Skip to main content
The HRT IndexFind My HRT Path (coming soon)

Hers Menopause Review (2026): What It Costs, What You Get, and Who It’s Really For

HI
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 — an independent comparison resource for HRT telehealth providers. Last verified: June 3, 2026. A quick word on our links:some links below are affiliate links, which means we may earn a commission if you check your eligibility through a provider. It never changes your price, and it never changes our verdict. Our rankings come from the verified facts in this article — not who pays us. This is editorial research, not medical advice. Not medically reviewed.

If you’re reading a Hers menopause review, you’ve probably already seen the ads. Now you’re trying to answer one quiet question: is this legit, or am I about to get stuck in a subscription I’ll regret?

Here’s the bottom line, up front. Hers is a real, legitimate way to get menopause and perimenopause care online. A licensed provider reviews your health history, and if you’re a good fit, you can get generic — meaning standard, FDA-approved — estradiol (the main form of estrogen) as a pill, a patch, or a vaginal cream, plus oral progesterone when you need it. The medicine is included in the base price, which starts at $79 a month for pills or $134 a month for patches on a 12-month plan.

It’s a strong fit if you want simple, cash-pay care without fighting your insurance. It’s the wrong fit if you need insurance to cover it, you want a face-to-face video visit by default, or you live in one of the states Hers doesn’t serve yet.

And yes — there’s one catch worth knowing before you hand over a card. We’ll get to it in plain English, because it’s the part the glossy pages skip.


Hers menopause at a glance

Quick verdictThe honest answer
Best forWomen who want cash-pay, fully online menopause or perimenopause care
Not forPeople who need insurance billing, Medicare/Medicaid, a default video visit, in-person labs, or who live where Hers isn’t offered
Starting pricePills from $79/mo; patches from $134/mo (12-month plan, medicine included)
Hormones offeredGeneric, FDA-approved estradiol (pill, patch, or vaginal cream) + oral progesterone
InsuranceNo — Hers is cash-pay and doesn’t bill insurance
Where it worksMost states, but not all 50 — check yours during intake
The one catchThe low prices are tied to a 12-month plan, it auto-renews, and used time generally isn’t refunded
First stepCheck that Hers covers your state and see your real price
See if you qualify and check Hers pricing for your state \u2192Not sure it fits? Free 60‑second HRT quiz →

A two-minute gut check before you start.While you’re in the eligibility flow, confirm these three things — they’re the parts that vary person to person:


What we actually checked for this Hers menopause review

Most “reviews” just rewrite the company’s sales page. We’d rather show our work. So before we tell you what to do, here’s what we confirmed and what only you can confirm at checkout.

What we verified (and where)

What only you can verify (do this before you pay)

The Hers menopause decision ledger

Your questionWhat we foundWhat it means for you
Is Hers really offering menopause care?Yes — launched in October 2025A current, real service, not a rumor
What’s included?Online intake, licensed-provider review, plan if eligible, medicine shipped, unlimited messagingDigital-first and provider-reviewed — not an over-the-counter purchase
What hormones might I get?Estradiol (pill, patch, or vaginal cream) and oral progesteroneYour provider decides the mix; not everyone gets every product
Are they FDA-approved or compounded?Hers describes them as generic — standard FDA-approved kind, not compoundedYou’re getting standard, FDA-reviewed medicine
What does it cost?Pills from $79/mo; patches from $134/mo (12-month plan)First 90 days ~$237 (pills) or ~$402 (patches) before tax or add-ons
Does it take insurance?No — cash-payGreat for predictable self-pay; poor if you need insurance
Is it available everywhere?No — not all 50 statesCheck your state before you trust the price
Is perimenopause use FDA-approved?No — HRT isn’t FDA-approved for perimenopause, but a provider may prescribe off-labelOff-label is legal and common; provider judgment matters more
Can you cancel?Yes — act at least 48 hours before your next order date; used time generally isn’t refundedNote your order date the day you sign up
Is the patch a reason to pick Hers right now?Nationwide patch supply constraints exist; Hers says it secured supplyA possible short-term edge — reverify, because supply shifts

Sources: forhers.com, Hims & Hers investor press release (Oct 2025), forhers.com/blog/does-insurance-cover-hrt, Hers support center, Reuters via WKZO (Apr 2026). Verified June 3, 2026. This section has no button on purpose — we want you to trust the facts first.


