Provider profile

Eden review

Eden publicly positions itself as a telehealth marketplace that publicly markets compounded GLP-1 medication access. The details below explain what to verify on its own site, because we have not independently confirmed Eden's current pricing, pharmacy, or state availability.

Pricing data availability note

We have not independently verified Eden’s pricing. We do not publish estimated or invented prices. When we confirm figures on Eden’s own site, this page will show them with a date and a primary-source tag, exactly as our verified provider pages do.

What to check

What Eden discloses — and what isn’t confirmed

How Eden publicly positions itself (not independently verified): a telehealth marketplace that publicly markets compounded GLP-1 medication access.

Verified by us: nothing yet for Eden this cycle — pricing, pharmacy, and state availability are unconfirmed.

Not publicly disclosed / to confirm on its site: the specific compounding pharmacy or 503B facility, whether a product is compounded (not FDA-approved) or FDA-approved, dose-based pricing, membership/shipping/consult fees, cancellation and refund terms, and exact state availability.

Pharmacy transparency checklist

Ask Eden before enrolling

• Which specific pharmacy (503A) or outsourcing facility (503B) fills the prescription, and is it named?

• Is the product compounded (not FDA-approved) or the FDA-approved branded drug?

• What is the documented clinical basis for compounding rather than the approved product?

• What is the total monthly cost at my maintenance dose, including all fees?

• Is the prescribing provider licensed for patients in my state, and is shipping refrigerated?

See the full pharmacy transparency checklist and how disclosed providers compare.

Regulatory status

Compounded GLP-1 in 2026

The FDA resolved the tirzepatide (Dec 2024) and semaglutide (Feb 2025) shortages, and wind-down deadlines passed in 2025. On Apr 30, 2026 the FDA proposed excluding these drugs from the 503B bulks list (comment closed Jun 29, 2026). Patient-specific 503A compounding continues only narrowly, and cost alone is not a clinical need. Full regulatory status →

State availability

Availability caveat

We have not verified which states Eden serves. Availability may vary by state and prescribing basis; confirm on its site and check that the prescriber and dispensing pharmacy are licensed for your state. See state notes.

FAQ

Eden questions

Does Eden sell FDA-approved or compounded GLP-1?

Confirm on Eden’s own site. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved and are not the same as Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, or Mounjaro; FDA-approved products are reviewed for safety, effectiveness, and quality. We have not independently verified which Eden offers.

How much does Eden cost?

We have not independently verified Eden’s pricing and do not publish estimates. Check its site for the price at your maintenance dose, including any membership, shipping, or consult fees, and compare total cost — see total monthly cost.

Is Eden legitimate and safe?

We can’t vouch for any provider we haven’t verified. Confirm the prescriber’s license, the named dispensing pharmacy, and whether the product is FDA-approved or compounded. Use our red-flags guide and transparency checklist.

References

How we’ll verify Eden

Status. Transparency-first profile, published 2026-06-25. Pricing/pharmacy/state data for Eden not yet independently verified; no referral relationship.