Does Evernow Prescribe Veozah?
By The HRT Index Editorial Team · Last verified:
Independent editorial research. Educational only — not medical advice. Not medically reviewed by a clinician.
Disclosure: The HRT Index may earn a commission if you start care through some links on this page, at no extra cost to you. It never changes the facts we report, the safety warnings we flag, or whether we call a provider a fit. FDA-approved and compounded medications are always labeled separately here — Veozah is an FDA-approved drug, with no compounding involved. See full disclosure.

Yes — Evernow prescribes Veozah.Evernow lets you request Veozah — the FDA-approved, non-hormonal pill for moderate-to-severe hot flashes and night sweats due to menopause — through a virtual visit or a membership, and a menopause-trained clinician prescribes it when it fits your situation. The catch most pages skip: Veozah needs liver blood tests before and during treatment, the pill is billed separately from your visit, and a prescription is never guaranteed.
That’s the honest bottom line. Below is what actually matters before you spend a dollar — whether you’rea candidate, what you’ll really pay in 2026, and how the required liver monitoring works when your care is online. We dug through Evernow’s own pages, the FDA’s Veozah label, and Astellas’ pricing to lay it out straight.
The HRT Index is 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.
Is this a fit for you?
A fit for you if…
Your hot flashes or night sweats are moderate to severe, you want a non-hormonal option or can’t take estrogen, your liver is healthy, and you can complete the required blood tests.
Not your path if…
Your symptoms are mild or occasional, you have cirrhosis or severe kidney disease, you take a medicine your clinician flags as a “CYP1A2 inhibitor,” or your main problem is vaginal dryness or painful sex — Veozah doesn’t treat that.
What we verified before you pay
We didn’t take anyone’s word for it. Here’s what we confirmed, and where it came from.
| What you want to know | What we found | How we know |
|---|---|---|
| Does Evernow prescribe Veozah? | Yes. Evernow lists Veozah (fezolinetant) and says a clinician can prescribe it online when it's appropriate for you. | Evernow's Veozah page |
| Is a prescription guaranteed? | No. A clinician reviews your symptoms, history, and safety first. It's not automatic. | Evernow |
| Is Veozah a hormone? | No. It's a non-hormonal pill for hot flashes and night sweats — not estrogen, not HRT. | FDA label; Astellas |
| What does the Evernow visit cost? | Pay-per-visit $150 self-pay (or your insurance copay); membership from $35/mo. | Evernow FAQ |
| What does the Veozah pill cost? | Astellas list price $566/month; $0 first month / ~$30 refills with the savings card if you have commercial insurance. | Astellas; GoodRx; SingleCare |
| What labs are required? | A liver blood test before you start, then at months 1, 2, 3, 6, and 9. | FDA boxed warning, Dec 2024 |
| Who can't take it? | People with cirrhosis, severe or end-stage kidney disease, or who take a CYP1A2 inhibitor. | FDA label |
| Where is Evernow available? | All 50 states plus D.C. | Evernow FAQ |
| Does Evernow take Medicare or Medicaid? | No — not for visits. It works with major commercial plans. | Evernow FAQ |
Where we say “Evernow reports,” that’s the company’s own statement. Where we cite the FDA label or Astellas’ pricing, that’s the primary source. One thing we could notconfirm from Evernow’s public pages: the exact way it orders and tracks your month-by-month Veozah liver labs — so ask about that at intake (we give you the script below).
If those tradeoffs fit what you wanted: See Evernow’s Veozah option →
Not sure it’s the right thing to ask for? Keep reading — the quick check below sorts it out in 30 seconds.
The right online HRT provider isn’t the same for every woman
It depends on your symptoms, your age and whether you have a uterus, your medication route preference (patch, pill, gel, or vaginal estrogen), your risk history, your insurance or cash-pay situation, and your state. Some situations belong with an in-person clinician first. Use Find My HRT Path to match your situation to the right provider — and to flag when online care isn’t the right starting point — before your first consult. (It asks a few health-related questions and runs under our privacy and consumer-health-data policy.)
Find My HRT Path →Affiliate disclosure: The HRT Index may earn a commission if you start care through some provider links. It never changes what we verify or who we recommend. Educational research only — not medical advice.
Quick check: should you even ask Evernow for Veozah?
Run through these before you book. Most of the value here is knowing you’re not about to waste a visit.
