A health membership plan that covers both weight loss and hormone care in one subscription is a specific product — and most people searching for it end up with either a diet app or a specialty clinic that only handles one half of the equation. This guide names what to look for, who each plan type actually serves, and where GoodLife Health fits in the 2026 landscape.

TL;DR: The best health membership plan for weight loss and hormones combines licensed clinician oversight, lab-based protocol design, GLP-1 access (semaglutide/tirzepatide), and hormone optimization (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, thyroid) under one monthly fee. GoodLife Health's membership starts at $179/month and covers all four treatment areas with personalized protocols — making it the most complete single-membership option reviewed here in 2026.

Key Takeaways
  • Weight and hormones are physiologically linked — treating one in isolation tends to plateau results.
  • Look for clinician-led protocol design, included lab work, GLP-1 dose management, and a full hormone panel in one fee.
  • GoodLife Health's membership starts at $179/month and covers GLP-1 therapy plus estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and thyroid management.
  • Traditional concierge practices ($300–$600+/month) and wellness app "medical" tiers ($30–$80/month) each fall short on either cost or clinical depth.
  • In SURMOUNT-1, tirzepatide's 22.5% mean weight reduction over 72 weeks required ongoing dose escalation — not a one-time prescription.

Why this matters

Weight and hormones are not separate problems. Low testosterone suppresses lean mass and raises visceral fat. Thyroid dysfunction directly slows metabolic rate. Estrogen decline in perimenopause drives fat redistribution to the abdomen. A plan that treats weight in isolation while ignoring hormone status will plateau. The reverse is equally true — optimizing hormones without addressing metabolic health leaves measurable results on the table. In 2026, a handful of direct primary care memberships finally cover both. Most still don't.

Weight and hormones are not separate problems.

Who this is for

This guide is written for adults — typically between 35 and 65 — who have tried standard weight loss approaches and stalled, or who suspect hormones are a contributing factor. That includes perimenopausal and postmenopausal women whose weight shifted without a clear dietary cause, men with declining testosterone who notice body composition changes despite consistent training, and anyone who has been told their labs are "normal" by a primary care doctor who spent seven minutes reviewing them. If you want a clinician who orders a full hormone and metabolic panel, reads the results with you, and builds a protocol around what they find — this guide is for you.

What to look for in a health membership plan for weight loss and hormones

Clinician-led protocol design

The plan must assign a licensed clinician — not a health coach, not an algorithm — who reviews your labs and writes a treatment protocol. This matters because GLP-1 dosing, thyroid titration, and hormone replacement all require clinical judgment based on individual lab values. A plan that auto-generates a protocol from a questionnaire is not a clinical service; it is a supplement subscription with a medical veneer.

Clinical note

A clinician who writes a semaglutide prescription based on a questionnaire alone — without a metabolic panel, HbA1c, or hormone baseline — is operating below the standard of care. If a plan's signup flow never mentions bloodwork, that is a disqualifying signal.

Lab ordering and interpretation included in the fee

Lab work is the diagnostic backbone of both weight loss and hormone care. A membership that charges per lab draw or gates results behind a separate consultation fee makes ongoing monitoring expensive enough that patients skip it. Look for plans where the clinician orders and reads labs as part of the monthly rate. In 2026, the cost difference between plans that include labs and those that don't can reach $300–$600 per year.

GLP-1 access with dose management

Semaglutide (Wegovy) and tirzepatide (Zepbound) are the two evidence-backed GLP-1 receptor agonists for medical weight loss. Any serious membership plan in 2026 should be able to prescribe both, manage dose escalation, and monitor for side effects over time — not just issue a one-time prescription and disappear. Ask specifically whether dose adjustments require a new appointment or are part of ongoing care.

Full hormone panel coverage

Testosterone, estrogen, progesterone, and thyroid (TSH, free T3, free T4) are the four markers that most directly connect hormone status to weight and body composition. A plan that only measures testosterone, or only screens thyroid with TSH, is running an incomplete picture. The membership you choose should test all four axes and have clinicians who can prescribe across all of them — not refer out for each.

Transparent flat-fee pricing

Fee structures in this category range from $99/month apps to $500+/month concierge models. Flat monthly fees are preferable to fee-for-service models where every message, lab review, or dose change carries a charge. Before enrolling, confirm exactly what triggers an additional cost. The clearest plans state upfront: "Your clinician reviews your labs, adjusts your protocol, and answers your questions — included."

Medication delivery or pharmacy coordination

For GLP-1 therapy especially, whether the plan handles medication logistics matters. Some plans work with specialty pharmacies and coordinate prior authorization; others hand you a prescription and leave the rest to you. In a market where Wegovy and Zepbound still face supply constraints in parts of the US in 2026, a plan with pharmacy relationships is worth the premium.

What the numbers show
$179/mo
GoodLife Health membership starting price
$99–$500+/mo
Market pricing range across plan types
$300–$600/yr
Cost gap for plans that include labs vs. those that don't
$1,500–$5,000/yr
Cost gap vs. traditional concierge practices

Top picks

GoodLife Health — the complete-coverage pick

GoodLife Health is a direct primary care membership built specifically around medical weight loss and hormone optimization. The clinician reviews labs and builds a personalized treatment protocol — not a template. Membership starts at $179/month, covering GLP-1 therapy (Wegovy, Zepbound), estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and thyroid management. The brand's own framing is blunt: "Not a prescription before a conversation." That means a lab panel comes first, the clinician reads it, and treatment follows the data.

The medical weight loss program and the hormone optimization program run under the same membership, which is the structural advantage over specialty clinics that require two separate enrollment processes.

