Evernow Cost: What You’ll Actually Pay for Menopause Care in 2026
By The HRT Index Editorial Team · · Educational only — not medical advice. The HRT Index may earn a commission from Midi Health and Winona through some links on this page. We do not earn a commission from Evernow — our links to Evernow are editorial. How we make money.
The price on Evernow’s homepage isn’t the whole story — and the part it leaves out is exactly where people get surprised at checkout. So let’s settle the Evernow cost question fast, with numbers pulled straight from Evernow, and then map the few things that move your real total.
| Evernow option | Cost | Medication included? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly membership | $49/month | No | Maximum flexibility, easy to stop |
| 3-month membership | $129 (~$43/mo) | No (free vaginal estrogen if you qualify) | Seriously testing the fit |
| 12-month membership | $420 (~$35/mo, paid upfront) | No (free vaginal estrogen if you qualify) | The lowest rate — if you’re sure |
| Pay-per-visit (self-pay) | $150/visit | No | One consult or a second opinion |
| Pay-per-visit (insurance) | Your copay/deductible | No | Commercially insured, no subscription |
Prices verified from Evernow’s official pricing FAQ and prescription pages, . Medication, labs, and any video-visit copays are separate. See Evernow’s current pricing to confirm today’s numbers. For the full review, see our Evernow HRT review.
Evernow is a smart pick if you want low-cost online menopause care, message-based access to a clinician, and the freedom to fill your prescription at your own pharmacy. It’s a weaker fit if you need Medicare or Medicaid, you want one flat price with medication baked in, or you expect a live video visit every single time.
How much does Evernow cost per month in 2026?
Evernow’s monthly cost is $49 if you pay month-to-month, $43 a month on the 3-month plan ($129 total), or $35 a month on the 12-month plan ($420 paid upfront). The longer you commit, the lower the rate. Every tier includes unlimited message-based access to a menopause clinician, prescriptions and refills when appropriate, and the option to add video visits. Medication is not included in any tier (with one free-cream exception on multi-month plans).
What each plan costs over real time
| Plan | What you pay | If you used it all year |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly | $49/month | $588/year |
| 3-month | $129 every 3 months | $516/year (if you renew 4×) |
| 12-month | $420 once | $420/year |
The annual plan saves you $168 a year versus paying monthly. And the 3-month plan is only $18 cheaperthan paying monthly for those same three months ($129 vs $147) — so if you’re testing the waters, the freedom of month-to-month costs almost nothing extra.
What the membership fee actually buys
The membership is built around secure messaging with a licensed clinician — a nurse practitioner or doctor credentialed in your state. You can ask questions, report side effects, and request dose changes without booking an appointment. It also covers access to prescriptions and refills if a clinician decides hormone therapy is right for you, plus the option to add a video visit.
Expectation to set: Evernow’s core model is asynchronous— message-based, not live video. Your clinician usually replies within about a day. If a real-time, face-to-face visit every time matters to you, that’s worth knowing before you pay.
Is Evernow really $35 a month? (The one catch worth knowing)
Yes — $35 a month is real, but only on the 12-month plan, and only because you pay the full $420 upfront.Pay month-to-month and it’s $49. And no matter which plan you pick, that price is your care fee — it does not include the cost of your medication.
Evernow does not give you one all-in number. The membership and your medication are billed separately. If a single, predictable, everything-included price is what you want, a shipped-medication service like Winona will feel cleaner — there, the monthly price is the medication.
But here’s the real flip side: because Evernow keeps the medication separate, you can run it through your own insurance or fill it at your local pharmacy.For a woman whose plan covers generic estradiol, that can make Evernow’s true monthly cost lowerthan a bundled service. The “catch” and the “advantage” are the same design choice.
Are Evernow medications included in the cost?
Mostly no — your medication is billed separately, with one exception. Members on the 3- or 12-month plans can get free vaginal estrogen cream if they medically qualify. Everything else (the estradiol patch, the pill, progesterone) is a separate cost, billed through your insurance at a local pharmacy or paid in cash through Evernow’s mail-order pharmacy.
