Menopause Diet & Weight

How Much Does Peptide Therapy Cost? A Complete 2025 Breakdown

How these medications work for sustainable weight management, what the research actually says, and whether they might be right for your wellness journey.

Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine
Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal MedicineMD, Internal Medicine
April 17, 2026 16 min read Medically reviewed by Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine

Medical Disclaimer

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any treatment.

You've heard about peptide therapy. Maybe a friend mentioned it over coffee. Maybe a podcast host swore by it. Or maybe you've been doing your own research into why you feel so different after 40 — and you stumbled into a world of acronyms, injection protocols, and maddeningly vague pricing. You're not alone. One of the most common questions we hear at Amie is simply: how much does peptide therapy cost?

Here's the frustrating part: most of what you'll find online is either written for men, loaded with jargon, or deliberately unclear about pricing. We think you deserve better than that. This guide breaks down real peptide therapy cost ranges for 2025, explains what drives price differences, answers whether insurance helps (spoiler: usually not), and helps you figure out whether peptide therapy is worth the investment — specifically for you. At Amie, we specialize in peptide therapy for women, so this reflects real clinical context, not recycled generic information.

Key Takeaway

Peptide therapy typically costs between $200 and $1,000+ per month, depending on the peptide type, dosage, and where you receive care. Most women pay somewhere in the $300–$600/month range for a supervised, clinician-prescribed protocol. Costs vary significantly based on your health goals and provider.

What Is Peptide Therapy? (And Why Women Are Paying Attention)

Peptides are short chains of amino acids — think of them as tiny biological messengers that tell your body to do specific things. They're different from hormones (which your body produces in glands) and different from traditional medications (which typically block or override a process). Peptides work with your body's existing systems, sending signals to ramp up healing, regulate appetite, improve sleep, or stimulate collagen production.

So why is peptide therapy having such a moment — especially among women between 35 and 60? Because this is exactly the demographic dealing with problems that peptides may help address: perimenopausal fatigue, shifting body composition, slower recovery from workouts or injuries, gut issues, declining skin elasticity, low libido, and that hard-to-describe feeling of just not being yourself anymore.

For women who've tried supplements without results or who want something more targeted than a multivitamin — but aren't sure if hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is right for them — peptide therapy offers another option worth exploring. Here are the key categories women commonly ask about:

  • Healing and recovery: BPC-157, TB-500
  • Weight and metabolism: Semaglutide, tirzepatide (these are GLP-1 receptor agonists — related but distinct from traditional peptides)
  • Anti-aging and skin: GHK-Cu, collagen-stimulating peptides
  • Sleep and stress: Selank, Epithalon
  • Growth hormone support: Sermorelin, Ipamorelin/CJC-1295

If you want a deeper look at how each of these works and which ones are best studied for women, read our Peptide Therapy for Women: A Complete Physician's Guide.

Medical Note

Peptide therapy should always be prescribed and supervised by a licensed clinician. The descriptions above reflect areas of ongoing research — not guaranteed outcomes. Individual results depend on your health history, protocol, and provider.

How Much Does Peptide Therapy Cost? (2025 Price Ranges)

Cost by Peptide Type

Let's start with what you actually came here for — numbers. The table below reflects 2025 pricing ranges across licensed telehealth providers and compounding pharmacies. These are estimates; your actual cost depends on dosage, duration, and your provider's pricing structure.

PeptideCommon UseEstimated Monthly Cost
BPC-157Gut health, recovery support, injury recovery$80–$300/month
SermorelinGrowth hormone support, anti-aging$200–$400/month
Ipamorelin/CJC-1295Sleep, body composition, energy$250–$500/month
GHK-CuSkin, hair, inflammation$100–$250/month
EpithalonLongevity, sleep$150–$350/month
TB-500Recovery, inflammation$200–$400/month
Semaglutide (GLP-1)Weight management$300–$1,000+/month

BPC-157 cost is one of the most searched questions we see — and for good reason. It's one of the most popular starting peptides, especially for women dealing with gut issues or recovering from injury.

Key Takeaway

BPC-157 typically costs between $80 and $300 per month depending on dosage, source, and whether it's prescribed through a licensed telehealth provider or compounding pharmacy. Injectable forms are generally more expensive than oral capsules but are considered more bioavailable by most clinicians.

