Medically reviewed by Dr. Golsa Ghasemzadeh, MD. Last updated April 2026.

:::takeaway

  • Membership: $149/mo (or $74/mo with annual prepay), plus medication costs
  • Total monthly cost: $223 to $600+ depending on medication and dose
  • Brand-name only: Wegovy (pen and pill), Zepbound, Foundayo (orforglipron), Ozempic, Saxenda
  • No compounded options available
  • Includes 1:1 nurse coaching, metabolic labs, insurance concierge, and app tracking
  • 4.4/5 on ConsumerAffairs (21,800+ reviews) :::

What Is Ro Body Program?

Ro is a telehealth company that has been around since 2017, and their Body Program is the weight loss arm of the operation. Unlike most GLP-1 telehealth platforms that focus on getting you a prescription as cheaply as possible, Ro positions itself as a full-service medical weight loss program.

That means you are not just getting a script. You are getting coaching, lab work, dose tracking, and an insurance concierge team. Whether all that extra stuff is worth the premium price is the real question, and we will get into it.

The short version: Ro is the "luxury SUV" of GLP-1 telehealth. You get a lot of features, but you pay for every single one of them.

Ro Body Pricing Breakdown

Let's talk numbers, because this is where Ro gets complicated.

Item Cost
Membership (first month) $39
Membership (monthly) $149/mo
Membership (annual prepay) $74/mo
Wegovy Pill (oral semaglutide) $149 intro, then $199-299/mo
Foundayo (orforglipron) $149 intro, then $199-299/mo
Zepbound KwikPen $299-449/mo
Wegovy Pen (injectable) $199-349/mo
Ozempic (off-label) $900-1,100/mo
At-home lab kit (optional) $75

So if you go with the Wegovy pill at $199/mo plus the $149 membership, you are looking at $348 per month. That is more than most people's car payment.

Go with Zepbound at $449/mo and you are north of $600 monthly. Annual prepay on the membership helps, but even at $74/mo you are still spending $273 to $523 per month depending on the drug.

For comparison, compounded semaglutide from other providers starts at $99 to $199 per month with no membership fee. That is a big gap.

How Ro Body Works

  1. Sign up and complete a health intake. You fill out a questionnaire covering your weight, medical history, goals, and medications. Takes about 15 minutes.
  2. Get matched with a licensed provider. Ro uses async consultations, so no video call is required. Your provider reviews your intake and reaches out if needed.
  3. Metabolic lab work. Ro includes Quest Diagnostics lab testing at no extra cost. You can also use an at-home kit for $75 if you prefer.
  4. Prescription and free delivery. If approved, your medication ships directly to you at no additional cost.
  5. Ongoing coaching and tracking. You get access to weekly 1:1 nurse coaching, up to 24 video sessions per year, and the Ro app for weight tracking, dose logging, and a curriculum covering nutrition, sleep, and exercise.

Medications Available at Ro

Ro's medication lineup is one of the biggest in telehealth, but it comes with a major caveat: everything is brand-name. No compounded options whatsoever.

Wegovy Pen (injectable semaglutide) is the classic. This is the FDA-approved injectable that put GLP-1 weight loss on the map. Ro charges $199 to $349/mo depending on your dose.

Wegovy Pill (oral semaglutide) launched in January 2026, and Ro was among the first telehealth platforms to offer it through a partnership with Novo Nordisk. If you hate needles, this is a big deal. Pricing starts at $149 intro, then $199 to $299 ongoing.

Foundayo (orforglipron) is the newest addition, added April 2026. This is an oral GLP-1 from Eli Lilly that does not require refrigeration and works differently from semaglutide. Pricing mirrors the Wegovy pill.

Zepbound KwikPen (tirzepatide) is the dual-action injectable that targets both GLP-1 and GIP receptors. It runs $299 to $449/mo through Ro, which is steep but competitive for brand-name tirzepatide.