- Good sign: Your hot flashes or night sweats are bad enough to disrupt your sleep or day. Veozah is built for exactly this.
- Good sign: You want a non-hormonal option, or you can’t take estrogen. That’s Veozah’s whole reason to exist.
- Ask a clinician first: You have liver disease, or you take a CYP1A2 inhibitor (certain medicines that change how your body handles Veozah). It may not be safe for you.
- Not a fit: You have cirrhosis or severe/end-stage kidney disease. These are FDA contraindications — the medicine can’t be used.
- Not the whole answer: Your main problem is vaginal dryness or painful sex. Veozah won’t touch that; a local vaginal treatment will.
- Wrong route: You’re on Medicare or Medicaid and need your visit covered. Evernow doesn’t bill those plans.
Cleared the “not a fit” and “wrong route” lines? You’re a reasonable candidate to ask Evernow about Veozah. Hit one of them? Find My HRT Path will match you to a better fit in about a minute →
You won’t lose your place.
So, does Evernow prescribe Veozah — and is it guaranteed?
Yes, Evernow prescribes Veozah, but it isn’t guaranteed. Evernow has a dedicated Veozah page and says its clinicians can prescribe the medication online when it’s medically appropriate. Approval still depends on a clinician reviewing your symptoms, health history, current medicines, and safety — so “Evernow offers it” is not the same as “you’ll get it.”
That’s actually a good sign. Veozah has real safety rules (more on those below), and a provider who hands it out after a two-minute quiz with no lab check is one to avoid — not one to trust. Evernow puts a licensed, menopause-trained clinician between you and the prescription, which is exactly what this drug calls for.
Here’s what “prescribe” really means on Evernow
| The step | What it means for you |
|---|---|
| Evernow lists Veozah | It's a real option in their menu, not something you have to talk them into |
| A clinician must review you | Your symptoms, history, and meds get checked — no rubber stamp |
| Two ways in | A one-time virtual visit or an ongoing membership |
| Baseline labs required | You'll need a liver blood test before the first pill |
| The pill is billed separately | Your visit fee doesn't include the medication |
| Not guaranteed | If it's not safe or right for you, they won't prescribe it |
Two things to get straight before we go deeper: Veozah is not HRT — it won’t replace estrogen and won’t help vaginal dryness — and the visit and the pill are two separate costs.
See Evernow’s Veozah option and start your assessment →
Still weighing whether Veozah is even the right ask? Find My HRT Path answers it first.
Is Veozah a hormone, or something different?
Veozah (fezolinetant) is not a hormone. It’s a non-hormonal, once-daily pill that calms the part of your brain that controls body temperature, which reduces hot flashes and night sweats. It doesn’t contain estrogen, and it’s not a “bioidentical” hormone — those are different things entirely. See our full Veozah guide for the complete picture.
Here’s the plain version. During menopause, falling estrogen throws off a brain chemical called neurokinin B (NKB) that helps run your internal thermostat. Veozah blocks the switch NKB flips (the “NK3 receptor”), so your thermostat stops overreacting. That’s why it works for vasomotor symptoms — the medical name for hot flashes and night sweats— without touching your hormones.
The FDA approved Veozah on May 12, 2023 for moderate-to-severehot flashes and night sweats due to menopause. “Moderate to severe” matters: it’s meant for symptoms bad enough to disrupt your sleep or day, not the occasional flush. It comes as one 45 mg tablet, taken once a day.
Because people mix these up constantly, here’s how Veozah compares to the two things it’s most often confused with.
| Veozah (fezolinetant) | HRT (e.g., estradiol) | Local vaginal estrogen | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treats hot flashes / night sweats | Yes | Yes | No |
| Treats vaginal dryness / painful sex | No | Sometimes (systemic) | Yes (that's its job) |
| Hormone or non-hormonal | Non-hormonal | Hormonal | Hormonal (low-dose, local) |
| FDA-approved | Yes | Yes (many options) | Yes (many options) |
| Liver blood tests required | Yes | No | No |
If your real problem is vaginal dryness, irritation, or painful sex, Veozah isn’t the answer — that’s a different treatment path, usually starting with local vaginal estrogen, and our Find My HRT Path tool can point you there.