Is Hers menopause legit?

Yes — Hers menopause is a legitimate telehealth service from Hims & Hers Health, a publicly traded company (NYSE: HIMS). Its menopause care is directed by licensed providers with a women’s-health focus, led by a chief medical officer who is a practicing OB-GYN. It launched in October 2025. “Legit” means it’s a real, regulated service that prescribes only after a provider reviews your case — it does not mean hormone therapy is right for everyone.

Hers is the women’s side of Hims & Hers Health — the same company you’ve seen advertise hair, skin, and weight-loss care, including during the Super Bowl. The menopause program runs through licensed providers trained in perimenopause and menopause, and the chief medical officer is Dr. Jessica Shepherd, an OB-GYN with more than 20 years of practice. You fill out an intake, a provider reviews it, and you only get a prescription if they decide it’s appropriate.

So the legitimacy question isn’t really about whether Hers is “real.” It is. The fair questions are about fit and billing— which is what the rest of this page is about.

“But what about the Hims & Hers FDA headlines?”

You may have seen news about Hims & Hers and the FDA. Here’s the honest, precise version: that fight was about compounded GLP-1 weight-loss drugs— copycat versions of Wegovy-style medicines. The FDA objected to ads suggesting those compounded products were the “same active ingredient” as the brand or “clinically proven” when they weren’t FDA-approved, and Hims eventually stopped offering the compounded weight-loss pill.

That story matters for how much you trust the brand. But it is notthe menopause program. The menopause hormones are generic, FDA-approved estradiol and progesterone — the standard stuff. Don’t let a weight-loss headline make a decision your menopause care should make on its own facts.

See if a licensed Hers provider can treat you \u2192Not sure? Take the free 60\u2011second quiz \u2192

What hormones does Hers prescribe for menopause — and are they FDA-approved?

Hers prescribes generic estradiol — as a pill, a patch, or a vaginal cream — and oral progesterone, which is added to protect the uterine lining if you still have a uterus. Hers describes these as generic medications, which means they are the standard, FDA-approved kind, not compounded (custom-mixed) hormones. “Bioidentical” does not mean “compounded”: FDA-approved estradiol and progesterone are already identical to the hormones your body makes.

Two words you’ll see everywhere:

Here’s the part that trips people up: “bioidentical” is not the same as “compounded.” FDA-approved estradiol and FDA-approved micronized progesterone are already bioidentical. You do not need a compounding pharmacy to get body-identical hormones. Hers offers the generic, FDA-approved kind.

What Hers can prescribe

MedicationWhat it’s forWhy it matters
Estradiol pillHot flashes, night sweats, other body-wide symptomsThe simplest option if you don’t mind a daily pill
Estradiol patchSame symptoms, delivered through the skinSkips the stomach, so doctors often favor it; changed once or twice a week
Estradiol vaginal creamVaginal dryness, irritation, and related urinary symptoms (GSM — genitourinary syndrome of menopause)A local treatment for dryness — a different job than the pill or patch
Oral progesteroneProtecting the uterine lining if you have a uterusIf you take estrogen and still have a uterus, you generally need progesterone too

Source: forhers.com.

Why the progesterone rule? If you have a uterus and take estrogen alone, it can thicken the uterine lining and raise the risk of uterine (endometrial) cancer. Adding progesterone protects against that — which is exactly why the FDA kept one specific warning in place.

What Hers does not offer for menopause

One honest limit: Hers’s public page lists medication categories, not your final prescription. The exact product and dose are decided during your visit, which is why we suggest confirming them.


How much does Hers menopause cost in 2026?

Hers lists oral menopause plans from $79 a month and estradiol patch plans from $134 a month on a 12-month plan, with the medicine included in the base price. The first 90 days runs about $237 for pills or $402 for patchesbefore tax or add-ons. The catch: the medicine itself is cheap as a plain generic, so with Hers you’re paying a convenience-and-access premium — worth it if you don’t already have a prescriber, less so if you do.

