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Best Online Lynkuet Providers: How to Get Elinzanetant Online (2026)

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The HRT Index Editorial TeamIndependent women's health research
Published: Last reviewed:
Editorial research — not medically reviewed by a clinician. Why this label

By The HRT Index Editorial Team · Editorial research, not medical advice · Not medically reviewed by a clinician ·

Let’s cut to it, because you came here to decide, not to read a brochure. If you searched for the best online Lynkuet providers, the honest answer is that there is no store that “sells” Lynkuet the way a site sells vitamins. Lynkuet (elinzanetant) is a brand-name, FDA-approved prescription with no generic and no compounded version. So “getting it online” is really two moves: a licensed clinician evaluates you and writes the prescription, and a pharmacy fills it.

Here’s the bottom line. For a woman with commercial insurance who wants a menopause-first clinical route, Midi Health is the best-positioned online starting point we could verify — it’s virtual, accepted by major insurance in all 50 states, and its clinicians order the blood work Lynkuet requires. You then fill through Bayer’s BlinkRx pharmacy, where eligible insured patients may pay as little as $25 a month, even though the list price is about $625. Uninsured or on Medicaid? Sesame’s cash-pay menopause care is the most flexible alternative. Already have an OB-GYN? You may not need a new service at all.

That’s the fast answer. But the sticker price hides a wrinkle most pages skip — and so does one question you have to ask any provider before you pay. That’s what the rest of this page is for.

The HRT Indexis the independent decision resource for online menopause and HRT care — comparing telehealth providers on clinical legitimacy, care quality, medication fit, price transparency, and access, with every claim verified and dated, so women can choose the path that fits their situation before their first consult.

Affiliate disclosure: Some provider links on this page are affiliate links. The HRT Index may earn a commission if you book with Midi or Sesame through our links, at no extra cost to you. It never changes our rankings — you’ll see exactly why each provider is placed where it is. See our full affiliate disclosure.

Lynkuet at a glance (verified July 2026)

Lynkuet (elinzanetant) quick-reference facts verified July 2026
QuestionThe short answer
Is it FDA-approved?Yes — elinzanetant, by Bayer, approved October 24, 2025, for moderate-to-severe hot flashes due to menopause
Is it a hormone?No. It’s non-hormonal — no estrogen or progesterone
Generic or compounded version?None. Brand only. A “compounded Lynkuet” offer is a red flag
Cash priceAbout $625 (list price); cash prices at retail pharmacies run roughly $615–$745, and some quote higher
Cheapest way to fill itBayer’s BlinkRx pharmacy — as little as $25/month with commercial insurance
Required before you startBaseline liver blood tests (ALT, AST, ALP, and total + direct bilirubin); not for use in pregnancy
Can you get it by telehealth?Yes — it’s not a controlled substance, so there are no special hurdles. You still need a real evaluation
Does any provider “sell Lynkuet”?No. You need a clinician to prescribe it — confirm they will at your visit

Lynkuet may be a strong fit if you…

  • Have moderate-to-severe hot flashes or night sweats
  • Can’t take hormones, or would rather not — this includes many women with a breast-cancer history
  • Want a once-a-day non-hormonal pill

Lynkuet is probably not your answer if you…

  • Are pregnant or might become pregnant (it’s contraindicated)
  • Have only mild symptoms
  • Would actually do better on hormone therapy — the tool below helps you tell

Have commercial insurance? Check if Midi takes your plan.

If you want a clinician who orders labs and can talk through whether Lynkuet fits, the fastest first step is a virtual visit. Insured patients average about $50 out of pocket.

Check if Midi takes your insurance →

Should you even be looking at Lynkuet, or at hormones?

In one sentence:Lynkuet (elinzanetant) is a non-hormonal prescription pill for moderate-to-severe hot flashes due to menopause — it contains no estrogen or progesterone. The FDA approved it on October 24, 2025. It works by quieting brain signals (called NK-1 and NK-3 receptors) that trigger hot flashes.

