Maximus Reviews
Honest patient reviews and ratings for Maximus peptide therapy services.
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Our Verdict
Maximus earns a 4.0/5 rating from 11 patient reviews, with pricing starting at $149/month. They offer video telehealth consultations with included lab testing.
Quick Facts
Consultation
Video Telehealth
Lab Testing
Included
Peptides Offered
7
Shipping
3-5 business days
All Patient Reviews (11)
King Protocol plus semaglutide — six months in and the combination is working
I went into Maximus thinking I'd just address the low testosterone. My intake questionnaire flagged metabolic issues — high fasting glucose and extra weight around the midsection — and my provider suggested a conversation about adding GLP-1. I was skeptical about stacking medications but the clinical reasoning made sense: the visceral fat associated with obesity depresses testosterone, so addressing weight simultaneously is rational. I added semaglutide to the enclomiphene protocol at 0.25mg and have titrated up to 0.5mg. Six months out: testosterone 547 ng/dL from 301, down 18 lbs, fasting glucose normalized. The lab monitoring has kept everything tracked — I've had three follow-up panels and the provider adjusted both protocols based on results. This is closer to a real men's metabolic program than most telehealth services offer.
March 29, 2026
Annual billing locked me in; cancellation process was a problem
I enrolled in the annual plan after reading that the monthly rate comes down significantly on annual billing — and that's true. What the enrollment page doesn't emphasize is how difficult it is to cancel if the protocol doesn't work for you. Three months in, my testosterone response to enclomiphene was weak (similar numbers to where I started) and I wanted to pause and consult with my urologist before continuing. I requested a cancellation and was told annual plans are non-refundable after 30 days and that I was committed for the remainder of the year. Support escalated me twice without resolution. I'm not saying Maximus's protocol is bad — plenty of men respond well to enclomiphene. But the combination of an annual upfront commitment, a 30-day refund window, and limited cancellation recourse is a real risk that isn't obvious when you're reading the enrollment page. The clinical care I received was fine. The business terms, once you try to exit, are a different story. Read the cancellation policy before committing annually.
March 20, 2026
Testosterone up 340 points without shutting down my own production
My wife and I are trying to have a second child, so standard TRT was off the table — the fertility suppression is well-documented and I wasn't willing to risk it. My urologist mentioned enclomiphene as an alternative that stimulates your own production rather than replacing it externally. I found Maximus after research and their King Protocol is exactly that. The at-home test kit was straightforward — tube arrives, you do a finger-prick, mail it back. My total testosterone came back at 312 ng/dL before starting. Four months later I'm at 652 ng/dL. My provider confirmed LH and FSH are still elevated, which is the fertility-preservation signal you want. My wife is now pregnant. I can't attribute that entirely to the protocol, but the timing is exactly right. Maximus gets the enclomiphene protocol right. Men who need to preserve fertility while addressing low T have very few good telehealth options — this is one of them.
March 14, 2026
Protocol works fine — billing dispute took three weeks to resolve
The enclomiphene protocol itself has been effective. Testosterone from 298 to 531 ng/dL over four months, the at-home labs have been convenient, and my provider responses have been adequate. The problem was a billing error in month two. I was charged twice in the same billing cycle — once for a renewal and once for what appeared to be an erroneous second charge. I contacted support and was given a ticket number and a 3–5 business day resolution window. It actually took 22 days and four follow-up messages before the charge was credited. The customer service team was polite but clearly overwhelmed. I've seen other Maximus users mention billing issues in forums, so this doesn't appear to be a one-off. The clinical program is a three or four star experience. The support infrastructure is a two. If you enroll, watch your billing statements.
March 8, 2026
Switched from injectable TRT to enclomiphene — Maximus handled the transition well
I was on injectable testosterone cypionate for two years at a local men's health clinic. When my wife and I decided to try for children, my urologist told me to stop TRT. My testosterone cratered during the washout period — common after suppression. I found Maximus and their King Protocol for post-TRT recovery. The transition management was better than I expected for an async platform. My provider reviewed my lab history alongside the intake results and started me on enclomiphene at 12.5mg. Three months later my own production has recovered: testosterone at 498 ng/dL, LH elevated, FSH recovering. The at-home labs were essential for tracking this — I've had two panels and each one showed measurable progress. One star off because the first three weeks of messaging had a 48-hour response lag that made me anxious during a sensitive hormonal transition. Resolved since. Overall, Maximus is the right tool for this specific use case.