PlanStarting priceFirst 90 daysAbout 12 monthsWhat can change it
Oral (pill) plan$79/month~$237~$948Final plan, dose, add-ons, tax, billing cadence
Patch plan$134/month~$402~$1,608Same as above
Vaginal estradiol creamConfirm at checkoutConfirmConfirmMay depend on your plan

Sources: forhers.com/blog/does-insurance-cover-hrt and Reuters (Apr 2026). Starting prices on a 12-month plan; confirm your exact total at checkout. A note on the patch plan: Reuters reports the patch kit may include progesterone where clinically appropriate — confirm whether that’s bundled into your price or billed separately.

The thing nobody tells you about Hers pricing

Here’s our take, and it’s the most useful sentence on this page: with Hers, the medicine is baked into the price. That sounds obvious, but it changes the math.

Plain generic estradiol is cheap. With a discount card, generic oral estradiol can run as little as about $10 for a 90-day supply, and generic estradiol patches are often under $40 a monthat a regular pharmacy. So Hers’s $79–$134 isn’t really “the price of hormones.” It’s the price of hormones plusa licensed provider, unlimited messaging, no separate visit fee, and home delivery — all bundled. See our full 2026 HRT cost breakdown to compare what the same medications cost at a regular pharmacy.

That bundle is genuinely worth it if you don’thave a doctor who’ll prescribe HRT, or you don’t want to chase appointments and pharmacies. It’s a worse deal if you alreadyhave a prescriber, because then you’re paying extra for access you already have.

See Hers\u2019s current menopause pricing for your state \u2192Not sure it\u2019s right for you? Take the free quiz \u2192

Does Hers menopause take insurance — and is it available in your state?

Two practical questions decide whether Hers even works for you: who pays, and whether you can get it where you live.

Insurance.Hers is built for self-pay. It doesn’t bill commercial insurance, Medicare, or Medicaid. That’s a feature if you want a flat, predictable price with no claims, deductibles, or surprise bills. It’s a drawback if your whole goal is to use insurance — in that case, see which HRT providers accept insurance or go to Midi first. You may be able to put Hers on an HSA or FSA; confirm Hers gives you the right receipt before you count on it.

Your state. Hers menopause is available in most states, but not all 50. At its October 2025 launch it was offered everywhere except North Carolina and Arkansas.Hers’s current page simply says it “is not available in all 50 states” without naming them, so don’t assume — the intake will tell you in seconds whether you’re covered.

Check your state and see current Hers pricing \u2192

The one catch: how Hers billing and cancellation really work

We promised you one catch in plain English. Here it is. Hers’s lowest prices are tied to a 12-month plan, often billed in a larger upfront amount. Subscriptions auto-renew. Act at least 48 hours before your next order date to change or stop it. Hers generally doesn’t refund partially used periods, though it may make exceptions case-by-case.

Hers runs on subscriptions. To get the $79 or $134 price, you sign up for a 12-month plan, and Hers’s multi-month plans are often billed in one larger upfront amount rather than month by month — so confirm your billing cadence at checkout. It auto-renews. To change or stop it, you should act at least 48 hours before your next order date, and Hers generally doesn’t refund partially used periods, though it says it may make exceptions case-by-case.

We’re not guessing about why this matters. Across review sites, the loudest Hims & Hers complaints aren’t about the medicine — they’re about surprise renewals, charges with little warning, and refund refusals. The Better Business Bureau notes that complaints on file center on canceling orders and refund requests, with thousands logged over the past three years. The FTC has also been looking at how telehealth companies handle cancellations.

Here’s how to stay in control: in the Hers app or website, go to your account, open Subscriptions, and choose to stop auto-renew or end the subscription.Do it more than 48 hours before your next order date — and know that canceling won’t stop an order already processing or shipped.

So is this a dealbreaker? No — here’s the honest pivot

Hers does not offer easy, refund-anytime, month-to-month billing at its headline price. If total flexibility is your top priority, a video-visit service like Sesame (about $99/month, cancel between cycles, with the medicine filled at your own pharmacy) or insurance-based Midi will suit you better.

