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Telehealth · WA

Washington.

Licensed by the Washington Medical Commission

Washington residents can now access GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide through telehealth — from Seattle and the Eastside, to Tacoma and Spokane, to the rural Olympic Peninsula. Pallas Health connects you with a board-certified provider licensed in Washington who can evaluate your eligibility in under 5 minutes and, if appropriate, prescribe medication that ships to any Washington address in a few business days.

Telehealth

Async + video

Asynchronous review permitted

Compounded sema

Available

Compounded tirz

Available

Shipping

2–3 business days

To any Washington address

Regulatory

How telehealth prescribing works in Washington

Washington permits licensed providers to use telehealth to establish a patient relationship and prescribe non-controlled medications like GLP-1s, including synchronous video and, in appropriate cases, asynchronous review.

Washington requires any provider writing a prescription to a Washington resident to hold an active Washington medical license — out-of-state licensure is not sufficient. Under RCW 18.71.075 and Washington Medical Commission telehealth policy, licensed providers may use telemedicine to establish the provider-patient relationship and prescribe non-controlled medications, including via synchronous video and, in appropriate cases, asynchronous review when the standard of care is met. Every Pallas clinician who treats Washington patients is individually licensed by the Washington Medical Commission. GLP-1s are not controlled substances, so Washington's separate Prescription Monitoring Program and controlled-substance telemedicine requirements don't add friction here, but our providers still document a complete history, screen for contraindications like personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, and schedule follow-up visits to monitor response and titrate the dose.

Insurance

Medicaid & insurance in Washington

Covered with conditions

Washington Apple Health (Medicaid) covers GLP-1s including coverage for weight management with prior authorization and step therapy. Compounded GLP-1s are not covered.

Pallas is a cash-pay telehealth service. Medicaid and private insurance do not apply to our prescriptions; pricing is flat and disclosed up front.

Coverage

Cities served in Washington

We ship to every ZIP code in Washington, including:

  • Seattle
  • Spokane
  • Tacoma
  • Vancouver
  • Bellevue
  • Kent
  • Everett
  • Renton

FAQ

Washington GLP-1 questions

Can I get semaglutide in Washington without seeing a doctor in person?+

Yes. Washington law allows a licensed Washington provider to establish a patient relationship and prescribe non-controlled medications like semaglutide through telehealth — including asynchronous review of your intake — as long as the standard of care is met. You do not need a prior in-person visit.

Does Washington Apple Health cover Wegovy®?+

Washington Apple Health (Medicaid) covers GLP-1s including coverage for weight management with prior authorization and step therapy. Compounded GLP-1s are not covered. Pallas is a cash-pay telehealth service, so Medicaid coverage does not apply to our prescriptions.

Is compounded tirzepatide legal in Washington?+

Yes. Compounded tirzepatide prescribed by a Washington-licensed provider and dispensed by a licensed compounding pharmacy is legal when prepared for a specific patient with a documented clinical need. Pallas works only with U.S. state-licensed 503A and 503B compounding pharmacies.

How fast does Pallas ship in Washington?+

Most Washington patients receive their medication within 2–3 business days of the pharmacy filling the prescription. Seattle, the Eastside, Tacoma, and Spokane typically ship fastest; Olympic Peninsula and rural eastern Washington ZIP codes may take an extra day.

Start your Washington intake

Under 5 minutes. Reviewed by a clinician licensed in Washington.

Start intake