Telehealth · WI
Wisconsin.
Licensed by the Wisconsin Medical Examining Board
Wisconsin residents can now access GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide through telehealth — whether you are in Milwaukee, the Madison area, the Fox Valley, or a rural county without a nearby obesity medicine specialist. Pallas Health connects you with a board-certified provider licensed in Wisconsin who can evaluate your eligibility in under 5 minutes and, if appropriate, prescribe medication that ships to any Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin address
Regulatory
How telehealth prescribing works in Wisconsin
Wisconsin permits licensed providers to establish a patient relationship and prescribe non-controlled medications like GLP-1s through telehealth, including synchronous video and, in appropriate cases, asynchronous review, when the standard of care is met.
Wisconsin requires any provider writing a prescription to a Wisconsin resident to hold an active Wisconsin medical license — an out-of-state license is not enough. Under Wisconsin Medical Examining Board telemedicine rules (Wis. Admin. Code ch. Med 24) and 2019 Wisconsin Act 56, a licensed provider may use telehealth to establish the provider-patient relationship and prescribe non-controlled medications like GLP-1s, including synchronous video and, in appropriate cases, asynchronous review of a completed intake, provided the standard of care is met and documentation is appropriate. Every Pallas provider who treats Wisconsin patients is individually licensed by the Wisconsin Medical Examining Board. GLP-1s are not controlled substances, so Wisconsin's additional controlled-substance telemedicine rules do not add friction here, but our providers still take a complete history, screen for contraindications like a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, and arrange follow-up to monitor response and titrate the dose.
Insurance
Medicaid & insurance in Wisconsin
Limited coverage
Wisconsin Medicaid (BadgerCare Plus, administered through ForwardHealth) covers GLP-1s for type 2 diabetes with prior authorization. Coverage for weight-management indications is limited, and compounded GLP-1s are not covered. Pallas is a cash-pay service, so Medicaid coverage does not apply to our prescriptions.
Pallas is a cash-pay telehealth service. Medicaid and private insurance do not apply to our prescriptions; pricing is flat and disclosed up front.
Pricing
Flat cash-pay pricing in Wisconsin
No insurance, no membership fee, and the same price to every Wisconsin ZIP code. You see the full price during intake, before you pay anything.
Compounded GLP-1s
- Semaglutide microdose$179/mo
- Semaglutide injection$269/mo · as low as $194/mo on the 12-month plan
- Tirzepatide injection$359/mo · as low as $269/mo on the 12-month plan
Brand-name · FDA-approved
FDA-approved Wegovy® and Zepbound® for chronic weight management, plus Ozempic® and Mounjaro® for type 2 diabetes, are available cash-pay from $1,069/mo. Your clinician helps determine which option is appropriate for you.
Pallas offers both FDA-approved and compounded medications. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved and are not generic versions of brand-name drugs. Eligibility and treatment are determined by a US-licensed clinician; results vary. Private pay only (no insurance). Operated by Brentmoor, Inc.
Coverage
Cities served in Wisconsin
We ship to every ZIP code in Wisconsin, including:
- Milwaukee
- Madison
- Green Bay
- Kenosha
- Racine
- Appleton
- Waukesha
- Eau Claire
- Oshkosh
- Janesville
- West Allis
- La Crosse
- Sheboygan
- Wauwatosa
- Fond du Lac
- Brookfield
FAQ
Wisconsin GLP-1 questions
Yes. Wisconsin law allows a licensed Wisconsin 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.
Wisconsin Medicaid (BadgerCare Plus) covers GLP-1s for type 2 diabetes with prior authorization. Coverage for weight-management indications is limited, and compounded GLP-1s are not covered. Pallas is a cash-pay service, so Medicaid coverage does not apply to our prescriptions.
Yes. Compounded tirzepatide prescribed by a Wisconsin-licensed provider and dispensed by a US state-licensed compounding pharmacy is legal when prepared for an individual patient with a documented clinical need. Pallas works only with US state-licensed 503A and 503B compounding pharmacies.
Most Wisconsin patients receive their medication within 2–3 business days of the pharmacy filling the prescription. Milwaukee, Madison, and Green Bay typically ship fastest; rural and Northwoods ZIP codes may take an extra day.
Pallas is a cash-pay telehealth service — there is no insurance to bill and no membership fee to join. Before you pay anything, you see a flat all-in price during intake that covers the medication, your clinician's review, and shipping to your Wisconsin address. The price you see is the price you pay — no surprise renewal markups — and multi-month plans lower the per-month cost compared with paying month to month. The price is the same whether you are in Milwaukee, Madison, or a rural Wisconsin ZIP code.
Eligibility is always decided by a Wisconsin-licensed clinician after reviewing your full intake, never by an automated quiz. In general, GLP-1 medications for weight management are considered for adults with a BMI of 30 or higher, or a BMI of 27 or higher together with a weight-related condition such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, or obstructive sleep apnea. Your clinician also reviews your medical history and current medications to confirm a GLP-1 is appropriate and safe for you, and will tell you if it is not.
Brand-name medications — Wegovy® and Ozempic® (semaglutide) and Zepbound® and Mounjaro® (tirzepatide) — are FDA-approved products from their manufacturers, offered cash-pay. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are prepared on a per-patient basis by US-licensed compounding pharmacies, regulated under federal law (FDCA §503A) and by state boards of pharmacy, when a clinician documents a patient-specific clinical need. While these pharmacies are highly regulated, the compounded medications themselves are not FDA-approved, are not generic versions of brand-name drugs, and have not been evaluated by the FDA for safety, efficacy, or quality. Which option fits you is a clinical decision you make with your Wisconsin-licensed provider.
Yes, many patients transfer their care to Pallas. During intake you tell your clinician which medication and dose you take now and how you have tolerated it. Your Wisconsin-licensed provider reviews that history and, if appropriate, continues you at a comparable dose or adjusts your titration plan. Do not stop or change a prescription on your own — let your clinician guide any transition.
Most patients use a once-weekly injection with a very fine needle, but a compounded oral semaglutide tablet is available for people who would rather not inject. Both are prescribed only after a clinician confirms they are appropriate for you, and your provider can help you weigh which form fits your routine and goals.
The most common side effects are gastrointestinal — nausea, constipation, diarrhea, or reflux — and they are usually mildest when the dose is raised slowly, which is why clinicians titrate up gradually. GLP-1s are not right for everyone; they are avoided in people with a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2, and during pregnancy. Your Pallas clinician screens for these before prescribing and stays available to help you manage any side effects.
You complete a detailed online intake in under five minutes, sharing your health history, goals, and current medications. A clinician licensed by the Wisconsin Medical Examining Board reviews it asynchronously in most cases — no live video required — and may follow up by secure message or request labs if your history calls for it. If a GLP-1 is appropriate, your prescription goes to a licensed pharmacy that ships to any Wisconsin address, usually within 2–3 business days.
Pallas care is ongoing, not a one-time script. Your plan renews on a regular cadence so your medication arrives before you run out, and your clinician schedules check-ins to monitor your response, adjust your dose, and manage side effects. You can message your care team, change your plan, or cancel anytime from your patient portal — no phone calls or retention hoops.
Start your Wisconsin intake