Evernow’s published medication prices
These are Evernow’s own example prices for medication shipped from its pharmacy (free shipping). Treat them as examples — prices can change, and you’ll see the exact amount before anything ships.
| Medication | Evernow’s listed price | FDA status (per Evernow) |
|---|---|---|
| Estradiol patch | $55/month | FDA-approved |
| Estradiol pill | $20/month | FDA-approved |
| Vaginal estradiol cream | $40 / 3 months (~$13/mo) — or free on a 3-/12-month plan if you qualify | FDA-approved |
| Progesterone pill | $20/month | Bioidentical (confirm the exact product at checkout) |
Estradiol is a form of estrogen identical to what your body makes. Progesterone protects the uterine lining when you take estrogen — most women with a uterus need both. Bioidentical means the molecule matches your body’s own hormone; many FDA-approved products are bioidentical, so “bioidentical” alone doesn’t tell you whether something is FDA-approved.
The free vaginal estrogen benefit, explained
Evernow advertises free vaginal estrogen cream — valued at up to $480 a year — for members on a 3- or 12-month plan who medically qualify. Vaginal estrogen is a low-dose, FDA-approved cream applied directly to vaginal tissue to treat what doctors call GSM(genitourinary syndrome of menopause — the dryness, irritation, painful sex, and recurring urinary symptoms many women get in midlife). It’s local therapy, working where you apply it rather than through your whole body, so it has a different safety profile than systemic estrogen. The benefit is real — just confirm you qualify before counting on it.
The two ways to fill your prescription
Your local pharmacy.Pick this and your medication is billed like any other prescription — you can use insurance or a discount card like GoodRx. For common generics, this is often the cheapest route, and it’s where Evernow can become a bargain.
Evernow’s mail-order pharmacy. Some medications ship to your door at the cash prices above. A few drugs are onlyavailable this way and can’t run through your insurance. Before you approve a care plan, find out which route your specific medication takes.
Five questions to ask before you approve a prescription
- Can this prescription go to my local pharmacy?
- Can I use my insurance for this medication?
- Is this medication FDA-approved, or is it compounded? (Compounded means custom-mixed by a pharmacy and not FDA-approved.)
- Is there a lower-cost FDA-approved option that would work for me?
- Will I see the exact medication price before it ships?
How much does Evernow cost without insurance?
Without insurance, Evernow’s membership is self-pay at $49/month, $129 for three months, or $420 a year, and a one-time visit is $150. Medication is separate, unless you qualify for the free vaginal estrogen cream on a 3- or 12-month plan. You can lower the cost two ways: pay with HSA/FSA dollars, and fill prescriptions at your local pharmacy with a discount card.
Plenty of women use Evernow entirely as a cash-pay service, and the prices above are the prices — no insurance required, no pre-authorization, no surprises tied to a plan. If you’re uninsured or simply don’t want to involve your insurer, the math is clean: pick a plan, add your medication, and that’s your number.
Does insurance cover Evernow?
Evernow now accepts insurance for video visits from four major commercial plans — UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Anthem, and Blue Cross Blue Shield. With one of those, a covered visit costs only your copay or deductible. The monthly membership fee is never billed to insurance (though it’s usually HSA/FSA-eligible), and Evernow does not work with Medicare or Medicaid.
This is a real 2026 change. For years Evernow was strictly cash-pay, and a lot of older review pages still say that. It’s no longer true for visits.
| Can insurance cover this? | Answer | What to verify |
|---|---|---|
| Video visits | Yes — UHC, Aetna, Anthem, BCBS | Your copay/deductible; that your specific plan covers telehealth |
| Membership fee | No — always self-pay | Whether you can pay it with HSA/FSA (usually yes) |
| Medication at your local pharmacy | Often yes | That your drug is on your plan’s formulary (its covered-drug list) |
| Medication from Evernow’s mail pharmacy | Sometimes no — a few are cash-only | Which route your specific medication uses |
| Medicare / Medicaid | No | N/A — Evernow doesn’t support these |
| HSA / FSA | Yes for most out-of-pocket costs | Keep receipts for your account |
Can you use HSA or FSA money?
Yes.Evernow says most out-of-pocket costs, including membership fees and video visits, are HSA/FSA-eligible — those are the tax-advantaged health spending accounts many people get through work. So even though insurance won’t pay the membership, you can often cover it with pre-tax dollars, which lowers your real cost by whatever your tax rate is (often in the 25–35% ballpark).