We put this before the shopping, because it’s the fork that matters most. A lot of women land on Lynkuet thinking it’s a type of hormone therapy. It isn’t — and that changes everything about who it’s right for.

Quick version: when estrogen drops in menopause, certain nerve cells in your brain’s “thermostat” start misfiring. That’s a hot flash. Hormone therapy fixes this by adding estrogen back. Lynkuet takes a different road — it calms those nerve signals directly, without touching your hormones. That’s why it’s an option for women who can’ttake estrogen (like many breast-cancer survivors) or simply don’t want to.

Does it work? In Bayer’s two main studies (called OASIS 1 and OASIS 2), women taking Lynkuet had about 65% to 67% fewer moderate-to-severe hot flashes per day by week 12, compared with roughly 42% to 46% fewerfor women on a placebo. Many also reported better sleep. Those are trial numbers, not a guarantee for any one person — but they’re what the FDA reviewed. It can start easing hot flashes within the first week, with fuller effects over a couple of months.

Here’s the honest decision fork, because a non-hormonal drug and hormone therapy solve different problems:

Decision fork: Lynkuet vs systemic HRT vs vaginal estrogen vs SSRIs — what each is, what it helps, and who it's for
OptionWhat it isWhat it mainly helpsWho it’s for
Lynkuet / VeozahNon-hormonal pills (NK-receptor blockers)Hot flashes and night sweatsWomen who can’t or won’t take hormones
Systemic HRT (estrogen + progesterone if you have a uterus)Hormone therapy — patch, pill, gelHot flashes, night sweats, plus sleep, mood, bone, and vaginal symptomsWomen who can safely take hormones and want broader relief
Vaginal estrogenLow-dose local hormone — cream, ring, tabletVaginal dryness, painful sex, some recurring UTIsWomen whose main problem is “down there,” not hot flashes
SSRIs / gabapentinNon-hormonal prescription optionsHot flashes (and mood, for SSRIs)Women who want a lower-cost non-hormonal route

If hormones are safe and right for you, they may relieve more than a hot-flash-only drug does. If they’re not, Lynkuet is one of a small handful of FDA-approved non-hormonal options built for exactly this. Not sure which side of the fork you’re on?

Not sure if Lynkuet, another non-hormonal option, or HRT is right for you?

Find My HRT Pathmatches your symptoms, risk history, insurance, and state to the right provider and flags when online care isn’t the right first step. Free, takes about 2 minutes.

Find My HRT Path →

Sensitive answers handled under our consumer health data policy.

Can you actually buy Lynkuet online?

In one sentence:You can’t “buy” Lynkuet online like a supplement — it’s prescription-only, with no generic and no compounded version. What you can do online is have a licensed clinician evaluate you, prescribe it, and send it to a pharmacy such as Bayer’s BlinkRx for home delivery.

So no — there’s no legitimate site where you add Lynkuet to a cart and it shows up. And that’s a good sign, not a hassle. It means a real clinician looks at your history first, which matters for a drug that needs liver testing.

Getting it online comes down to two steps:

  1. Get evaluated and prescribed. A licensed clinician (by video or in person) confirms your symptoms, reviews your history, orders the required liver labs, and writes the prescription.
  2. Fill it. The prescription goes to a pharmacy. Bayer partners with an online pharmacy called BlinkRx that delivers to your door and offers the lowest price for eligible patients.

One real warning: no legitimate generic or compounded Lynkuet exists

Because Lynkuet is expensive and brand-only, some shady websites may advertise a cheaper “generic” or “compounded” version. There is no FDA-approved generic Lynkuet, and federal rules restrict pharmacies from compounding what are essentially copies of an approved drug like this one. If a site offers you a discount “generic Lynkuet” or “compounded elinzanetant,” treat it as a red flag — it may be counterfeit or unlawfully made. Stick with a clinician who prescribes the real thing and sends it to a licensed pharmacy.

What are the best online Lynkuet providers?