How to get Veozah through Evernow, step by step
Getting Veozah through Evernow means choosing a care option, completing a health profile, meeting a clinician, doing a baseline liver blood test, and — if it’s right for you — filling the prescription at a pharmacy. The whole thing is virtual, and Evernow says you can message a provider within 24 hours.
- Pick your care option.Pay-per-visit ($150 self-pay, or your insurance copay) gets you a one-time virtual visit plus 90 days of access to the care portal and prescriptions — best if you just want to ask about Veozah without committing to a membership. Membership (from $35/month) gives you unlimited messaging with your clinician, optional video visits, and automatic refills — best if you want ongoing support, which matters for a drug that needs repeat lab checks. (Evernow lists membership starting at $35/month on the annual plan, with shorter plans priced higher. Confirm the current price at checkout.)
- Answer the health questions.You’ll share your symptoms, your medical history (liver, kidney, and current medicines especially), and what you’ve already tried.
- Ask about Veozah directly.Don’t leave it vague. Copy and paste this to your clinician:
“I’m looking for a non-hormonal option for moderate-to-severe hot flashes and night sweats. Do you prescribe Veozah when it’s appropriate? If so, how do you handle the baseline liver labs, the follow-up liver tests, prior authorization, and refills?”
- Do the baseline liver blood test before you start.This isn’t optional — the FDA requires it, and Evernow says it orders labs when a medication needs them. Your clinician reviews the results before the prescription goes through.
- Fill it at a pharmacy. Evernow can send most prescriptions to your local pharmacy (where you can use commercial insurance and discounts) or ship through a partner pharmacy. For a pricey brand-name drug like Veozah, the local-pharmacy route usually matters most for cost.
(We mapped these steps from Evernow’s public pages; we didn’t complete a paid intake, so confirm the exact lab and paperwork details at checkout.)
Straight talk — one real limitation. Evernow does not take Medicare or Medicaid for its visits; it works with major commercial plans like UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Anthem, and Blue Cross Blue Shield. If a government plan covering your visit is what you need, your own doctor or a local clinic is the better starting point — and our Find My HRT Path tool can help you find one. But because Evernow skips the slow insurance-contract maze that bogs down big clinics, it can usually get you a menopause-trained clinician within about a day and keep your ongoing lab checks in one place, instead of leaving you to chase a specialist for months.
Ready to ask the right questions? Start your Evernow assessment →
What liver tests does Veozah require before and after starting?
Here’s the real catch. Veozah carries the FDA’s most serious alert — a boxed warning for rare but serious liver injury, added December 16, 2024. Any legitimate prescriber, Evernow included, must order a liver blood test before you start and repeat it on a set schedule. This is the single most important thing to understand before choosing any online route. See our full Veozah liver warning breakdown for the complete monitoring schedule.
We’re not saying this to scare you off. Veozah is still FDA-approved and prescribed today, and its maker, Astellas, says the benefit-risk balance remains positive. But the FDA considered the liver risk serious enough to add its strongest warning — so the monitoring isn’t a formality, and the provider you pick matters.
Here’s the schedule the FDA requires:
| When | What happens |
|---|---|
| Before your first pill | Liver blood test (ALT, AST, ALP, and bilirubin — these measure how your liver is doing) |
| Month 1 | Repeat liver blood test |
| Month 2 | Repeat liver blood test |
| Month 3 | Repeat liver blood test |
| Month 6 | Repeat liver blood test |
| Month 9 | Repeat liver blood test |
| Any time you feel symptoms | Stop and call your clinician right away |
And here are the rules your clinician follows, in plain English:
- They won’t start Veozah if your baseline liver enzymes (ALT or AST) are already 2 times or more above the top of the normal range, or your bilirubin is 2 times or more above normal.
- They’ll test you more often if your liver enzymes climb above 3 times normal, until things settle.
- They’ll stop Veozah if your enzymes go above 5 times normal, or above 3 times normal along with bilirubin above 2 times normal — or if you have any symptoms of liver trouble.
- You stop it yourself and call right away if you notice new tiredness, nausea or vomiting, itching, yellow skin or eyes, pale stools, dark urine, or pain in your upper-right belly.
None of this means Veozah is dangerous for most people — it means it’s monitored, and that monitoring is exactly why a real clinician (not a vending-machine prescription service) should be running your care.
If you can commit to the lab schedule, ask an Evernow clinician whether Veozah fits your history →
Does Evernow handle Veozah’s labs and insurance paperwork?