Cost by Delivery Method

How you take a peptide affects the price — and the results. Here's a quick breakdown:

  • Injectable (subcutaneous): The most common and generally most effective delivery method. Typically the highest cost per month, but the highest bioavailability — meaning more of the peptide actually reaches your system.
  • Oral/sublingual capsules: Lower bioavailability, lower cost — usually in the $50–$150/month range. A good option for some peptides, but not ideal for all.
  • Topical creams: Used for GHK-Cu and some BPC-157 applications. Lower cost, but limited evidence for systemic (whole-body) effects. Best for localized concerns like joint pain or skin.
  • Nasal sprays: Used for peptides like PT-141 and Selank. Moderate bioavailability and cost, convenient for certain protocols.

Cost by Provider Type

Where you get peptide therapy matters as much as what you're taking. Here's how pricing typically shakes out by provider type:

  • Med spa or in-person clinic: Often $400–$800+/month. Higher overhead costs (rent, staff, equipment) get passed to you. Quality varies widely.
  • Compounding pharmacy direct (no oversight): Cheaper upfront, but you're on your own. No clinician adjusting your protocol, no monitoring, and quality control can be questionable.
  • Telehealth platforms like Amie: Typically $200–$600/month. Lower overhead than brick-and-mortar clinics, with physician oversight, protocol personalization, and ongoing support built in.

A quick note on the "cheapest option" instinct: we understand wanting to save money. But with peptide therapy, the compounding pharmacy quality, clinician oversight, and protocol personalization matter enormously — both for safety and for results.

What Factors Affect the Cost of Peptide Therapy?

1. Type of Peptide

Not all peptides are created equal — in terms of research backing, manufacturing complexity, or cost. A well-studied peptide like BPC-157 may cost less than a stacked protocol combining Ipamorelin/CJC-1295 with GHK-Cu. And stacked protocols (multiple peptides working together) cost more, though they may deliver more comprehensive results for women managing several symptoms at once.

Here's something worth knowing: most peptide protocols online are designed with men in mind. Women's dosing, cycling, and peptide selection often need to be different — which is why working with a provider who specializes in women's health matters.

2. Dosage and Duration

Some peptide protocols run 6–12 weeks and then stop. Others are maintenance-level ongoing protocols. Higher doses require more vials, which means higher costs. Dosing frequency also plays a role — a daily injection protocol costs more per month than a "5 days on, 2 days off" schedule using the same peptide.

3. Your Provider's Expertise and Overhead

Board-certified physicians and specialized nurse practitioners bring clinical judgment, ongoing monitoring, and the ability to adjust your protocol based on your response. That expertise has real value. Telehealth platforms reduce overhead costs (no physical office, no waiting room) and typically pass those savings to you — without sacrificing quality of care.

4. Consultation and Lab Work Fees

Many providers charge separately for the initial consultation, baseline lab work, and follow-up visits. Here's what to expect:

  • Initial consultation: $100–$300 (sometimes waived or applied to your first order)
  • Baseline labs: $100–$400 depending on the panel
  • Follow-up visits: $75–$200 per check-in

Ask upfront what's included in your quoted price. Hidden fees — for consultations, lab reviews, or protocol adjustments — are more common than they should be.

5. Compounding Pharmacy Quality

The pharmacy that actually makes your peptide matters more than most people realize. FDA-registered compounding pharmacies follow strict standards for potency, sterility, and ingredient quality. Non-registered sources — including peptides purchased directly online without a prescription — may not meet those standards. According to the FDA's guidance on compounding, compounded medications are not FDA-approved and require appropriate oversight to ensure safety.

Cheap peptides sourced without a prescription carry real risks: contamination, incorrect dosing, degraded product, and no clinical oversight if something goes wrong.

Is Peptide Therapy Covered by Insurance?

Peptide therapy is not typically covered by health insurance in 2025. Because most peptides are prescribed off-label and sourced from compounding pharmacies, they fall outside standard insurance formularies. Some patients use HSA or FSA funds to offset costs — check with your plan administrator to confirm eligibility.

