65°F at the surface. The vial was in only a soft bubble wrap pouch, not a bottle. The safe transport range for unopened GLP-1 medication is 36°F to 46°F, and the vial’s own label says “Store Refrigerated 36–46°F,” so it arrived well outside that range. Tracking existed but the estimate was wrong by several days. A week after I reached out to support about this issue, TrimRX support did respond to say their medication had been tested to be safe for use if refrigerated immediately, but some may feel uneasy with this process.

How it arrived: a styrofoam cooler with a single gel pack, the vial, syringes, and a CasaPharmaRx card.

The vial came in just a soft bubble wrap pouch, not a rigid bottle or sleeve.
The vial was labeled compounded tirzepatide with B12, a 2 mL multi-dose vial, with a beyond-use date of 11/23/26 and the standard 28-day discard window from first puncture. The label listed it as a sterile injectable and named the pharmacy in small print: “Compounded by CasaPharmaRx.”
Here is the part every prospective patient should check on their own order: the patient name printed on my dispensing label was not mine. Confirming that the name, medication, and prescriber on the label are actually yours is the first thing you should do on arrival, and mine failed that check. I asked TrimRX for a corrected script and official pharmacy documentation and did not get either. The name was my daughter’s name and not mine. This likely happened because I used her email at sign up and did not have an opportunity to provide ID verification, but all the information entered was mine, including name and health history.

The dispensing label (name blurred here). Check the name, drug, and prescriber the moment it arrives. Mine were not right.

The vial itself: compounded tirzepatide 2.5mg/0.5ml with B12 (cyanocobalamin), a 2 mL multi-dose vial.
What came in the box:
- 1 multi-dose vial (2 mL)
- 10 insulin/draw syringes (1 mL)
- 10 alcohol prep pads

Everything in the box: a med-info sheet, 10 alcohol prep pads, 10 syringes, the vial, and the pharmacy card.
Was TrimRX support responsive?
Was support responsive? No. Support runs through the portal and WhatsApp. Throughout my experience, the median response was more than seven days. I flagged the late, warm delivery on June 8 and got an automated reply two minutes later telling me it was fine. I followed up immediately asking for a new script or official pharmacy documentation, and heard nothing useful until over a week later.
I requested a certificate of analysis but never received it, and was told days later they cannot provide it. I called CasaPharma about the meds being warm, and they never answered. I left a voicemail that was never returned.

The support reply after I flagged the warm delivery: stable per CasaPharmaRx data, refrigerate right away.
The portal is a basic web dashboard with the essentials and a message thread, minimal. Support did respond to me with different messages via the portal, texts, and WhatsApp, and you cannot see the threads all together in one place. TrimRX leans heavily on marketing, but there’s no real patient community and not much organic patient-to-patient conversation to find when you do your own research.

The patient portal: treatment status, shipping, and a downloadable prescription order under Medical Files.
What prospective patients should pay attention to when evaluating
These are the questions worth asking of any compounded GLP-1 provider, not just TrimRX. The notes after each one are my findings for TrimRX specifically.
Clinical oversight. Did the provider ask real questions about your medical history, contraindications, and prior prescriptions?
Somewhat, through a checklist-style questionnaire of about 20 questions similar to any doctor’s appointment.
Cold-chain reliability. Was the product shipped quickly, insulated well, and did it arrive cold?
No on all three. It arrived several days behind the tracking estimate, in a plain box with a foam insert, with the gel pack warm at 65°F above the 36–46°F range the label itself requires.
Transparency around pharmacies. Do you know which pharmacy is dispensing and compounding your medication, and is it licensed in your state?
No. The pharmacy was not named before purchase, and support declined to confirm it or provide a CoA when I asked. The only place I saw CasaPharmaRx was the vial. I also contacted Casa about the warm meds and never heard back from them.
BUD (Beyond-Use Date) and pharmacy compliance. Does the printed BUD give you enough runway?
The vial read 11/23/26 with the standard 28-day discard from first puncture, which is adequate runway.
Communication. Are clinicians reachable and responsive?
No. Support replies took more than a week and there is no clinician you can actually reach. If you’d need to contact your provider with a real question, TrimRX did not clear that bar for me.
My take
Who TrimRX would be good for
I’ll be honest that this is hard to evaluate the way I normally would. The flat, dose-independent pricing is the one feature I’d point a returning, price-focused patient toward. However, it would be difficult to recommend anyone to a place without clinical responses and that ships warm products, so anyone who uses TrimRX should feel comfortable with those risks.
Life hack for those who do try TrimRX: When possible, decline offers of products as much as possible, as you’re likely to be offered the same product at a lower cost than before, saving you some money without any additional work.

The add-on pricing I was shown: each product started at a list price, then dropped 30% and again to 50% off as I kept declining. Decline twice and NAD+ went from $299 to $149, Sermorelin from $259 to $129, and Zofran from $99 to $49.
Who TrimRX would be a bad fit for
TrimRX is likely to be difficult to navigate for a person new to GLP-1s or with a low risk tolerance. Even veterans of the telehealth space may feel uncomfortable with the lack of support, the mixup in patient details, and the poor shipping conditions of the medication.
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Frequently asked questions
Is TrimRX legit?
TrimRX is a telehealth provider offering compounded tirzepatide. It requires a real medical intake, a prescription is written by a clinician (listed as an MD/NP licensed in your state), and the medication is compounded and dispensed by a pharmacy (CasaPharmaRx, in my case).
How much does TrimRX cost?
TrimRX was $279/month for tirzepatide ($399 list, with a $120 “Join” coupon applied), and the same price covered every dose tier. The number I saw at signup matched what was set up at checkout, and you’re only charged once the prescription is approved. Be aware the checkout pushes paid add-ons (NAD+, Sermorelin, Zofran) whose prices drop as you decline them.
Does TrimRX have a discount or coupon?
In my experience, yes, indirectly. The base tirzepatide price I saw was $279/month ($399 list with a $120 “Join” coupon applied). The checkout also pushes paid add-ons (NAD+, Sermorelin, Zofran), and the offered price drops each time you decline, so declining repeatedly lowered the price I was shown.
How fast does TrimRX ship?
Mine was slow. The tracking estimate said Friday and it didn’t arrive until the following Monday, with the package arriving warm, at 65°F.
Does TrimRX require lab work?
No. TrimRX did not request or require labs. Intake was a checklist-style medical questionnaire, with no labs in the prescription process and no ID verification.
Which pharmacy does TrimRX use?
My vial said “Compounded by CasaPharmaRx.” The pharmacy was not named before I purchased, and support would not confirm it or provide a certificate of analysis when I asked. Yours may vary by location.
Does TrimRX have provider check-ins?
No. There is a support chat in the portal but I got very slow responses and not many answers to questions.
Can you cancel TrimRX easily?
Yes. Cancellation was self-serve and took a couple of clicks. The subscription auto-renews, so cancel before your next cycle if you want to stop.
What’s in the TrimRX vial?
For my prescribed medication, the vial was compounded tirzepatide with B12 (cyanocobalamin), in a 2 mL multi-dose vial. I was not offered a choice of formulation at intake.
Is TrimRX good for beginners?
I would not recommend it for beginners. In my experience support did not respond to questions, which is exactly the kind of help a new patient is most likely to need.
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