On a PPO and want your visits actually covered? A clinic built around insurance billing can cost you less per visit than self-pay anywhere. See how Midi Health’s insurance-covered visits work — most insured patients pay around $50 out of pocket. (Midi is a partner we recommend; see our disclosure above.)
On Medicare or Medicaid?Evernow won’t work for you, and neither will Midi’s billing. Take the quiz and we’ll route you toward options that fit those programs.
Evernow membership vs. pay-per-visit: which is cheaper?
Pay-per-visit ($150, or your copay) is usually cheaper if you just need one consult or a second opinion. Membership is the better value if you want ongoing messaging, refills, and dose adjustments over several months. A one-time Evernow visit includes a personalized care plan plus 90 days of access to prescriptions and the care portal.
Choose pay-per-visit if…
- You want a single consult or a second opinion
- You’re not ready to commit to a subscription
- You already have a doctor and just need a menopause-focused prescription
- You want 90 days of access without a membership
Choose the 3-month membership if…
- You’re starting therapy or dialing in your dose
- You want a few months to judge whether it’s working
- You want messaging and refill support, not a year-long commitment
- You’d use the free vaginal estrogen benefit
Choose the 12-month membership only if…
- You’re confident Evernow’s model fits you
- You understand the medication is billed separately
- You’ve confirmed the cancellation and refund terms (read below first)
- You’re comfortable paying $420 upfront
The breakeven math, in plain numbers
If you’ll need ongoing support, the membership wins easily — four separate visits ($600) cost more than a full year of membership ($420). If you truly need just one visit, pay-per-visit wins. The trap is buying a year “to be safe” before you know whether the model even fits you.
Evernow True Cost Estimator
Your real Evernow cost = your plan + your medication (+ a visit copay or labs only if they apply).Pick one row from each list below and add them. The medication prices are Evernow’s own published examples; your local-pharmacy price with insurance may be lower or higher.
Step 1 — Pick your plan (monthly cost):
- Annual plan: $35/mo (paid as $420 upfront)
- 3-month plan: $43/mo (paid as $129)
- Month-to-month: $49/mo
- Or one-time visit: $150 once (then medication; 90-day access)
Step 2 — Add your medication (Evernow’s example prices):
- Estradiol pill: +$20/mo
- Progesterone pill: +$20/mo
- Estradiol patch: +$55/mo
- Vaginal estrogen cream: +$13/mo ($40/3 mo) — or $0 if you qualify on a 3-/12-month plan
Step 3 — Add only if they apply:
A video-visit copay (or $150 self-pay if you’re not using insurance), and labs (only required for select medications).
What that looks like in real life:
| Your setup | Monthly all-in (before visit copays/labs) |
|---|---|
| Annual plan + estradiol pill | ≈ $55/mo |
| Annual plan + estradiol patch | ≈ $90/mo |
| Month-to-month + estradiol patch | ≈ $104/mo |
| Month-to-month + patch + progesterone | ≈ $124/mo |
| 3-/12-month plan + free vaginal estrogen (if you qualify) | ≈ $35–$43/mo |
The honest range for most women is about $55 to $125 a month, all in. The cheapest realistic combo is the annual plan with a low-cost pill and insurance covering the drug; the higher end is a month-to-month plan with both systemic estrogen and progesterone shipped from Evernow’s pharmacy.
What’s the real first-year cost of Evernow?
Evernow’s lowest published first-year care cost is $420, if you prepay the annual plan. Stay month-to-month all year and it’s $588 before medication. A visit-only path depends on how many visits you need — one is $150, four is $600. Your true first-year number is whichever you pick, plus your medication, plus any labs your clinician requires.
| Your path | Care cost, year one | Plus | Honest read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual membership | $420 (upfront) | medication, labs if required | Lowest membership rate — biggest commitment |
| 3-month membership | $129 first 90 days | medication | Cleanest way to test the fit |
| Monthly for 3 months | $147 first 90 days | medication | Most flexible; only $18 more than the 3-month plan |
| Monthly all year | $588 | medication | Flexible, but $168 more than annual |
| One self-pay visit | $150 | medication | Great for a single consult |
| Four self-pay visits | $600 | medication | Avoids a subscription, but can exceed annual membership |
Why the annual plan is cheaper but riskier
The 12-month plan gives you the lowest monthly rate. But you hand over $420 up front, and Evernow’s stated policy is that it generally does not prorate or refundthe unused portion if you cancel early. The annual plan rewards certainty and punishes second-guessing. Choose it only if you’ve already decided Evernow is your long-term answer.