In one sentence:For commercially insured women, Midi Health is the best-positioned online route — it’s virtual, bills insurance in all 50 states, and its clinicians order the liver labs Lynkuet requires. Uninsured or on Medicaid, Sesame’s cash-pay menopause care lets you choose a licensed provider. If you already have an OB-GYN, you may not need a new service at all.

We built the comparisons below using The HRT Index Verification Standard — our documented process where we read every published price, separate FDA-approved from compounded, and confirm insurance and state coverage against each provider’s own materials, then re-check on a fixed schedule (top providers monthly, full roster quarterly). We rank on our five pillars, in this order: clinical legitimacy, care quality, medication fit, price transparency, and access.

Here’s the part we want to be straight about. No telehealth company advertises Lynkuet by name as a stocked product yet — it launched in late 2025. What we verified is each route’s model: does it bill insurance, can it order labs, does it prescribe FDA-approved medications, and does it cover your state. Whether a specific clinician will start you on Lynkuet is a clinical call to confirm at your visit.

The practical comparison

Online Lynkuet access routes compared: insurance, visit cost, lab ordering, prescribing, and best for
RouteInsurance or cashTypical visit costCan order your labs?Lynkuet prescribingBest for
Midi Health (our top pick)Bills most PPO insurance; all 50 states~$50 avg. out-of-pocket with insurance; self-pay $250 first visit, $150 follow-ups✓ Yes — orders blood work (usually Labcorp)FDA-approved-focused; confirm Lynkuet at your visitCommercially insured women who want labs plus follow-up
SesameCash-pay; does not bill insuranceMenopause subscription ~$99/month, or single visit à la carte✓ Yes — provider can order labs (usually Quest)Prescribes non-hormonal options; confirm Lynkuet at your visitUninsured, Medicaid, or “I want to pick my provider”
Your own OB-GYN or primary care doctor + BlinkRxYour planYour normal copay✓ YesAsk them directlyAnyone with an existing prescriber — no new service needed
Bayer’s BlinkRx (fill, not prescribe)Copay card (commercial insurance only)As little as $25/month with eligible insuranceDepends on the prescribing clinicianIt’s Bayer’s drug — for the lowest fill price once you have a prescriptionGetting the best price on your fill

Verification status (checked July 2026)

Lynkuet provider verification status: whether each route lists Lynkuet publicly and what to confirm before paying
RouteLists Lynkuet publicly?Lynkuet prescribing confirmed by us?What to confirm before you pay
Midi HealthNoNo — model verified, drug-specific not confirmedCan your clinician evaluate Lynkuet and order the full liver panel?
SesameNoNo — model verified, drug-specific not confirmedSame — plus confirm the lab order and cash cost
Your own doctorN/AN/AWhether they’ll prescribe it and send it to BlinkRx

Not a Lynkuet route — and here’s why

Compounded-hormone platforms — such as Winona or Inner Balance’s Oestra — cannot supply Lynkuet. Lynkuet is a finished, FDA-approved brand product; a compounding pharmacy can’t make it. Those services are good at what they do, but they’re a different category. We flag this so you don’t waste a visit asking a compounding-only provider for a drug they can’t prescribe.

Why Midi Health is our top pick

In one sentence:Midi Health is a virtual women’s-health practice that bills insurance in all 50 states, uses menopause-trained clinicians, and orders lab work — which matters because Lynkuet requires baseline liver testing before you start.

Midi checks the boxes that actually matter for this drug. Its clinicians focus on midlife and menopause. It prescribes FDA-approved medications and already offers non-hormonal hot-flash options like fezolinetant (the drug Veozah). Its clinicians order your blood work through a national lab. And it bills most PPO insurance, so with in-network coverage, most patients average about $50 out of pocket per visit (self-pay is $250 for the first visit and $150 for follow-ups, with labs and medication billed separately). That mix — labs plus insurance plus follow-up — is exactly what a lab-monitored drug calls for. You can read our full Midi Health review for the deeper dive.