Evernow says its providers order labs when a medication requires them, and Veozah’s label requires that testing — so a clinician can order your baseline and follow-up liver panels as part of your care. What isn’t spelled out on Evernow’s public pages is the fine print: which lab, who pays for it, who reminds you about each month’s test, and whether they’ll file your insurance prior authorization. So confirm it at intake.
Before you pay for the medication, get clear answers to these:
- Who orders my baseline liver panel — and can I use recent labs I already have?
- Which lab do I use, and what will the test cost?
- Will the prescription be held until my results are reviewed?
- Who keeps track of my month 1, 2, 3, 6, and 9 tests?
- Will Evernow submit my insurance prior-authorization paperwork if my plan requires it?
- What happens if a result comes back abnormal?
Asking these upfront is the difference between smooth care and a surprise bill. It also tells you fast whether Evernow’s model fits how much hand-holding you want.
How much does Veozah cost if Evernow prescribes it? (2026)
Two separate costs. The Evernow visit runs $150 self-pay (or your insurance copay) for pay-per-visit, or from $35/month for membership. The Veozah medicationhas a list price of $566/month, but what you actually pay swings a lot with your coverage — from as little as $0 the first month to a few hundred dollars, or the full price if your plan excludes it.
What Evernow charges for care
| Evernow option | Published price | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Pay-per-visit (self-pay) | $150 per visit | Asking about Veozah without a membership |
| Pay-per-visit (insurance) | Your copay/deductible | Using a major commercial plan |
| Membership | From $35/month (annual plan; shorter plans cost more) | Ongoing care and refills |
Membership fees aren’t insurance-covered, but they are HSA/FSA eligible (you can pay with pre-tax health-account dollars). See our full Evernow cost breakdown for the complete picture.
What the Veozah pill costs, by coverage
| Your situation | What you may pay | The catch |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial / employer insurance | Astellas reports an average of $42/month; the savings card can make your first month $0 and refills as low as $30 (up to $4,000/year) | May need prior authorization or "step therapy" first |
| Medicare Part D | Astellas reports an average of $55/month | Savings card not allowed; coverage varies by plan |
| Medicaid | Astellas reports an average of $2/month | Savings card not allowed; coverage varies by state and plan |
| No insurance (cash pay) | Astellas list price is $566/month; discount cards (GoodRx, SingleCare) run roughly $475–$775 depending on pharmacy and day; or $0 if you qualify for Astellas' patient assistance program | No generic exists yet |
A word on that cash-pay row, because it surprises people. Astellas’ “list price” of $566 isn’t always what you’ll see at the register. As of our July 2026 check, discount-card prices ranged from about $475 ( SingleCare’s card) up to around $775 at some pharmacies — prices shift by location and day. If you’re uninsured, call the Astellas Patient Assistance Program (1-866-239-1637); qualifying patients can get Veozah at no cost. See GoodRx’s current pricing and our Veozah cost without insurance guide for the full pharmacy-side breakdown, or our Veozah savings card guide for the fine print.
Check Veozah’s current price and savings options before you commit →
If the numbers don’t work, see lower-cost paths with Find My HRT Path— sometimes another option fits your budget and your symptoms better.
Does insurance cover Veozah, and will Evernow take my plan?
Often, yes — but with strings. Astellas says about 64% of people with commercial insurance have a plan that covers Veozah, though many require prior authorization or step therapy. Evernow accepts major commercial insurance (UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Anthem, and Blue Cross Blue Shield) for video visits, but does not take Medicare or Medicaid for visits. The pill is billed separately at your pharmacy. See our does Evernow take insurance guide for the full billing picture.
Two kinds of “coverage” get mixed up here, so keep them apart.
| What it covers | The gotcha | |
|---|---|---|
| Your Evernow visit | The care/consult | Commercial plans often yes; no Medicare or Medicaid |
| The Veozah medication | The pill at the pharmacy | May need prior authorization or land on a higher-cost tier |
| Prior authorization | Your insurer wants the prescription justified first | Adds time; ask Evernow to file it |
| Step therapy | You may have to try a cheaper option first | Common for pricey brand drugs |
If you’re on Medicare or Medicaid and want a visit covered, Evernow isn’t your route. Find a provider that fits your coverage with Find My HRT Path →
Who is — and isn’t — a good fit for Veozah through Evernow?