Why month-to-month can be worth the extra $168
For a lot of women, the monthly plan’s flexibility is worth more than $168 a year. You can leave the moment the model doesn’t fit, you’re not chasing a refund, and there’s far less regret risk. Whatever you choose, remember the constant: $420, $588, or $150 — none of those includes your prescription.
What should you verify before you pay Evernow? (The hidden-fee checklist)
Before paying, confirm your plan length, your renewal date, the exact amount due today, the cancellation and refund terms, your medication route and cost, and whether labs are required.The recurring cost friction wasn’t a hidden membership price — it was people expecting a low monthly charge and seeing the full annual fee, or assuming a cancellation came with a refund.
Three cost facts that won’t find on the pricing page:
1. The annual plan is paid upfront, and Evernow generally won’t refund the unused months.Per Evernow’s stated policy, if you cancel an annual plan before it renews, your access continues to the end of the paid term, but the company generally does not prorate or refund the rest. Treat that $420 as committed. One reviewer described signing up expecting $35 a month and seeing a $420 charge for the year.
2. There’s a $50 fee for no-shows and last-minute cancellations. Evernow’s policies cite a $50 fee if you miss a scheduled video visit or cancel it within 24 hours. Easy to avoid once you know it exists.
3. Membership fees don’t prorate, period.Even on the 3-month plan, canceling means your access runs to the end of the billing cycle — you don’t get a partial refund for time you didn’t use.
Screenshot these five things
- The exact plan you selected (monthly, 3-month, or annual)
- The renewal date
- The exact amount being charged today (is it $35, or $420?)
- The “medication not included” language (and the free-vaginal-estrogen terms, if that’s why you’re joining)
- The cancellation and refund terms
Copy-paste this question to Evernow support before you commit
“Before I pay, can you confirm: (1) can my prescribed medication go to my local pharmacy, (2) is the membership fee separate from the medication cost, (3) does my plan auto-renew, and (4) what happens to my payment if I cancel before the term ends?”
How cancellation actually works
Evernow’s help center says you cancel through your account at care.evernow.com and to watch for a confirmation email. Its membership terms add that your access continues to the end of the billing cycle. Save that confirmation. If you’re on the annual plan, the main reason people cancel early is simply to stop the auto-renewal — just don’t expect the unused months back.
What could make Evernow cost more — or feel like the wrong fit?
Evernow is an established telehealth platform with menopause-trained clinicians, FDA-approved hormone options, and care in all 50 states plus D.C. It works best for fairly straightforward menopause and perimenopause symptoms. It can cost you a visit fee without a prescription if your medical history is complex.
It’s message-first, not video-first.The core membership runs on secure messaging, with a clinician replying within about a day. You can add a video visit, but the default rhythm is text-based. Set that expectation and you’ll be happy; expect a weekly face-to-face and you won’t.
Complex cases may be turned away.Evernow screens carefully. If your history raises red flags for hormone therapy, a clinician may decide hormone therapy isn’t safe to prescribe online. That’s responsible medicine — but it also means a small number of women pay for a visit and leave without a prescription. If your history is complicated, a clinic that does live video and bills insurance — so a visit costs less even if it doesn’t end in a prescription — may be the lower-risk place to start.
Evernow also says it recommends a screening mammogram every two years, in line with major medical guidelines, and may ask for a recent one before certain treatments.
Evernow is a strong fit if you…
- Have commercial insurance (or want to use HSA/FSA)
- Like message-based access and quick replies
- Want to fill prescriptions at your local pharmacy
- Have fairly straightforward menopause symptoms
- Understand the medication is a separate cost
- Want a low starting price for online care
Evernow is not the best fit if you…
- Need Medicare or Medicaid
- Want one flat price with the medication included
- Dislike subscriptions or upfront annual payments
- Want every interaction to be live video
- Have a complex medical history that may need in-person care
When is Evernow cheaper than Midi, Winona, Sesame, Hers, or Inner Balance?