But the subscription is why Hers can do the thing many women actually want: bundle the medicine, the provider, and unlimited messaging into one flat price with nothing extra to chase. The model that creates the catch is the same model that creates the convenience.


Is HRT through Hers safe? What the 2025–2026 FDA changes mean

In November 2025, the FDA began removing the decades-old “black box” warnings about heart disease, stroke, breast cancer, and dementia from estrogen hormone-therapy products. By February 2026 it had approved updated labels for the first six products — a major shift toward today’s science. One warning stayed: the boxed warning for uterine (endometrial) cancer on estrogen-only products. HRT still isn’t right for everyone, so your personal history must be reviewed by the prescribing provider.

For over 20 years, hormone therapy carried the FDA’s strongest “black box” warnings, scaring a generation of women away from it. After an expert panel and public comment, the FDA began removing the broad boxed warnings about cardiovascular disease, stroke, breast cancer, and probable dementia from estrogen products. By February 2026, the FDA had approved updated labels for the first six menopause hormone products.

Don’t treat this page as permission to start HRT. Hormone therapy may not be safe if you have unexplained vaginal bleeding, a history of breast or uterine cancer, blood clots, stroke or heart attack, liver disease, or if you might be pregnant. If any of those apply to you, talk with a clinician before relying on any online program.

One reassuring detail: the patch and pill estradiol Hers prescribes, plus oral progesterone, are formulations many menopause specialists favor today — the patch sends estrogen through the skin and skips the first pass through your liver. That’s a reasonable, mainstream approach, delivered through a provider review.

Check your eligibility with a licensed Hers provider \u2192Not sure you\u2019re a fit? Take the free quiz \u2192

The estrogen patch shortage: why timing matters right now

In 2026, there are nationwide estrogen patch supply constraints, driven by a surge in demand after the FDA rolled back its hormone-therapy warnings. Patch use more than tripled between 2018 and early 2026. Industry sources told Reuters the squeeze could last up to three years. Hers has publicly said it secured patch inventory for eligible patients. Supply changes, so reverify during intake.

After the FDA rolled back those warnings, demand for estrogen patches surged. Women across the country hit backorders, switched brands, or went without. Industry sources told Reuters the squeeze could last up to three years, while the FDA had notofficially designated estrogen patches as being in shortage as of Reuters’ April 2026 reporting.

In April 2026, Hers said it had secured patch inventoryfor eligible patients to begin or continue treatment without interruption. If you’ve been turned away at the pharmacy, that’s a real, practical reason Hers might be worth a look right now.

Two honest caveats. First, supply can change fast — what’s stocked today may not be next month, so confirm it during intake. Second, if patches are hard to get, gels, sprays, and pills are effective alternatives that sidestep the patch crunch entirely. A shortage is a reason to keep options open, not a reason to panic-buy.


How Hers menopause works, step by step

No mystery here. This is what actually happens before you ever enter payment details.

  1. You fill out an intake. Questions about your symptoms (hot flashes, sleep, mood, dryness), your health history, your medications, and your state.
  2. A licensed provider reviews it.This is the gate. They decide whether treatment is appropriate — and they can say no.
  3. You get a plan, if you’re eligible. It may include an estradiol pill or patch, progesterone if you have a uterus, or vaginal cream for dryness. The exact medicine and dose are theirs to set.
  4. Medicine ships, and support continues. Hers gives you ongoing provider messaging, check-ins, and plan tweaks as needed.

A smart move: when you reach the plan, screenshot your price, your order date, and the cancellation language. Future-you will be glad you did.

Start the Hers assessment \u2192Not sure it fits? Free 60‑second HRT quiz →

Hers menopause reviews: what customers actually say

We’ll be straight with you, because this is where a lot of affiliate pages fake it. The menopause program is new — only about eight months old as of this writing. So genuine, menopause-specific customer reviews are still thin. Anyone showing you a pile of glowing “Hers menopause changed my life” testimonials is probably stretching.