Now the one honest drawback:Midi is not a one-and-done prescription mill, and it does not bill Medicaid. If you want a single script with zero follow-up, or you’re on Medicaid or Medi-Cal, Midi isn’t your route — Sesame is, and we cover it next. But here’s why that “drawback” is really the point. Because Midi runs ongoing, insurance-billed care with real labs, it’s built for a medication that needs baseline liver tests and check-ins — which is precisely what Lynkuet is. The thing that makes Midi a little slower to start is the same thing that makes it the safer home for this drug.

Midi’s care is widely and publicly reviewed by patients on Trustpilot, where women frequently mention insurance acceptance and clinicians who actually listen.

What if I don’t have commercial insurance?

In one sentence:If you’re uninsured, on Medicaid, or you’d rather pick your own clinician, Sesame offers cash-pay menopause care — a roughly $99/month subscription (video visits, labs if needed, prescriptions, and messaging) or single à la carte visits — where a licensed provider can evaluate you, order labs, and send a prescription to your pharmacy.

Not everyone has a PPO plan, and Midi can’t help Medicaid patients. That’s where Sesame fits. It doesn’t bill insurance — you see the price before you book, you choose the provider, and you can go month to month or book one visit. For getting evaluated and prescribed without insurance red tape, that’s a real advantage. Our Sesame menopause review has the full breakdown.

Two honest caveats. First, because it’s cash-pay, you pay out of pocket — though Sesame’s prices can still beat a surprise specialist copay, and they give you a prescription discount card for the pharmacy. Second, since it’s a marketplace of individual clinicians, whether a given provider will start you on a brand-new drug varies — so mention Lynkuet when you book, and confirm they’re comfortable prescribing it and ordering the full liver panel.

Check Sesame’s cash-pay menopause care →

Confirm Lynkuet support and the full liver panel before booking.

How much does Lynkuet cost per month — with and without insurance?

In one sentence:Lynkuet’s list price is about $625 for a 30-day supply, and cash prices at retail pharmacies run roughly $615 to $745. But commercially insured women who fill through Bayer’s BlinkRx pharmacy may pay as little as $25 a month. Medicare and Medicaid patients can’t use the copay card and should check their plan.

This is the number that stops most people, so let’s make it clear: what you pay depends mostly on your insurance status, not on which telehealth service you pick.

Lynkuet monthly cost by insurance situation: commercial insurance plus BlinkRx, cash pay, Medicare/Medicaid, and patient assistance
Your situationWhat you’ll likely pay per monthHow it works
Commercial insurance + BlinkRxAs little as $25Bayer’s copay/affordability program, applied when you fill through BlinkRx
Commercial insurance, regular pharmacyYour copay, minus a Bayer savings cardBring the manufacturer copay card to your pharmacy
Cash / uninsuredAbout $625 list; retail roughly $615–$745 (some pharmacies higher)Full price; discount coupons (GoodRx, SingleCare) bring it near $615
Medicare or MedicaidCopay card not available — check your plan’s formularyGovernment insurance is excluded from the manufacturer copay program
Can’t afford itPossibly $0The Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation helps eligible patients get Bayer medicine at no cost

That $25price is real, but it’s tied to commercial insurance. If you have Medicare or Medicaid, you can’t use the manufacturer copay card at all — your cost comes down to what your plan covers. And if you’re paying cash, $625-plus is steep for a monthly pill — a fair reason to weigh Lynkuet against other options with your clinician.

The simplest money move: if you’re commercially insured, ask your clinician to send the prescription to BlinkRx. That’s the path to the $25 price, and it ships to your door.

Lynkuet vs Veozah: which non-hormonal option is right?

In one sentence: Lynkuet and Veozah are both FDA-approved, non-hormonal pills for hot flashes, and neither is a hormone. Lynkuet blocks two brain receptors (NK-1 and NK-3) and is taken as two capsules at bedtime; Veozah blocks one (NK-3) as a single daily pill. A key difference: Veozah carries a boxed liver warning and a strict testing schedule, while Lynkuet does not carry a boxed warning.