Evernow tends to win on price when you want a low care fee and can put your prescription through your own insurance or local pharmacy. Midi is often cheaper for insured women with low copays. Winona and Inner Balance feel more predictable because the medication price is built in.There’s no single “cheapest” — it depends on your insurance and how you like to pay.
| Provider | How you pay | Verified price | Medication? | FDA status | Insurance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Evernow | Membership or per-visit | $49/mo · $129/3mo · $420/yr · or $150/visit | No (free vaginal estrogen on 3-/12-mo plans if you qualify) | Patch, pill, vaginal cream: FDA-approved | Visits via UHC/Aetna/Anthem/BCBS; no Medicare/Medicaid |
| Midi Health | Visit-based, insurance-first | ~$50 avg with insurance; $250 first / $150 follow-up self-pay | No | FDA-approved medications | Most PPOs; no Medicaid/Medi-Cal; Medicare self-pay only |
| Winona | Medication subscription | From $39/mo (progesterone), $54 (estrogen tablet), $89 (combo cream), $149 (patch) | Yes — the price is the medication | Mix: FDA-approved patches, tablets, progesterone capsules; compounded creams are NOT FDA-approved — confirm your product | Cash-pay; HSA/FSA |
| Sesame | Cash-pay marketplace | From ~$29/visit; ~$49/mo women’s-health subscription | No | Varies by prescription | No insurance middleman |
| Hers | Online menopause kits | Oral from $79/mo; estradiol patch from $134/mo | Usually kit-based | FDA-approved (estradiol, progesterone) | Cash-pay; some HSA/FSA; not all states |
| Inner Balance (Oestra) | All-in product subscription | $199/mo first 6 months, then $99.50/mo | Yes | Compounded prescription cream — NOT FDA-approved | Cash-pay; HSA/FSA |
A word on FDA status: FDA-approved medications have been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, and quality. Compounded medications are custom-mixed by a pharmacy and are notFDA-approved; the FDA does not verify compounded drugs for safety, effectiveness, or quality before they’re sold. Compounded isn’t “better” or “more natural” than FDA-approved — it’s a different category. Winona offers both, so confirm which you’re getting; Oestra (Inner Balance) is compounded.
Evernow vs. Midi
Midi can be cheaper if you have a PPO and a low copay; Evernow can be cheaper if you’re uninsured and want messaging instead of visits. Midi bills insurance directly, and most insured patients pay around $50 out of pocket per visit; self-pay is $250 for a first visit and $150 after, with labs and prescriptions separate.
Evernow vs. Winona
Winona’s pricing is more predictable because the medication is the price — but it’s cash-pay, so it can cost more than Evernow if your insurance covers your drug.Winona ships your hormones for a flat monthly fee, with no separate visit or membership charge and no labs required. It offers a mix of FDA-approved finished products and compounded creams, so confirm which you’re prescribed. If you want a single number you can budget around and you’re paying cash anyway, Winona is the simpler buy.
Evernow vs. Sesame
Sesame can be cheapest for a simple cash-pay visit, but it’s a general marketplace, not a menopause-specific program.Through its Costco partnership, Sesame lists $29 virtual primary-care visits and a $49/month women’s-health subscription; medication isn’t included. Good for stable, price-driven shoppers; Evernow is more tailored to menopause care.
Evernow vs. Hers
Hers fits women who want a recognizable, standardized kit; Evernow offers more pharmacy flexibility.Hers menopause care starts around $79/month for oral options, with estradiol patch kits from $134/month; Hers also isn’t available in every state. If you want to use your own insurance and pharmacy, Evernow’s model gives you more room.
Evernow vs. Inner Balance (Oestra)
Inner Balance is the most predictable all-in option, but it’s compounded and pricier up front.Oestra is a daily prescription cream that combines estradiol and progesterone, priced at $199/month for the first six months, then $99.50/month. It’s a clean “one product, one price” path — just remember it’s a compounded medication, not FDA-approved.
Is Evernow worth the cost?
Evernow is worth it if you want affordable, menopause-focused online care with quick message-based access and the freedom to use your own pharmacy — especially on the annual plan with insurance covering your medication. It’s less compelling if you need one all-in price, Medicare/Medicaid, or live video every time.
What you’re really paying for with Evernow isn’t just a prescription — it’s convenience, fast clinician access, and FDA-approved hormone therapy without waiting months for a specialist. For many women, that’s easily worth $35–$49 a month. If your only goal is the cheapest possible script and you don’t need the support, a flat-fee or insurance-billing alternative may get you the same medication for less.