Here's why insurance doesn't cover most peptide therapy:

  • Most peptides are used off-label — meaning they're prescribed for purposes not specifically approved by the FDA for that compound.
  • Compounded medications, by definition, aren't FDA-approved as standalone drugs.
  • Insurance formularies (the lists of covered medications) don't include most compounded peptides.

The one notable exception: GLP-1 medications like semaglutide (branded as Ozempic or Wegovy) may have partial insurance coverage when prescribed for type 2 diabetes or, in some plans, weight management. This is very plan-specific — call your insurer directly.

Ways to Manage Costs Without Insurance

  • HSA/FSA funds: With a valid prescription, peptide therapy costs may qualify as an eligible medical expense. Ask your plan administrator and save your receipts.
  • Request a superbill: Ask your provider for a superbill — a detailed receipt you can submit to your insurer for potential out-of-network reimbursement.
  • Subscription or membership models: Some telehealth platforms (including Amie) offer bundled or subscription-based pricing that reduces the per-month cost compared to à la carte ordering.
  • Telehealth as a cost strategy: Choosing a telehealth provider over an in-person clinic can save $100–$300/month in overhead-related fees alone.

How Much Does Peptide Therapy Cost Per Month? Realistic Scenarios for Women

Abstract price ranges are useful, but real-life context is better. Here are four scenarios based on the kinds of women we work with at Amie. These are illustrative examples — not prescriptions. Your clinician will determine your actual protocol based on your health history, labs, and goals.

Scenario 1: Managing Perimenopausal Fatigue and Body Composition

A 44-year-old woman experiencing brain fog, disrupted sleep, and stubborn weight changes she's never dealt with before. She's interested in growth hormone support and skin health.

  • Example protocol: Ipamorelin/CJC-1295 + GHK-Cu
  • Estimated monthly cost: $350–$550/month

Curious about how peptide therapy compares to hormone replacement therapy? Read our guide: peptides vs HRT: Which Is Right for Women in Perimenopause and Menopause?

Scenario 2: Active Woman Dealing with an Injury or Slow Recovery

A 38-year-old who runs and lifts regularly but tore a ligament six months ago and still isn't healing. She's also noticed her gut has been off since she started taking NSAIDs for the pain.

  • Example protocol: BPC-157 ± TB-500
  • Estimated monthly cost: $200–$450/month

For a deeper look at BPC-157 specifically, see: BPC-157 Benefits and Dosage: What the Research Actually Shows

Scenario 3: Focused on Longevity and Skin Health

A 52-year-old who's through menopause and now focused on proactive aging — she wants to support cellular repair, improve skin quality, and optimize sleep.

  • Example protocol: Epithalon + GHK-Cu
  • Estimated monthly cost: $250–$500/month

Scenario 4: Exploring Medically Supervised Weight Support

A 47-year-old who's gained 30 pounds in two years despite no major changes to her diet or activity. She's been evaluated for thyroid issues (normal) and wants medical support.

  • Example protocol: GLP-1 peptide therapy (compounded semaglutide)
  • Estimated monthly cost: $300–$1,000+/month (highly variable based on dose titration and source)
Important

GLP-1 medications require careful medical oversight, including monitoring for gastrointestinal side effects, nutritional status, and muscle mass preservation. Always work with a licensed clinician for weight-related peptide therapy.

Is Peptide Therapy Worth the Investment?

This is the question behind the question. And the honest answer depends on what you're comparing it to.

Compared to doing nothing: If you're dealing with persistent fatigue, gut issues, slow recovery, or body composition changes that affect your quality of life, the "cost" of not addressing those symptoms is real — even if it doesn't show up on a credit card statement. Lost productivity, reduced enjoyment of daily life, and downstream health consequences all carry a price.

Compared to other wellness spending: The average American woman spends $100–$300/month on supplements, gym memberships, skincare, and wellness services. A targeted peptide protocol supervised by a physician may deliver more measurable results than a cabinet full of supplements — according to a 2023 review in the journal Molecules, certain peptides like BPC-157 show significant preclinical evidence for tissue repair and anti-inflammatory activity that no over-the-counter supplement can match.

