How Sipra compares
Honest comparisons with the other weight loss, hormone, and lab companies. Real prices, what each membership covers, and where each one wins. Updated for 2026.
Weight loss, men’s, and women’s health
28 prescription comparisons

Sipra vs Hims
Hims made GLP-1 feel easy. The fine print is what you pay once you need more than one thing.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Ro
Ro will fight your insurance for branded Wegovy. Worth it, until you add the membership on top.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Noom
Noom built the habit app everyone knows. We weigh whether the meds and membership justify the price.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Found
Real obesity medicine depth, but the price can climb with your dose and labs cost extra.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Eden
Eden's ninety nine dollar compounded price looks unbeatable, until you add the membership it requires.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Henry Meds
Henry keeps dosing flat and simple. We do the math on what that simplicity actually costs.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Mochi Health
A dietitian in the loop and flat dosing. We compare what a single membership really covers.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Calibrate
Calibrate's $199/mo buys coaching, but the GLP-1 is a separate insurance bill, so here is what you actually pay versus one Sipra membership.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs LifeMD
LifeMD sells branded GLP-1s with insurance help, but its base fee, program fee, and drug cost stack up fast.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs PlushCare
PlushCare splits weight loss into a membership, a per visit fee, and a pharmacy bill, so the real cost hides in three places.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Sesame
Sesame's marketplace looks cheap per visit, but subscription, medication, and each appointment are billed separately.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Ivim Health
Ivim's posted prices look clean until the $75 monthly membership stacks on top of every medication package.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs WeightWatchers
WeightWatchers sells the coaching and bills the branded GLP-1 separately, so see what you really pay once the medication is added back in.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs eMed
eMed ships branded Wegovy with at-home blood testing, but stacks a $149 membership on dose-priced medication that climbs as you go.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Form Health
Form Health gives you a real obesity doctor and dietitian, but $299 covers visits only, not medication.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Zealthy
Zealthy's insurance team can chase branded coverage, but its membership covers weight loss only. See the real all-in math.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Medvi
Medvi's flat semaglutide price is fair, but it bills every 28 days and covers weight loss only.
Read the comparison ›Weight loss
Sipra vs Twin Health
Twin Health can be free through your employer, but its $215 direct pay plan leaves out the medication and only covers metabolic health.
Read the comparison ›Men's health
Sipra vs RexMD
RexMD wins on one cheap ED script, but see what stacking per-condition fees really costs versus one membership.
Read the comparison ›Men's health
Sipra vs Rugiet
Rugiet's 3-in-1 sublingual ED troche is genuinely distinctive, but you pay a fresh subscription for every condition.
Read the comparison ›Men's health
Sipra vs Maximus
Maximus does one thing deeply, testosterone for men, but every protocol is billed on its own with no shared membership.
Read the comparison ›Men's health
Sipra vs Hone Health
Hone's at-home lab kit is convenient, but tiered membership and dose based medication pricing add up.
Read the comparison ›Men's health
Sipra vs Blokes
Blokes bundles TRT, labs, and coaching into one flat plan, but every extra therapy is a separate bill. See where that leaves you.
Read the comparison ›Women's health
Sipra vs Winona
Winona nails menopause HRT alone, but the moment your health needs a second thing, one membership starts to matter.
Read the comparison ›Women's health
Sipra vs Midi Health
Midi wins on insurance but bills per visit and treats menopause only. Here is the honest tradeoff.
Read the comparison ›Women's health
Sipra vs Evernow
Evernow is a menopause specialist, but its $49/mo membership and insurance-dependent medication cover only half of what a household needs.
Read the comparison ›Women's health
Sipra vs Alloy
Alloy's menopause-certified doctors are a real draw, but its per-product billing and separate weight fee are where the math turns.
Read the comparison ›Women's health
Sipra vs Gennev
Gennev takes insurance and pairs you with a dietitian, but every visit and every refill lands as its own bill.
Read the comparison ›Labs and testing
19 lab comparisons

Sipra vs Function Health
One hundred plus biomarkers twice a year, and no physician to treat what they find. Here is the tradeoff.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs Superpower
Two hundred dollars for a year of labs sounds great. The catch is who acts on the results.
Read the comparison ›LabsSipra vs InsideTracker
Built for athletes chasing optimization. We show what a full year of testing really costs.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs Marek Health
The hormone optimization favorite. We compare the true cost of testing plus the coaching.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs Life Force
Life Force runs a deep 50+ biomarker panel, but you pay a membership, a diagnostic fee, then extra for every treatment it recommends.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs Everlywell
Everlywell mails you the lab result; the honest question is who reads it when the number looks wrong.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs SiPhox Health
SiPhox mails you a needle-free blood test, but the results land in an app, not with a physician who can prescribe.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs Quest Health
Quest Health sells you the lab results but not the doctor who acts on them, and that gap is the whole story.
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Sipra vs Labcorp OnDemand
Labcorp OnDemand hands you trusted lab numbers from $29, but nobody treats what they find.
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Sipra vs LetsGetChecked
LetsGetChecked hands you the number; see why acting on it still means finding care somewhere else.
Read the comparison ›LabsSipra vs Empirical Health
Empirical's cardiovascular panel is cheap and physician-led, but see where a testing-plus-treatment membership fits a wider goal.
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Sipra vs Mito Health
Mito's $349 annual panel is a bargain for 100+ markers, but it only advises; see why treatment changes the math.
Read the comparison ›Labs
Sipra vs Choose Health
Choose Health checks your numbers cheaply from home, but who acts on the result is the real question.
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Sipra vs Base
Base reveals what your labs say but refers you elsewhere to treat it, unlike one membership covering both.
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Sipra vs Thorne
Thorne mails you a physician-reviewed biomarker snapshot and a supplement plan, but no one who can actually prescribe what it finds.
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Sipra vs Ulta Lab Tests
Ulta's per-test prices are genuinely low, but it hands you numbers and no doctor to act on them.
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Sipra vs Ezra
Ezra scans your whole body in 22 minutes, but a scan cannot treat what it finds, and that gap is the whole story.
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Sipra vs Prenuvo
Prenuvo takes a stunning picture inside your body, then hands the follow-up to someone else. Here is when that trade is worth it.
Read the comparison ›LabsSipra vs Neko Health
Neko's scan finds problems head to toe, then refers you out. Sipra tests and treats under one membership.
Read the comparison ›