If you’re researching Lynkuet, you’ll bump into Veozah (its generic name is fezolinetant). They’re cousins. Here’s how they actually differ — and the liver monitoring gap is the part most people miss. Our full Lynkuet vs Veozah comparison goes deeper.

Lynkuet vs Veozah comparison: maker, approval, mechanism, dosing, liver safety, and liver testing schedule
 Lynkuet (elinzanetant)Veozah (fezolinetant)
Maker & FDA approvalBayer; approved October 24, 2025Astellas; approved May 12, 2023
How it worksBlocks two receptors — NK-1 and NK-3Blocks one receptor — NK-3
How you take it120 mg (two 60 mg capsules) once daily at bedtimeOne 45 mg pill once daily
Liver safetyRequires baseline liver labs; you can’t start if certain values are too high. No boxed warningCarries a boxed warning (the FDA’s strongest) for rare but serious liver injury
Liver testing scheduleBaseline liver labs; follow-up as your clinician directsBaseline, then monthly for the first 3 months, plus at 6 and 9 months
SleepBetter sleep was measured as a trial outcomeNot the same dual-receptor design

The honest takeaway: Veozah has a longer track record since 2023, but it earned a boxed warning and a demanding testing schedule. Lynkuet is newer and, so far, has a lighter monitoring picture and no boxed warning — but “newer” also means less long-term real-world data. Neither is automatically better. Your clinician weighs your liver history, your other medicines, and your sleep. See also: Best online Veozah providers and non-hormonal hot flash medications online compared.

What you have to do before starting Lynkuet (labs, pregnancy, and interactions)

In one sentence:Before starting Lynkuet you need baseline liver blood tests measuring ALT, AST, ALP, and total plus direct bilirubin, and you can’t start it if certain values are 2 times the normal limit or higher. It’s contraindicated in pregnancy, and it interacts with some medicines and with grapefruit.

This is exactly why which provider you pickmatters — a good online route orders these labs instead of skipping them.

The liver labs

Bayer’s prescribing information says clinicians should run baseline liver tests before you start: ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and bilirubin — both total and direct. You should notstart Lynkuet if your ALT or AST is 2 times the upper limit of normal or higher, or if your total bilirubin is 2 times that limit or higher. In trials, a small number of women had mild liver-enzyme bumps without symptoms. This is manageable — but it’s a real step, and it’s why we push you toward a clinician who orders blood work.

One practical detail that can trip people up

A routine “comprehensive metabolic panel” (CMP) covers ALT, AST, ALP, and total bilirubin — but often not direct bilirubin, which Lynkuet’s label calls for. So when your clinician orders labs, make sure the order specifically includes direct bilirubin.

Pregnancy

Lynkuet is not for use in pregnancy — animal studies suggest it could cause pregnancy loss. If you could become pregnant, your clinician should confirm you’re not pregnant before you start, and you should use effective birth control during treatment and for two weeks after stopping.

Drug and food interactions

Lynkuet is processed by a liver enzyme called CYP3A4. Some medicines (certain antibiotics and heart drugs, for example) and grapefruit can interfere with it. If you take an interacting medicine, your clinician may lower your dose to one capsule (60 mg) or advise against it. Bring your full medication and supplement list to your visit.

A note if you’re a breast-cancer survivor

Lynkuet is one of the few non-hormonal choices for women who can’t take hormones, which is why it matters here. But if you have a breast-cancer history or take endocrine therapy (like tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor), don’t treat this as a quick online errand — coordinate with your oncology team so your care stays connected and your medications are checked against each other.

How to take it, once you’re cleared

The standard dose is 120 mg — two 60 mg capsules — once a day at bedtime, swallowed whole with water, with or without food. Don’t cut, crush, or chew them, and don’t double up for a missed dose.

Common side effects reported in trials include headache, tiredness, dizziness, drowsiness, stomach pain, rash, diarrhea, and muscle spasms. Because it can make you sleepy or dizzy, see how it affects you before driving.