Compared to managing downstream health issues: Proactive investment in metabolic health, recovery, and inflammation management now may reduce healthcare costs later. A 2022 study published in Frontiers in Endocrinology found that growth hormone–releasing peptides like Ipamorelin showed promise in improving body composition markers — the kind of early intervention that could offset bigger medical bills down the road.

The value of physician oversight deserves emphasis here. DIY peptide protocols — buying research-grade peptides online and self-dosing without clinical guidance — carry real risks and often deliver underwhelming results. Working with a clinician who can run labs, adjust your protocol, and monitor your response isn't a luxury. It's the difference between guessing and knowing.

Who tends to see the most benefit: Women who come in with clear symptoms, realistic expectations, and willingness to follow a protocol for at least 8–12 weeks before evaluating results.

Signs it might not be the right time: If you have underlying conditions that haven't been evaluated yet, if your expectations center on overnight transformation, or if the cost would create genuine financial strain without a clear clinical need — it's okay to wait.

"The right peptide protocol, with the right oversight, can be one of the most targeted investments a woman makes in her health. But 'right' is the key word — the protocol has to match your biology, not someone else's Instagram results."
— Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine, Amie Medical Team

Who Is a Good Candidate for Peptide Therapy?

Peptide therapy isn't for everyone — and that's a sign of a legitimate treatment, not a limitation. Here's who tends to benefit most:

  • Women in perimenopause or menopause experiencing fatigue, sleep disruption, or body composition changes
  • Women with active lifestyles who've noticed slower recovery than they used to have
  • Women dealing with chronic gut or digestive issues (BPC-157 is particularly well-studied here)
  • Women managing inflammation, joint pain, or autoimmune-adjacent fatigue
  • Women who've tried supplements and want something more targeted and clinician-guided
  • Women interested in longevity-focused, proactive care — not just reactive medicine

Who Should Wait or Consult Further Before Starting

  • Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding
  • Women with active cancers (certain peptides may be contraindicated — always disclose your full health history)
  • Women who haven't had baseline labs or a proper clinical consultation
Medical Note

This is not an exhaustive list of contraindications. A licensed clinician should review your complete health history, current medications, and lab work before prescribing any peptide protocol.

How to Save Money on Peptide Therapy Without Cutting Corners

You don't need the most expensive protocol to get meaningful results. Here's how to be smart about peptide therapy cost without sacrificing safety or quality:

  • Start with a single peptide, not a full stack. You can always add more later based on your response. Starting simple also makes it easier to identify what's working.
  • Choose telehealth when medically appropriate. You save on overhead costs — and you skip the commute. For most peptide protocols, in-person visits aren't necessary after the initial evaluation.
  • Ask about bundled or subscription pricing. Providers who offer monthly membership models (like Amie) often include consultations, follow-ups, and protocol adjustments in the price — which saves you from paying for each interaction separately.
  • Use HSA/FSA funds. If you have a health savings account or flexible spending account, your prescribed peptide therapy may qualify. Keep your prescription and receipts.
  • Avoid unregulated online peptide sources. "Research-grade" peptides sold without a prescription are not manufactured to pharmaceutical standards. You may save money upfront, but the risks — contamination, incorrect dosing, zero oversight — aren't worth it.
  • Look for transparent pricing. If a provider won't quote costs before a consultation, that's a red flag. You should know what you're signing up for financially before you commit.
  • Reassess quarterly. You may not need the same protocol indefinitely. A good clinician will adjust your plan over time — which often means stepping down to a maintenance dose or pausing a peptide entirely.

How to Find the Right Peptide Therapy Provider

The provider you choose shapes everything — your safety, your results, and your cost. Here's what to look for and what to avoid.

Green Flags

  • Licensed physician or NP oversight: Your protocol should be prescribed and monitored by a credentialed clinician — not a wellness coach or aesthetician.
  • Access to FDA-registered compounding pharmacies: Ask where your peptides are sourced. This matters more than most providers advertise.
  • Transparent pricing: You should see costs before committing, with a clear breakdown of what's included.
  • Baseline lab work required: A provider who prescribes without labs is skipping a critical step.
  • Women's health specialization: Peptide dosing, cycling, and selection differ for women. A provider who treats mostly men may not adjust protocols appropriately.

