Zealthy Reviews
Honest patient reviews and ratings for Zealthy peptide therapy services.
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Our Verdict
Zealthy earns a 4.1/5 rating from 11 patient reviews, with pricing starting at $25/month. They offer async telehealth consultations.
Quick Facts
Consultation
Async Telehealth
Lab Testing
Not included
Peptides Offered
2
Shipping
3-5 business days
All Patient Reviews (11)
Saved me over $3,000 this year compared to going cash-pay
I ran the math after my first full year on Zealthy. Brand-name Zepbound at $25/month copay versus the $349/month I was quoted by Ro and Henry Meds for compounded tirzepatide. That's $3,888 in savings over 12 months — on the FDA-approved drug with a manufacturer's cold chain, not a compounded vial from a pharmacy I can't verify. I've lost 41 lbs over 14 months, titrated from 2.5mg up to 10mg. The prior auth process took about three weeks at the start and required going back for one additional document, but Zealthy handled all of it. For anyone with decent insurance this should be your first call.
March 22, 2026
No insurance, cash-pay price only revealed after I completed the intake
I don't have employer insurance. I came to Zealthy after seeing it recommended for GLP-1 access and completed the full intake — ID verification, medical history, the questionnaire. At the end of intake I was offered compounded semaglutide at $199/month. That price is not listed anywhere on the public website before you enroll. I compared it afterward: Ro is $149/month, Henry Meds is $149/month, Belle Health is lower. I understand Zealthy's value prop is the insurance pathway and they do that well from what I've read. But for someone without insurance, I spent 25 minutes on intake and committed identifying information before learning their cash-pay rate isn't competitive with the alternatives. This is a disclosure problem. Tell me the cash-pay price on the pricing page before I complete intake.
March 18, 2026
Got Wegovy covered by insurance — game changer
I was paying $350/month for compounded semaglutide before I found Zealthy. Their team handled my prior authorization and got Wegovy approved under my employer insurance. Now I pay a $25 copay. If you have decent insurance, try Zealthy before going the cash-pay route.
March 15, 2026
Prior auth denied — then Zealthy appealed and won
First prior authorization came back denied. United said GLP-1s weren't covered for my plan tier. Zealthy's team came back immediately with an appeal, submitted additional documentation including my HbA1c and metabolic panel, and reframed the request around comorbid risk factors rather than just weight loss. The appeal was approved six days later. Zepbound at a $30 copay. I've been on it four months and I'm down 27 lbs. The willingness to push back on a denial is what separates Zealthy from every other telehealth provider I've dealt with. Most of them would have just redirected me to the cash-pay page.
March 10, 2026
Insurance approval came through but the 7-week wait wasn't what I expected
The end result was good. Wegovy at $25/month copay through my BCBS plan. But the intake materials suggested two to three weeks for a prior auth decision. My approval came at week seven. Between weeks three and seven I sent four messages to support asking for status. The responses were polite but essentially confirmed the case was in queue. No actionable updates. When the approval did arrive, the provider team was quick to get the prescription to the pharmacy. I've been on it two months now and the weight loss is real — 11 lbs so far. For the long-term value I'll stay, but the timeline communication needs to match reality better. Tell people it could take six to eight weeks so they're not refreshing their inbox every day.
March 1, 2026
Insurance denied after three attempts — ended up on cash-pay without a clear price upfront
Zealthy tried three prior auth submissions with my Humana plan. I appreciate that they kept trying. After the third denial Humana confirmed my plan excludes GLP-1s for any weight-related indication and the exclusion is categorical. Zealthy then offered me the cash-pay compounded option. The compounded semaglutide program is $179/month. My provider is responsive and the medication is working — I've lost 9 lbs in six weeks. But I went from expecting a $25 copay to paying $179/month cash, and the transition from the insurance track to the cash track wasn't smooth. I wasn't told upfront what happens if insurance fails. If I'd known from the start that my plan type commonly gets denied, I might have skipped the six-week prior auth process and gone straight to cash-pay somewhere else.
February 28, 2026
Wegovy at $25 a month — I still can't believe it worked
I have Blue Cross through my employer and my plan technically covers Wegovy for obesity but I had no idea how to actually get it covered. Two other telehealth providers told me just to go cash-pay at $299/month. Zealthy was the first one that said let's try the insurance route. They submitted a prior authorization with my BMI documentation and the letter from my PCP, and it was approved in 11 days. My copay is $25 a month for brand-name Wegovy 0.5mg. Down 19 lbs in three months. For the first time I'm on the actual FDA-approved medication instead of a compounded version. If you have insurance and haven't tried the prior auth route, you need to do this before assuming you have to pay cash.
February 18, 2026
Insurance route works but the wait for prior auth is real
My prior authorization took 31 days from intake to approval. During that stretch I was in a kind of limbo — couldn't start treatment, had follow-up questions about whether my application was moving forward, and got one update from Zealthy's team at the two-week mark. They were responsive when I reached out directly but I would have preferred more proactive communication. Once the PA came through, $25/month for Wegovy, the experience has been smooth. Down 14 lbs in two months. If you need medication fast the insurance pathway is not the route — budget six weeks. If you're okay with a slower start to save significant money long-term, it pays off.
February 5, 2026
My employer insurance covered it — Zealthy figured that out, I didn't know
I came to Zealthy fully expecting to pay cash. My HR department had told me our plan didn't cover weight loss medications. Zealthy's intake process asked detailed questions about my plan type and they identified that while my plan excludes weight-loss-only coverage, it does cover GLP-1s prescribed for metabolic syndrome — which I qualify for based on my labs. That distinction matters enormously and I never would have found it on my own. Went from expecting $199/month to a $50 copay for brand-name Wegovy. The medication itself is working well — down 16 lbs in two months. The provider communication is async but responsive, usually same day.
January 29, 2026
Great for insured patients — I just wish they were clearer about cash-pay from the start
I came in with Cigna that doesn't cover GLP-1s for weight loss at all — a hard exclusion, confirmed multiple times. Zealthy was honest about it: they told me within 48 hours that my plan wasn't viable for the insurance pathway and offered the compounded semaglutide cash-pay route. What I didn't love is that the cash-pay pricing wasn't visible on the website before I enrolled. I had to get through intake to find out it was $179/month for compounded semaglutide. That's not a bad price — it's competitive — but it felt like they lead with the insurance value prop and don't want to talk about cash-pay until you're already in. I'm satisfied with the medication and provider quality. I just wanted to know the price before I started.
January 14, 2026
Needed a second submission but the provider stayed on it
Aetna kicked back my first prior auth request asking for additional diagnostic codes. My Zealthy provider revised the submission with clarifying documentation and a letter of medical necessity. Second submission was approved in eight days. Total time from intake to first dose was about five weeks. I'm four months in now on Zepbound 5mg — down 21 lbs. The $30 copay is the reason I stayed. What I'd improve: clearer upfront communication about how often first-round approvals succeed and what resubmission looks like. I spent two weeks worried the process had stalled when it was actually just in queue at Aetna. The provider's follow-through was solid; the status visibility was not.
December 19, 2025
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Zealthy legit?
Zealthy has 11 patient reviews with an average rating of 4.1/5. They offer async telehealth consultations. They are based in United States.
How much does Zealthy cost?
Zealthy pricing starts at $25/month. They offer 2 peptides including Semaglutide, Tirzepatide.
What peptides does Zealthy offer?
Zealthy offers 2 peptides: Semaglutide, Tirzepatide.
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