The verdict, in one table
| If this is you… | Your best move |
|---|---|
| You want the lowest annual rate and you’re sure | Evernow’s 12-month plan — after you confirm the refund policy |
| You want to test without a big commitment | Evernow’s 3-month plan (or just monthly) |
| Your main symptoms are vaginal/urinary | Evernow’s 3-/12-month plan, for the free vaginal estrogen |
| You only need one consult | Evernow pay-per-visit ($150) |
| You have a PPO and want visits covered | Compare Midi Health |
| You want medication in one predictable price | Compare Winona or Inner Balance |
| You’re on Medicare or Medicaid | Neither Evernow nor most online clinics fit — take the quiz |
| You’re unsure what care model fits | Take the HRT Index quiz |
Real reviews: what members and shoppers say about Evernow’s cost
Members who like Evernow tend to praise the attention and pharmacy flexibility; the most common complaint in the samples we checked wasn’t a hidden price, it was billing surprise — auto-charges, the annual fee, and the lack of refunds.Reviews are individual experiences, not proof of medical results, and Evernow’s independent review samples are small — so weigh them as signals, not gospel.
The positive side.On Evernow’s own reviews page, members describe getting more attention than from a once-a-year in-person visit and appreciate being able to message a clinician anytime. One member’s line captures a common theme: she gets “more attention on a monthly basis” than she would seeing a provider once a year. (These are Evernow-published testimonials — not independently verified, and they don’t speak to medical outcomes.)
The friction.Across public review platforms, the recurring cost complaint is billing surprise rather than a buried price — people expecting $35 a month and seeing $420, or assuming a cancellation came with a refund. A few also found the message-based model less hands-on than they hoped. That’s exactly why we built the checklist above: nearly every one of these is preventable with five screenshots and one support question.
How to read Evernow reviews
- Company testimonials show what happy members report — useful, but one-sided
- Forum and review-site posts surface the real objections and billing friction
- Independent samples are small, so don’t over-weight a single star score
- None of it is medical evidence — that’s between you and a clinician
Is Evernow medically appropriate for menopause HRT?
Evernow can be a legitimate starting point for online menopause care, but whether hormone therapy is right for you is a clinical decision based on your symptoms, history, and risks — not a marketing claim.
The platform is not your doctor.Evernow connects you with licensed clinicians — nurse practitioners and doctors credentialed in your state — and they make the actual care decisions. Its medical director is a clinician certified by The Menopause Society. A prescription is never guaranteed; if hormone therapy isn’t appropriate or safe for you, a clinician can and should decline it.
FDA-approved vs. compounded. FDA-approved medications have been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, and quality. Compounded medications are custom-mixed by a pharmacy and are notFDA-approved. Evernow’s listed hormone options — the estradiol patch, pill, and vaginal cream — are labeled FDA-approved on its product pages; confirm the exact formulation of any progesterone or other medication in your care plan. If you’re ever offered a compounded formula, ask why, and ask whether an FDA-approved option would work for you.
Care should be individualized. Guidance from The Menopause Society emphasizes shared decision-making between you and your clinician, with treatment matched to your symptoms, age, and time since menopause, and reviewed periodically.
This section has no CTA by design. The goal here is clear eyes, not a sale.
Evernow cost FAQ
- How much is Evernow per month?
- Evernow costs $49 a month month-to-month, $129 for three months ($43/month), or $420 for twelve months ($35/month, paid upfront). Medication is billed separately.
- Is Evernow really $35 a month?
- Yes, but only on the 12-month plan with the full $420 paid upfront. Pay monthly and it’s $49. Medication is not included, aside from the free vaginal estrogen benefit on multi-month plans.
- How much is Evernow without insurance?
- The membership is self-pay at $49/month, $129 for three months, or $420 a year. A one-time visit is $150 self-pay. Medication is extra.
- Does Evernow include medication?
- Mostly no — medication is billed separately, often $20–$55 a month using Evernow’s own examples. The exception is free vaginal estrogen cream for members on a 3- or 12-month plan who medically qualify.
- Does Evernow take insurance?