Ozempic is available off-label at $900 to $1,100/mo, and Saxenda (liraglutide) rounds out the list. Neither is a great value through Ro unless you specifically need those drugs.

What Works: Ro's Strengths

The insurance concierge is genuinely useful. Most telehealth GLP-1 platforms leave you to fight your own insurance battles. Ro's concierge team handles prior authorization paperwork for you. If your insurer covers Wegovy or Zepbound, this service alone could save you hundreds per month.

Coaching goes beyond a chatbot. You get actual 1:1 time with nurses, plus up to 24 video sessions annually. The curriculum covering nutrition, sleep, and emotional health is more robust than what you will find at most competitors. If accountability matters to you, this is meaningful.

The medication variety is impressive. Offering both injectable and oral options for semaglutide, plus tirzepatide, plus the brand-new orforglipron, gives Ro one of the widest formularies in the space.

Lab work is included. Quest Diagnostics metabolic testing at no extra charge is a nice touch. Most competitors either skip labs entirely or charge $100+ for them.

The FDA crackdown validated their approach. Ro's decision to go brand-name-only looked expensive a year ago. Now, with the FDA tightening regulations on compounding pharmacies, it looks prescient. You will never have a supply disruption or regulatory scare with brand-name meds.

Watch Out For: Ro's Limitations

The total cost is hard to stomach. There is no way around it. When you add a $149/mo membership to medication costs of $199 to $449, the monthly bill gets heavy. You are paying a premium for services you may or may not use fully.

No compounded options. This is a dealbreaker for budget-conscious patients. Compounded semaglutide starts at $99/mo elsewhere, and compounded tirzepatide at $133/mo. If you are comfortable with compounded medications and want to save money, check our GLP-1 cost guide for alternatives.

Cancellation complaints are real. The BBB complaints and Trustpilot reviews (3.7/5 with 3,198 reviews) consistently mention difficulty canceling. The $39 initial fee is also non-refundable, even if you are not approved for treatment.

You are paying for coaching whether you use it or not. The membership fee covers coaching, video sessions, and the curriculum. If you just want a prescription, you are overpaying for features you will never touch. Simpler platforms like Hims might be a better fit.

Who Should Use Ro Body (and Who Shouldn't)

Ro is a strong fit if you:

  • Have insurance that may cover GLP-1 medications and want help navigating prior auth
  • Value structured coaching, accountability, and a full medical team
  • Want brand-name, FDA-approved medications only
  • Prefer oral GLP-1 options like the Wegovy pill or Foundayo
  • Can comfortably budget $300 to $500 per month for weight loss

Ro is probably not for you if you:

  • Are paying entirely out of pocket and need to minimize cost
  • Just want a prescription without the coaching and extras
  • Are comfortable with compounded GLP-1 medications
  • Have had negative experiences canceling subscription services

Not sure which provider is right for your situation? Take our free quiz to get a personalized recommendation.

The Bottom Line

Ro Body is the most feature-rich GLP-1 telehealth program on the market. The insurance concierge, nurse coaching, included lab work, and wide medication selection make it a legitimate medical weight loss program, not just a prescription mill.

But that quality comes at a price that puts it out of reach for many people. At $300 to $600+ per month all-in, Ro costs two to four times more than basic telehealth platforms offering compounded GLP-1s. The value proposition only clicks if you will actually use the coaching, or if the insurance concierge saves you enough to offset the membership fee.

If budget is your primary concern, Ro is not the answer. If you want the most hands-on, brand-name-only experience and can afford it, Ro delivers.

:::info All GLP-1 medications require evaluation by a licensed healthcare provider. Ro connects you with licensed providers in your state who review your medical history before prescribing. Individual results vary, and GLP-1 medications are not appropriate for everyone. :::

Sources

  1. Ro Body Program official site
  2. ConsumerAffairs Ro reviews
  3. Trustpilot Ro reviews
  4. FDA GLP-1 prescribing information
  5. Novo Nordisk Wegovy pill press release, Jan 2026