What the broader brand reviews do tell us is useful for setting expectations. On Trustpilot, Hers (forhers.com) sits at roughly 3.4 out of 5 across about 7,000 reviews as of mid-2026. The pattern:

Use reviews for what they’re good at — judging the experience(service, shipping, billing). Don’t use a stranger’s review to judge whether hormone therapy is medically right for you. That’s your provider’s job.

A note on testimonials:we only publish real, attributable quotes. As menopause-specific Hers reviews accumulate, we’ll add 1–3 here, each labeled with its source and date, and with a clear note that one person’s experience isn’t a promise of typical results. We won’t invent quotes to fill space.


Hers vs. the alternatives: Midi, Winona, Sesame, and Inner Balance

Hers is a strong choice — but it isn’t the only good one, and pretending otherwise would make this page useless. Here’s the honest map, with the same columns across every provider. If you’d rather see all of them weighed side by side, our guide to the best online menopause HRT providers does exactly that.

HersMidi HealthWinonaSesameInner Balance (Oestra)
Hormone typeGeneric, FDA-approved estradiol + progesteroneFDA-approved and compoundedFDA-approved tablets, patches & progesterone capsules + compounded creamsProvider prescribes; usually FDA-approved genericsCompounded estradiol + progesterone (not FDA-approved)
Visit styleOnline intake + unlimited messagingLive video + messagingAsync (no video)Same-day video + messagingAsync
InsuranceNo (cash-pay)Many major insurers, or self-pay; not Medicare/MedicaidNo (cash-pay; HSA/FSA)Doesn’t bill insurance; HSA/FSA via itemized billNo (HSA/FSA eligible)
Medicine included?Yes (base plan)No (filled at your pharmacy)YesNo (you get a savings card)Yes
Cost$79 pills / $134 patch (12-mo, meds included)Insurance copay or visit fees; meds extraTablets from $54; popular cream from $89; patch $149~$99/mo incl. video + basic labs; meds extra$199/mo first 6 mo, then $99.50/mo
Best forSimple FDA-approved care by messageInsurance, complex cases, video, non-hormonal optionsCompounded combination creams (or FDA-approved tablets/patch)Video + labs, your own pharmacyVaginal dryness, one daily cream

Sources: Midi (Telehealth Ally review), Winona (bywinona.com), Sesame menopause launch pages, Inner Balance (ConsumerAffairs), forhers.com. Verify current figures before relying on them.

Quick translation: which one is “you”?

So when does Hers win?

Hers wins when you want a recognizable brand, cash-pay simplicity, a public starting price, online intake, ongoing messaging, and a generic, FDA-approved estradiol pill or patch — all in one flat bundle. If that’s you, you’re in the right place.

Start the Hers assessment →Torn between two options? Take the free quiz →

Should you choose Hers if you’re in perimenopause, not menopause?

Perimenopause is the stretch of years beforemenopause when your hormones swing up and down — periods get irregular, and symptoms come and go. A lot of women searching this feel one of two things: “Am I too young for this?” or “Will an online provider even take me seriously?”

Here’s the straight answer. Hers serves perimenopause, and a provider can prescribe HRT off-label for it. Off-label is legal and routine— it just means the medicine wasn’t specifically approved for that use, so the provider’s judgment carries more weight.

Telehealth can be reasonable when your symptoms clearly fit perimenopause, you have no red flags, and the provider screens you properly. Start with in-person care instead if you have unexplained bleeding, could be pregnant, have severe pelvic pain, a new breast lump, or a history of clots, stroke, certain cancers, or liver disease — or if you simply think something else might be going on and want an exam or labs first.

Not sure whether you’re in perimenopause or menopause? Take the free 60‑second HRT path quiz → and get a personalized starting point.


What to ask before you commit to Hers

A little homework here saves real money and stress. Here’s our checklist — screenshot it and use it during intake.

Before you enter payment

Before you start medicine

After your first month

Use this checklist during the Hers assessment \u2192Or take the free quiz to compare all options \u2192

Final verdict: who should use Hers menopause, and who should skip it

Hers is a smart pick if you’re the reader who already wants online menopause care, doesn’t need insurance to pay, likes a recognizable platform, wants the medicine bundled into one flat price, and values convenience enough to accept a subscription with a 48-hour change window.