Veozah through Evernow fits best if hot flashes or night sweats are your main problem, you want a non-hormonal option, you can do the liver labs, and you have commercial insurance or can handle the cash price. It’s a poor fit if you have certain liver or kidney conditions, take a CYP1A2 inhibitor, or need broader menopause care.
A strong fit if you…
- ✓Have moderate-to-severe hot flashes or night sweats
- ✓Want (or need) a non-hormonal option
- ✓Can complete the lab schedule
- ✓Have commercial insurance, or are okay with cash pricing
Not a strong fit if you…
- ✗Have known cirrhosis or liver disease
- ✗Have severe or end-stage kidney disease
- ✗Take a CYP1A2 inhibitor
- ✗Can't get to a lab on schedule
- ✗Mainly have vaginal dryness, painful sex, or recurrent UTIs, without much in the way of hot flashes
- ✗Need your visit covered by Medicare or Medicaid
If you landed in the “not a strong fit” column, don’t force it. The wrong medication is worse than no medication. Get matched to a better-fitting option with Find My HRT Path →
What if Veozah isn’t right for you? Other options that work
If Veozah’s liver monitoring, cost, or safety rules rule it out, you still have real choices — a newer non-hormonal pill, another FDA-approved non-hormonal option, some off-label medicines, and hormone therapy itself, which remains the most effective treatment for hot flashes for women who can take it. See our full Veozah vs. Lynkuet comparison.
| Option | FDA status for hot flashes | Hormone? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lynkuet (elinzanetant) | FDA-approved Oct 2025 | Non-hormonal | Newest option; once daily at bedtime; also studied in women with a history of breast cancer (its FDA approval is for menopausal hot flashes). List price around $625/month; insured patients may pay far less. |
| Paroxetine 7.5 mg (Brisdelle) | FDA-approved | Non-hormonal | A low-dose option, usually cheaper than Veozah. |
| Venlafaxine, gabapentin, others | Off-label | Non-hormonal | Not FDA-approved for hot flashes but commonly used; inexpensive as generics. |
| Hormone therapy (HRT) | FDA-approved | Hormonal | Per The Menopause Society, the most effective treatment for hot flashes and night sweats for appropriate candidates. Evernow prescribes FDA-approved options like the estradiol patch, estradiol pill, and progesterone. |
| Local vaginal estrogen | FDA-approved | Hormonal (low-dose, local) | The targeted fix for vaginal dryness or painful sex — not hot flashes. |
Not sure whether the answer is Veozah, Lynkuet, HRT, or a local treatment? That’s the exact call our tool is built for. Compare your options with Find My HRT Path →
Evernow vs. your own doctor vs. another online provider
Choose Evernow if you want fast, menopause-focused online care and its insurance and lab process fit you. Choose your OB-GYN or an in-person clinic if you have complex medical history, abnormal labs, or need a physical exam. Choose a different telehealth provider if Evernow doesn’t take your insurance or you want to compare a specialist that leans FDA-approved-first. See our full Midi vs. Evernow comparison.
| Route | Best for | Watch-out |
|---|---|---|
| Evernow | Menopause-focused online care and a Veozah request; all 50 states + D.C.; accepts major commercial plans | No Medicare/Medicaid for visits; confirm labs and drug cost |
| Your OB-GYN or PCP | Complex history, in-person exam, managing labs alongside other conditions | Appointments can take weeks |
| Another menopause telehealth (e.g., Midi Health) | Comparing a menopause-specialist provider that leans FDA-approved-first and takes many PPOs | Confirm it prescribes Veozah and serves your state before you commit |
| Find My HRT Path first | You're unsure between Veozah, HRT, or another provider | It's a matching tool, not a prescription service |
Whatever you choose, one rule holds: avoid any provider willing to prescribe Veozah without a baseline liver test. That’s not a corner worth cutting. If you want to see how another lab-capable provider handles this drug, read our does Midi prescribe Veozah breakdown.
Is Evernow legit?
Yes. Evernow is a LegitScript-approved telehealth service that uses licensed, menopause-trained clinicians, follows major medical-society guidelines, and prescribes FDA-approved medications including Veozah. It’s a legitimate way to get menopause care online — though, like any provider, it fits some situations better than others. See our full Evernow review for the complete verdict.