Red Flags

  • No consultation required before prescribing
  • Selling peptides without a valid prescription
  • No follow-up or monitoring protocol after you start
  • Generic, one-size-fits-all protocols with no personalization
  • Pressure to buy large upfront packages before you've seen results

Telehealth has changed access to quality peptide therapy — especially for women in areas without specialized clinics nearby. Geography used to determine your options. Now, a board-certified physician can evaluate your labs, build a personalized protocol, and monitor your progress from anywhere in the country. Peptide therapy cost near major metro areas like Miami or Los Angeles often runs higher for in-person visits; telehealth levels that playing field.

Frequently Asked Questions About Peptide Therapy Cost

How much does peptide therapy usually cost?

Peptide therapy typically costs $200–$1,000+ per month depending on the peptide, dosage, delivery method, and provider. Most women working with a telehealth provider like Amie pay $300–$600/month for a supervised, personalized protocol that includes clinician oversight and follow-up care.

Is peptide therapy covered by insurance?

Generally, no. Most peptide therapies are prescribed off-label from compounding pharmacies and are not covered by insurance. Some costs may be eligible for HSA or FSA reimbursement with a valid prescription — verify with your plan administrator. GLP-1 medications like semaglutide may have partial coverage in specific plans when prescribed for FDA-approved indications.

How much does BPC-157 cost?

BPC-157 typically costs $80–$300/month depending on dosage and form. Injectable BPC-157 costs more than oral capsules but delivers higher bioavailability. Always use a clinician-prescribed, pharmacy-compounded product — not unregulated "research-grade" peptides sold online without a prescription.

What does BPC-157 support in the body?

BPC-157 is best studied for its potential to support gut lining health, tendon and ligament recovery, and inflammation reduction. Preclinical research suggests benefits for joint pain, intestinal permeability ("leaky gut"), and post-injury recovery. Most studies to date are preclinical — human clinical trials are still emerging. For a full evidence review, read our guide on BPC-157 benefits and dosage.

Can BPC-157 cause liver damage?

There is no strong clinical evidence that BPC-157 causes liver damage at therapeutic doses prescribed by a licensed clinician. Some animal studies have actually explored its potentially hepatoprotective (based on preclinical data) (liver-protective) properties. As with any therapy, work with a licensed clinician who monitors your labs regularly and adjusts your protocol as needed.

Can BPC-157 be applied topically?

Yes. BPC-157 can be compounded into a topical cream, often used for localized joint pain or skin applications. Topical absorption is lower than injectable forms, so it may be less effective for systemic or gut-related goals. Your clinician can help you choose the right delivery method based on what you're trying to address.

How much do peptides for muscle growth and body composition cost per month?

Peptides used for body composition — such as Ipamorelin/CJC-1295 — typically cost $250–$500/month through a licensed provider. Stacked protocols combining multiple peptides may run higher. Quality, clinician oversight, and protocol personalization matter as much as the price tag when it comes to results.

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The Bottom Line on Peptide Therapy Cost

Here's the real picture: most women pay $300–$600/month for physician-supervised peptide therapy in 2025. Your specific cost depends on which peptide (or peptides) you use, how you take them, and who's guiding your care. Some protocols run as low as $80–$200/month; GLP-1 therapies and complex stacks can push past $1,000.

Cost is a real consideration — and we'd never tell you to ignore it. But we'd also encourage you to reframe the question. It's not just "how much does peptide therapy cost?" It's also: what is it costing me to keep feeling this way?

If you've been dealing with fatigue that coffee can't fix, recovery that takes twice as long as it used to, gut issues that won't resolve, or a body that feels unfamiliar — and you want a physician who actually listens, builds a protocol around your biology, and adjusts it as you go — that's exactly what we do at Amie.

You don't have to figure this out alone. And you don't have to settle for care that wasn't built for you.

Written by the Amie Editorial Team | Medical Review: Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine (NPI: 1922265305) | Last reviewed: April 17, 2025

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting any new therapy.

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Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine
Written by
Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine
MD, Internal Medicine
Dr. Meyer is board-certified in internal medicine with a focus on longevity, peptide therapy, and integrative approaches to aging.
Medically Reviewed by
Dr. Erin Meyer, MD, Internal Medicine
MD, Internal Medicine
NPI: 1922265305
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