- Yes, for video visits, with UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Anthem, and Blue Cross Blue Shield. The membership fee is not covered by insurance but is usually HSA/FSA-eligible. Evernow does not support Medicare or Medicaid.
- Can I use HSA or FSA for Evernow?
- Yes. Evernow says most out-of-pocket costs, including membership fees and video visits, are HSA and FSA eligible.
- Does Evernow require lab work?
- Only for select medications. Your clinician will tell you if labs are needed; they are not bundled into the price.
- Can Evernow send prescriptions to my local pharmacy?
- Yes. Most prescriptions can go to your local pharmacy where you can use insurance, though a few medications are mail-order cash-pay only.
- Can I cancel Evernow, and will I get a refund?
- You cancel through your account and access continues to the end of your billing cycle. Evernow’s stated policy is that it generally does not prorate or refund unused time, so canceling the annual plan early generally will not refund the remaining months.
- Are there any hidden Evernow fees?
- There is a $50 fee for missing a scheduled video visit or canceling it within 24 hours. Otherwise, the main surprise is that medication and any labs are separate from the membership price.
- Is Evernow cheaper than Midi?
- It depends on your insurance. Midi can be cheaper with a low copay; Evernow can be cheaper for self-pay members who fill prescriptions at their own pharmacy.
- Is Evernow cheaper than Winona?
- Evernow has a lower care fee, but Winona’s all-in medication price is more predictable. If your insurance covers your drug, Evernow can come out cheaper; if you’re paying cash, Winona’s single price may be simpler and competitive.
- Is Evernow worth it?
- It’s worth considering if you want affordable online menopause care, quick messaging access, and pharmacy flexibility — and you understand the medication is a separate cost. It’s less ideal if you need one all-in price or Medicare/Medicaid.
The bottom line on Evernow’s cost
Evernow’s real price is honest once you stop reading the headline and start reading the structure: $35–$49 a month (or $150 a visit) for care, plus your medication, plus any labs — with free vaginal estrogen cream thrown in on multi-month plans if you qualify. For the right woman — commercially insured or HSA/FSA-funded, comfortable with messaging, happy to use her own pharmacy — that adds up to genuinely affordable, menopause-focused care. For someone who needs one bundled price, Medicare or Medicaid, or live video every time, a different option will cost less and frustrate her less.
You came here to find out what Evernow really costs before you pay. Now you know the numbers, the catch, the fees nobody advertises, and exactly who saves money where. That’s enough to make a confident call.
Still not sure which HRT program is right for you?
Answer a few questions about your insurance, state, and symptoms — we’ll point you to the lowest-friction path.
The HRT Index is the independent menopause HRT decision layer for women. We verify pricing and policies directly from primary sources and re-check this page quarterly. Educational content only — not medical advice. Talk to a licensed clinician about whether hormone therapy is right for you.
What we actually verified ()
We pulled Evernow’s three membership prices ($49 / $43 / $35 per month), the $150 self-pay visit fee, and the medication example prices (estradiol patch $55/mo, pill $20/mo, vaginal cream $40/3 mo, progesterone $20/mo) directly from Evernow’s pricing FAQ and prescription pages. We confirmed the free-vaginal-estrogen benefit (worth up to $480/year, for medically qualifying members on a 3- or 12-month plan), the insurance carriers (UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Anthem, Blue Cross Blue Shield), the no-Medicare/Medicaid policy, HSA/FSA eligibility, all-50-states availability, and that most medication and labs are billed separately. We verified the cancellation/no-proration policy and the $50 no-show/late-cancellation fee from Evernow’s own statements in public complaint responses. Alternative-provider prices come from each provider’s own site and are labeled as examples.
Disclosure
The HRT Index may earn a commission if you start care with Midi Health and Winona through links on this page. We do notearn a commission from Evernow — our links to Evernow are editorial. We don’t accept payment for placement, and compensation never changes the prices we report or the verdicts we reach. Full disclosure.
Sources
- Evernow — Official Pricing FAQ
- Evernow — Prescription pages
- Evernow — Care portal and cancellation
- The HRT Index — Does Evernow Take Insurance?
- The HRT Index — Evernow HRT full review
- The HRT Index — Midi Health review
- U.S. FDA — Compounding and the FDA
- The Menopause Society — Hormone Therapy
- Midi Health — appointment cost
- Winona — pricing pages