A few things that back that up (and where each claim comes from):
- LegitScript approved — Evernow displays the LegitScript seal, an independent check that a telehealth provider follows the rules. (Verified: seal shown on Evernow’s site.)
- Licensed clinicians in all 50 states plus D.C., certified by The Menopause Society (formerly NAMS). (Evernow-reported.)
- Guideline-based care — Evernow says its providers follow the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and The Menopause Society. (Evernow-reported.)
- Scale and results — Evernow reports it’s trusted by more than 160,000 women, and that most women feel better within one to three months, based on its study with data from over 100,000 members. (Evernow-reported; not independently verified clinical efficacy.)
Here’s what one member said about the care model (this is one person’s experience with Evernow’s service, not proof of any medical result):
“I have never had a doctor I could talk to like this. I wish the whole medical field would go to this system, so much more efficient and effective.” — Michele, Evernow member review
Legit doesn’t mean “right for everyone.” Re-read the liver-warning and fit sections above, confirm your state and insurance, and you’ll know where you stand.
How we verified this — The HRT Index Verification Standard
We reviewed this page using The HRT Index Verification Standard: we read every published price, separated FDA-approved facts from marketing, checked the FDA’s current safety labeling, confirmed state availability and insurance, and re-check on a fixed schedule — top providers monthly, the full roster quarterly. We evaluate every provider on five things, in this order: clinical legitimacy, care quality, medication fit, price transparency, and access.
For this page, that meant reading Evernow’s own Veozah, FAQ, pricing, and review pages; Astellas’ official cost and hepatic-monitoring information; the FDA’s boxed-warning safety communication and prescribing label; and guidance from The Menopause Society. We don’t assign providers a numeric score, and this page is editorial research — not a substitute for your clinician’s judgment.
What we actually verified (July 2026)
We confirmed on Evernow’s own prescription page that Evernow lists and prescribes Veozah (fezolinetant) after a clinician review. We confirmed Veozah’s FDA boxed warning for liver injury and the required liver-testing schedule from the FDA’s Drug Safety Communication (December 16, 2024) and Astellas’ hepatic-monitoring information, which cites the prescribing label. We confirmed Evernow’s pricing, insurance list, all-50-states availability, and LegitScript seal from Evernow’s FAQ and site. We confirmed Veozah’s list price and average out-of-pocket figures from Astellas’ official cost page, and real-world discount prices from GoodRx and SingleCare. We did not complete Evernow’s paid intake, so the exact Veozah lab-ordering and prior-authorization workflow should be confirmed at checkout. Provider policies and prices change — re-verify before you pay. This is editorial research, not medical advice, and it was not medically reviewed by a clinician.
By The HRT Index editorial team — the independent menopause-HRT decision layer for women. Educational only; not medical advice. Last verified: July 2026.
Frequently asked questions
The short version: Evernow lists and can prescribe Veozah after a clinician review, but it isn’t automatic. These answers cover the follow-ups most likely to send you back to searching.
Does Evernow prescribe Veozah?
Yes. Evernow lists Veozah (fezolinetant) and says its clinicians can prescribe it online when medically appropriate. Approval depends on a clinician reviewing your symptoms, health history, and safety.
Is Veozah a hormone or HRT?
No. Veozah is a non-hormonal pill for moderate-to-severe hot flashes and night sweats due to menopause. It is not estrogen, progesterone, or hormone replacement therapy.
Do I need bloodwork for Veozah?
Yes. The FDA requires a liver blood test before starting, then at months 1, 2, 3, 6, and 9.
Does Evernow order the Veozah liver labs?
Evernow says its providers order labs when a medication requires them, and Veozah's label requires it — so a clinician can order your baseline and follow-up panels. Confirm the specifics (which lab, cost, and who tracks each test) at intake.
How much does Veozah cost through Evernow?
The visit and the medication are separate. Astellas lists Veozah at $566/month; Evernow charges $150 per self-pay visit or from $35 per month for membership. With commercial insurance, the savings card can make the first month $0 and refills as low as $30.
Does insurance cover Veozah?
Often, for commercial plans — Astellas says about 64% of commercially insured people have coverage — but many plans require prior authorization or step therapy. Medicare and Medicaid coverage varies, and those plans can't use the manufacturer savings card.
Does Evernow take my insurance?
Evernow accepts major commercial plans (UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Anthem, Blue Cross Blue Shield) for video visits. It does not take Medicare or Medicaid for visits.