Before you book: 4 questions that get you a straight answer

Since no telehealth service advertises Lynkuet by name yet, the smartest thing you can do is confirm these four things with any provider before you pay. Screenshot their answers.

  1. Can your clinicians evaluate me for Lynkuet (elinzanetant) specifically?
  2. Can you order the full liver panel — ALT, AST, ALP, and total and direct bilirubin?
  3. Can you send my prescription to BlinkRx (for the lowest price if I’m commercially insured)?
  4. What happens if a clinician decides Lynkuet isn’t right for me — what are my other options?

Those four answers tell you whether a provider is a real Lynkuet route or a dead end — before you’re out any money.

Is Lynkuet a controlled substance?

In one sentence:No. Lynkuet is not a controlled substance. Unlike testosterone, which is a Schedule III controlled drug in the U.S. with stricter prescribing rules, Lynkuet is a standard prescription — so telehealth prescribing carries no special hurdles. You still need a prescription, a licensed evaluation, liver labs, and a pharmacy to fill it.

We mention this because women researching menopause treatments often run into the controlled-substance rules that apply to things like testosterone, which can complicate online prescribing. Lynkuet doesn’t carry those. Any licensed clinician who evaluates you and thinks it’s appropriate can prescribe it. That removes a hurdle — it doesn’t remove the need for a real medical evaluation and labs.

Who should not start with online Lynkuet care?

In one sentence:Online care is a fine starting point for many women with straightforward moderate-to-severe hot flashes, but some situations belong with an in-person clinician or a coordinated team first — including pregnancy, liver disease, complex medication lists, and active oncology care.

Online-first isn’t right for everyone, and we’d rather tell you than lose your trust. Consider starting in person, or with your existing care team, if you:

If any of that is you, use Find My HRT Path— it flags when online care isn’t the right first step and points you toward the right kind of clinician.

Frequently asked questions

Is Lynkuet available online?
You can’t buy Lynkuet directly online, but you can get it online — a licensed clinician evaluates you by video, prescribes it, and sends it to a pharmacy like BlinkRx for home delivery. There’s no legitimate “add to cart” option because it’s prescription-only.
Does Midi prescribe Lynkuet?
Midi prescribes FDA-approved medications and already offers non-hormonal hot-flash options like fezolinetant (Veozah), and its clinicians order lab work — so it’s well-positioned for Lynkuet. But Midi does not list Lynkuet by name publicly, and we have not independently confirmed a specific clinician will prescribe it. Confirm it at your visit.
Does Sesame prescribe Lynkuet?
Sesame’s cash-pay providers prescribe both hormonal and non-hormonal menopause treatments and can order labs. Like Midi, Sesame does not advertise Lynkuet by name, so confirm Lynkuet-specific prescribing and the full liver panel with your chosen provider before booking.
How do I get a prescription for Lynkuet?
See a clinician who can evaluate your hot flashes and order the required liver labs — online through Midi (if you have commercial insurance) or Sesame (cash-pay), or through your own OB-GYN or primary care doctor. Once prescribed, you fill it at a pharmacy such as BlinkRx.
How much does Lynkuet cost per month?
The list price is about $625 for a 30-day supply, and cash prices at retail pharmacies run roughly $615 to $745. With commercial insurance and Bayer’s BlinkRx pharmacy, eligible patients may pay as little as $25 a month.
Does insurance cover Lynkuet?
Coverage varies by plan and formulary. Commercial insurance often covers part of the cost, and Bayer’s copay card can bring it to as little as $25 a month through BlinkRx. Medicare and Medicaid patients can’t use the copay card, so cost depends on the plan.
Is Lynkuet a hormone?
No. Lynkuet is non-hormonal — it contains no estrogen or progesterone. It reduces hot flashes by calming overactive brain signals (NK-1 and NK-3 receptors) instead of adding hormones, which is why it’s an option for women who can’t or don’t want to take hormones.
What’s the difference between Lynkuet and Veozah?
Both are FDA-approved non-hormonal pills for hot flashes. Lynkuet blocks two brain receptors (NK-1 and NK-3) as two capsules at bedtime; Veozah blocks one (NK-3) as one daily pill. Veozah carries a boxed liver warning and monthly testing early on; Lynkuet requires baseline liver labs but has no boxed warning.
Do I need bloodwork before starting Lynkuet?
Yes. You need baseline liver blood tests — ALT, AST, ALP, and total plus direct bilirubin — before you start, and you can’t begin if certain values are too high. Make sure the lab order includes direct bilirubin, which a standard metabolic panel may leave out.
Can I get Lynkuet without insurance?
Yes, but you’ll pay the cash price (about $615–$745 depending on pharmacy) unless you qualify for Bayer’s patient assistance program. Booking cash-pay menopause care through Sesame is a common way for uninsured women to get evaluated and prescribed.
Is there a generic or compounded version of Lynkuet?
No. As of mid-2026 there’s no FDA-approved generic, and federal rules restrict compounding copies of an approved drug like this. Be cautious of any site offering a cheaper “generic” or “compounded” Lynkuet — it may be counterfeit or unlawfully made.
Is Lynkuet a controlled substance?
No. It’s a standard prescription, which makes it straightforward to prescribe by telehealth — unlike testosterone, which is a Schedule III controlled substance with stricter rules.