Hers is the wrong pick if youneed insurance coverage, want to start with a video visit or an in-person exam and labs, have red-flag medical history, or live in a state Hers doesn’t serve yet. None of that is a knock on Hers — it’s a fit issue, and we’d rather tell you now than have you cancel in month two.

Our honest recommendation: if you’re the right cash-pay reader, Hers is genuinely worth checking. Do the assessment, confirm your real medicine and price, note your order date, and continue only if the plan matches what you expected.

Check your Hers menopause eligibility and current pricing →Still not sure? Free 60‑second matching quiz →

Hers menopause review: frequently asked questions

Short, direct answers to the follow-up questions people ask after deciding whether Hers menopause is worth it — covering legitimacy, cost, insurance, state availability, medications, FDA-approved vs. compounded, cancellation, and how it compares to Midi.

Is Hers menopause legit?

Yes. Hers menopause is a legitimate telehealth service from Hims & Hers that launched in October 2025 and uses a licensed-provider review before any prescription. Being legit doesn’t mean everyone qualifies or that hormone therapy is right for you.

How much does Hers menopause cost?

Pills start at $79 a month and patches at $134 a month on a 12-month plan, with medicine included in the base price. The first 90 days is roughly $237 (pills) or $402 (patches). Confirm your final total at checkout.

Does Hers menopause take insurance?

No. Hers is cash-pay and doesn’t bill insurance, Medicare, or Medicaid. If you need insurance to cover care, Midi or an in-network local clinician is a better first stop.

Are Hers’s menopause hormones FDA-approved or compounded?

Hers describes them as generic estradiol and progesterone — the standard, FDA-approved kind, not compounded hormones. Note that “bioidentical” doesn’t mean “compounded”; FDA-approved estradiol and progesterone are already bioidentical.

Is Hers menopause available in every state?

No. At launch it covered all states except North Carolina and Arkansas, and Hers now says only that it isn’t available in all 50 states. Check your state during intake.

What medications does Hers offer for menopause?

Estradiol as a pill, patch, or vaginal cream, plus oral progesterone. A provider decides which, if any, is right for you.

Does Hers prescribe estradiol patches?

Yes, and as of April 2026 Hers said it had secured patch supply during nationwide supply constraints. Because supply shifts, reverify before relying on it.

Does Hers prescribe testosterone for menopause?

No. The menopause program doesn’t include testosterone. There’s no FDA-approved testosterone product made for women in the U.S., and testosterone is a Schedule III controlled substance that requires a clinician’s evaluation, a prescription, and monitoring.

Can you cancel Hers menopause?

Yes. Act at least 48 hours before your next order date to stop auto-renew or end the subscription. Canceling won’t stop an order already processing, and Hers generally doesn’t refund used time, though it may make exceptions case-by-case.

Is Hers better than Midi for menopause?

Hers may be better for cash-pay simplicity with medicine bundled in. Midi may be better if you want to use insurance, need a live video visit, or have a more complex situation.


How we made this Hers menopause review

Who made this: The HRT Index Editorial Team.

What we are: The HRT Index is an independent comparison resource for HRT telehealth providers.

Why this exists: to help you decide whether Hers menopause fits your budget, symptoms, state, and care style before you enter payment information.

How we did it:we reviewed Hers’s public menopause pages and support center, Hims & Hers company statements, Reuters reporting, FDA menopause materials, and public pricing from competing providers. We separate verified commercial facts (price, availability, cancellation) from medical and regulatory facts (FDA status, warnings, contraindications) from our own editorial conclusions (who Hers fits best). Anything that depends on your individual plan, we flag for you to confirm at checkout.

A medical note: this is editorial research, not medical advice, and not a substitute for a licensed clinician.

Last verified: June 3, 2026. Pricing, availability, medications, and policies change. We recheck Hers pricing and terms monthly and full provider comparisons quarterly.

Sources

This article is editorial research, not medical advice. Always consult a licensed clinician before starting or changing hormone therapy. Last verified: June 3, 2026.