March 1, 2026
Enclomiphene didn't move my numbers enough — ended up needing standard TRT
I signed up for the King Protocol based on the fertility-preservation pitch and the clinical logic is sound — enclomiphene works by stimulating the pituitary rather than replacing testosterone externally. For some men, that's sufficient. For me, it wasn't. Three months in, my testosterone had only moved from 241 to 318 ng/dL. My provider agreed the response was suboptimal and we discussed switching to standard TRT. The transition to injectable testosterone was handled fine through the platform. I'm now at 612 ng/dL and feeling significantly better. My context: my urologist suspects partial primary hypogonadism — damage at the testicular level that limits how much LH stimulation can accomplish. Enclomiphene is the wrong tool for that. I don't fault Maximus for trying enclomiphene first; it's the appropriate first-line choice for most cases of secondary hypogonadism. But the three-month wait to establish it wasn't working added time I could have spent on a more effective protocol. Three stars — the program eventually got me where I needed to go, but the path was longer than it had to be.
February 25, 2026
Bundled plan covers everything I was managing across three separate services
Before Maximus, I was paying for a GLP-1 service, a separate TRT clinic, and getting ED medication through a mail-order pharmacy. Three login portals, three billing cycles, three sets of providers who had no visibility into each other's prescriptions. I moved to Maximus's higher-tier bundled plan and consolidated everything. Enclomiphene for testosterone, tirzepatide for weight management, and ED medication — all under one protocol reviewed by one provider who can see the full picture. Four months in: down 22 lbs, testosterone up from 298 to 589 ng/dL, and the interaction management has been noticeably more thoughtful because one provider is looking at everything. The annual billing was a mental hurdle — it's a meaningful upfront commitment — but the effective monthly rate beats what I was spending across three services. Men with multiple overlapping conditions are the exact use case this platform was built for.
February 18, 2026
Enclomiphene is working — the annual billing commitment is the real ask
Three months into the King Protocol. Testosterone at 519 ng/dL from a baseline of 331. Energy is better, the mental clarity that people describe with optimized testosterone is real. The at-home lab kit was painless and my results came back cleanly. What I'm less enthusiastic about is the annual billing structure. Maximus does save you money on the monthly rate if you pay annually, but locking in for a year before you know whether a hormonal protocol works for you is a lot of commitment. I asked support about the cancellation policy before enrolling and the answer was not especially clear. I stayed enrolled because the protocol is working — but men who are uncertain about whether enclomiphene is right for them should read the terms carefully before committing annually. Four stars because the clinical program is genuinely good; the business model asks for real upfront trust.
February 7, 2026
Community aspect is a real differentiator
The coaching calls and community are what keep me here. Semaglutide pricing is a bit high but the accountability and protocol guidance make up for it. Labs included is a nice touch.
January 28, 2026
At-home lab kit plus async intake — no wasted time
I've been to two in-person testosterone clinics over the past five years. Both required multiple visits — initial consult, then a separate lab draw, then another visit to review results — before prescribing anything. The whole process took six to eight weeks. Maximus did it in nine days. Test kit arrived in two days, I mailed it back, results were in the portal in four days, and my provider messaged me with a protocol recommendation two days after that. The async model works cleanly when the intake questionnaire is thorough, and Maximus's intake is detailed — it asked questions my in-person clinic didn't. I'm five months into the King Protocol, testosterone is 608 ng/dL from a starting point of 279, and I've had two follow-up lab panels included in my plan. The men's-only focus means nothing in the intake is generic — every question is relevant. I don't miss the clinic waiting rooms.
January 27, 2026
Solid testosterone protocol — wish there was a video check-in option at key milestones
Five months on the King Protocol. My testosterone went from 277 to 584 ng/dL. I'm sleeping better, my mood has stabilized, and I've noticed an improvement in gym recovery. The async intake model worked fine at the start — the questionnaire was thorough and my provider's initial protocol recommendation was well-reasoned. Where I've felt the limitation is at the six-week check-in. My provider and I exchanged a few messages about adjusting my dose, but that kind of nuanced conversation — symptoms, how I'm feeling, questions about the protocol mechanism — is hard to do efficiently through portal messaging. I'd pay extra for a 20-minute video call option at dose adjustment points. The platform doesn't offer that. Everything else is solid: at-home labs, responsive messaging most of the time, men's-focused intake. The async-only constraint is a genuine limitation for complex discussions.
January 14, 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Maximus legit?
Maximus has 11 patient reviews with an average rating of 4.0/5. They offer video telehealth consultations and include lab testing. Founded in 2021, they are based in Los Angeles, CA.
How much does Maximus cost?
Maximus pricing starts at $149/month. They offer 7 peptides including CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin, Semaglutide, Sermorelin, and 4 more.
What peptides does Maximus offer?
Maximus offers 7 peptides: CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin, Semaglutide, Sermorelin, BPC-157, TB-500, MK-677, Gonadorelin.
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