Who should not take Veozah?
People with known cirrhosis, severe or end-stage kidney disease, or who take a CYP1A2 inhibitor. A clinician must review your history before prescribing.
Does Veozah help vaginal dryness?
No. Veozah treats hot flashes and night sweats only. For vaginal dryness or painful sex, a local vaginal estrogen is the targeted option.
Lynkuet vs. Veozah — what's the difference?
Both are non-hormonal pills for moderate-to-severe hot flashes. Lynkuet (elinzanetant) was FDA-approved in October 2025 and is taken at bedtime; Veozah was approved in 2023 and carries a boxed warning with the liver-test schedule above. A clinician can help you weigh them for your situation.
What are the signs of liver problems on Veozah?
New tiredness, nausea or vomiting, itching, yellow skin or eyes, pale stools, dark urine, or upper-right belly pain. Stop the medicine and contact your clinician right away.
Is Evernow legit?
Yes — it's a LegitScript-approved telehealth service using licensed, menopause-trained clinicians. (That's a legitimacy signal, not a medical endorsement.)
Your situation changes the answer
Find My HRT Path
The right online HRT provider isn't the same for every woman. It depends on your symptoms, your age and whether you have a uterus, your medication route preference (patch, pill, gel, or vaginal estrogen), your risk history, your insurance or cash-pay situation, and your state — and some situations belong with an in-person clinician first. Because a general answer can't resolve those for you, use The HRT Index's Find My HRT Path tool to match your situation to the right provider, and to flag when online care isn't the right starting point, before your first consult.
Find My HRT Path →So — does Evernow prescribe Veozah?
Yes. Evernow lists Veozah and a menopause-trained clinician can prescribe it when it’s appropriate for you — but it isn’t guaranteed, the pill is billed separately from your visit, and you’ll need the liver blood tests the FDA requires. If you’re a reasonable candidate (moderate-to-severe hot flashes, no liver or kidney contraindications, willing to do the labs), Evernow is a legitimate way to start that conversation. If you’re unsure whether Veozah, hormone therapy, a local treatment, or in-person care fits you, don’t guess. Take our free Find My HRT Path match. It takes about 60 seconds and gives you a personalized starting point — including a flag if your situation calls for in-person care — before your first consult.
Still not sure which HRT program is right for you? Take our free 60-second matching quiz. Find My HRT Path → The HRT Index is the independent decision resource for online menopause and HRT care. Educational only — not medical advice. FDA-approved and compounded medications are always labeled distinctly, and compounded options are never implied to be equivalent to FDA-approved medicine. Some providers may compensate The HRT Index if you click or apply; our recommendations follow The HRT Index Verification Standard, not payout. Because Find My HRT Path collects sensitive health information, it’s handled under our consumer-health-data and privacy policy. For any medical decision, talk with a licensed clinician. Last verified: July 2026.
Sources (verified July 2026)
- Evernow — Veozah page (prescribes Veozah; clinician review) — accessed July 2026
- Evernow — FAQ (pricing, insurance, all 50 states + D.C., no Medicare/Medicaid, labs, pharmacies) — accessed July 2026
- Evernow — Membership page (“from $35/mo”; 160,000 members; NAMS/Menopause Society-certified providers) — accessed July 2026
- Evernow — Reviews (member testimonial) — accessed July 2026
- FDA — Drug Safety Communication, boxed warning for Veozah liver injury, updated December 16, 2024
- Astellas Medical Information — Fezolinetant hepatic monitoring requirements (baseline/months 1–3/6/9; do-not-start, more-frequent, and discontinuation thresholds; cirrhosis contraindication), citing the VEOZAH package insert — accessed July 2026
- FDA — VEOZAH (fezolinetant) Prescribing Information (indication, contraindications, dosing)
- Astellas — Veozah cost page (list price $566; average out-of-pocket $42 commercial / $55 Medicare Part D / $2 Medicaid; patient assistance) — accessed July 2026
- Astellas — VEOZAH Savings Program terms ($0 first month, ~$30 refills, $4,000/yr cap; commercial only)
- GoodRx and SingleCare — Veozah retail and discount pricing snapshots (July 2026)
- FDA / Bayer — Lynkuet (elinzanetant) approval, October 24, 2025
- The Menopause Society — position that hormone therapy is the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms for appropriate candidates