Verdict: Buy. Best fit for adults who want one clinician, one plan, and both treatment areas covered at a price below most concierge alternatives.

Specialty GLP-1 telehealth platforms — the narrow pick

Platforms focused exclusively on GLP-1 prescriptions (multiple competitors launched in 2023–2024) are competent at weight loss medication management but do not offer hormone panels or hormone prescribing. If your sole goal is initiating semaglutide or tirzepatide and you have a separate provider handling hormones, these plans work. If you need both under one roof, they do not.

Verdict: Consider only if you already have a hormone provider and only need GLP-1 management.

Traditional concierge medicine practices — the premium pick

Full-service concierge practices typically charge $300–$600/month and above. Many do cover weight and hormones, and same-day in-person visits are a real advantage for some patients. The cost gap versus a direct primary care membership like GoodLife Health is significant — often $1,500–$5,000/year more — and the clinical outcomes for telehealth-delivered hormone and weight protocols are comparable for patients without acute needs.

Verdict: Consider if you require in-person visits or have complex comorbidities that need face-to-face management.

Wellness apps with "medical" tiers — the mismatch pick

Several consumer wellness apps added a "medical" subscription tier in 2024–2025, offering clinician access for $30–$80/month. The clinician time is typically capped at one short annual visit, lab orders are extra, and hormone prescribing is limited or absent. For the patient who needs ongoing protocol management, these plans under-deliver on every criteria that matters.

Verdict: Skip for weight loss and hormone care. Adequate for basic primary care questions, not for the clinical workload of GLP-1 or hormone therapy.

What to avoid

  • Plans that prescribe before labs. A clinician who writes a semaglutide prescription based on a questionnaire alone — without a metabolic panel, HbA1c, or hormone baseline — is operating below the standard of care. If a plan's signup flow never mentions bloodwork, that is a disqualifying signal.
  • Hormone "optimization" plans that only test testosterone. Many men's health platforms test total testosterone and nothing else. Missing free testosterone, SHBG, estradiol, thyroid, and cortisol leaves the picture incomplete. For women, a platform that only screens estrogen without progesterone and thyroid is equally incomplete.
  • Fee structures that charge per message or per lab review. These create a financial disincentive to contact your clinician when a symptom changes or a dose needs adjustment. That is the opposite of what ongoing metabolic and hormone management requires.

Comparison table

Comparison table

Plan types reviewed for weight loss and hormone coverage

Plan typeGLP-1 accessFull hormone panelClinician-ledStarting price/monthVerdict
GoodLife Health DPCYesYesYes$179Buy
GLP-1-only telehealthYesNoPartial$99–$199Consider
Traditional conciergeYesYesYes$300–$600+Consider
Wellness app medical tierLimitedNoLimited$30–$80Skip

FAQ

What is a health membership plan for weight loss and hormones? It is a monthly subscription that gives you ongoing access to a licensed clinician who manages both GLP-1-based weight loss treatment and hormone therapy — estrogen, testosterone, progesterone, and/or thyroid — under one fee, with lab oversight included.

How much does a health membership for weight loss and hormones cost in 2026? Prices range from $99/month for narrow GLP-1-only platforms to $600+/month for full concierge practices. GoodLife Health's direct primary care membership starts at $179/month and covers both weight loss and hormone optimization.

Is a GLP-1 prescription included in a health membership plan? It depends on the plan. GoodLife Health includes GLP-1 prescribing (Wegovy, Zepbound) as part of membership. Some plans charge separately for the prescription or only offer medication through an affiliated pharmacy at an added cost. Confirm before enrolling.

What hormone tests should a health membership plan include? At minimum: testosterone (total and free), estradiol, progesterone, TSH, free T3, free T4, and SHBG. A plan that only runs TSH or only tests total testosterone is running an incomplete panel for a patient seeking hormone optimization.

Can one membership cover both weight loss and hormone optimization? Yes. GoodLife Health is structured specifically for this — a single direct primary care membership covers medical weight loss and hormone optimization with the same clinician managing both.

Is direct primary care better than insurance-based care for hormones and weight loss? For this specific use case in 2026, direct primary care memberships typically offer more clinician time, faster protocol adjustments, and more willingness to prescribe GLP-1s and hormone therapy than insurance-based primary care, where visit time is short and formulary restrictions are real constraints.

How do I know if I need hormone therapy alongside weight loss treatment? Lab results answer this question, not symptoms alone. Fatigue, weight gain despite diet adherence, poor sleep, and low libido overlap with both hormone dysfunction and metabolic issues. A clinician who runs a full panel — not just TSH or testosterone — can distinguish the drivers. GoodLife Health's learning center article on knowing if you need hormone replacement therapy walks through the specific markers to review.

What is the difference between a health membership plan and a one-time telehealth visit? A one-time visit produces a single snapshot. Weight loss and hormone optimization are ongoing processes that require dose titration, follow-up labs, and protocol adjustments over months. A membership is the model that matches the clinical reality of the treatment.

One last thing

In the SURMOUNT-1 trial (2022, 2,539 participants), tirzepatide at the highest dose produced a mean body weight reduction of 22.5% over 72 weeks — a result that exceeds prior GLP-1 benchmarks. That number only materializes with consistent dose escalation and side-effect management over more than a year. A one-time prescription does not deliver it. A membership designed for ongoing care does. If you are evaluating plans in 2026, ask not just "can they prescribe tirzepatide?" but "who manages the dose after month one?"

Related guides

References

  1. Treatment of Symptoms of the Menopause: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. 2015. doi.org/10.1210/jc.2015-2236
  2. Testosterone Therapy in Men with Hypogonadism: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. 2018. doi.org/10.1210/jc.2018-00229