What we actually verified

We’re an independent decision resource, not a pharmacy and not the manufacturer — so here’s exactly what we checked, and what we didn’t, so you can trust the parts we stand behind and spot-check the rest.

Verification table: claims about Lynkuet, source, and whether confirmed by The HRT Index
ClaimSourceVerified
Lynkuet’s FDA approval date, non-hormonal status, dose, liver-lab requirement, and pregnancy contraindicationFDA/Bayer prescribing information; DailyMed (2025)✓ Yes
Cash price (~$625 list; ~$615–$745 retail) and BlinkRx savings (as little as $25, commercial insurance only)Bayer/BlinkRx; GoodRx, Drugs.com, SingleCare (July 2026)✓ Yes
Trial results (65–67% vs 42–46% hot-flash reduction, OASIS 1 & 2)Bayer prescribing information / manufacturer site (2025)✓ Yes
Midi’s model: insurance billing, lab ordering, all-50-states, self-pay $250/$150Midi Health’s own site and help center (2026)✓ Yes
Sesame’s model: cash-pay, ~$99/month menopause subscription, provider-ordered labsSesame’s own site and launch materials (2025–2026)✓ Yes
Veozah’s boxed warning and monitoring scheduleAstellas/FDA labeling (2024–2026)✓ Yes

What we did not independently confirm: that any specific Midi or Sesame clinician will start youon Lynkuet — because it’s brand-new, confirm this at your visit (use the four questions above). Prices and provider policies change; we refresh this page and its “Last verified” date on a fixed schedule.

See our editorial and medical-review policy.

Your next step

You came here wanting a clear path and a little permission. Here it is. If your hot flashes are moderate-to-severe and hormones aren’t right for you, Lynkuet is a legitimate, FDA-approved option — and getting it doesn’t have to mean overpaying or gambling on a sketchy website.

Choose your path

Have commercial insurance?

Start with a clinician who’ll order your labs. Average ~$50 out of pocket.

Check Midi availability →

Uninsured or on Medicaid?

Cash-pay menopause care. See the price before you book.

Check Sesame menopause care →

Still not sure whether Lynkuet, another non-hormonal option, or hormone therapy is right for you?

Sources

Written by the editorial team at The HRT Index — the independent menopause-HRT decision resource for women. This is editorial research, not medical advice, and is not medically reviewed by a clinician. Always talk with a licensed healthcare provider before starting any prescription. Prices and provider policies change; we refresh this page on a fixed schedule. Because our matching tool collects sensitive health information, answers are handled under our consumer-health-data and privacy policy.