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Menopause Society Certified Practitioner Online: How to Find One and How Online Alternatives Compare

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

Last verified: June 2026 · By The HRT Index editorial team · Editorial research — not medically reviewed by a clinician · Some provider links are affiliate links, labeled inline. Rankings follow The HRT Index Verification Standard, never payout.

To find a Menopause Society Certified Practitioner online, start at the free directory at menopause.org, use its telehealth filter, and pick your state. For services where you can book today, four telehealth providers show certified or menopause-trained clinicians: Alloy, Gennev, and Evernow put certification on their clinician pages, and the directory remains the official source. Then verify the assigned clinician, your state, price, insurance, and FDA-approved vs. compounded medication before you pay.

Here’s the part nobody tells you: there are now about 4,100 Menopause Society Certified Practitioners in the entire country — and most women searching this don’t actually need the credential itself. They need good menopause care, fast. We’ll show you both: how to find a certified clinician, and how the honest online alternatives compare. Let’s get you unstuck.


Best for you / not for you

This page is for you if:

This page is not the right starting point if:


The bottom line, in one table

Here’s the whole decision on one screen. The rest of the page is the proof and the details.

What you want mostWhere to start
A clinician who personally holds the MSCP credentialThe Menopause Society directory (menopause.org) → telehealth filter
A bookable service that shows certified cliniciansAlloy, Gennev, or Evernow (each displays Menopause Society certification on its clinician pages)
Insurance-friendly online menopause careMidi (in-network with most PPO plans) or Evernow (insurance-eligible video visits)
A lower-cost cash-pay or subscription pathSesame, Hers, or Winona— board-certified, menopause-focused clinicians
You’re not sure which of these is youThe HRT Index’s Find My HRT Path tool
Bleeding after menopause, or a major risk historyAn in-person clinician first

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.

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. Because a general answer can’t resolve those for you, use The HRT Index’s Find My HRT Path toolto 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 best-fit menopause care path →

Takes about 60 seconds. Flags when online care isn’t the right starting point. (how we protect your health data)


How do you find a Menopause Society Certified Practitioner online?

Start with The Menopause Society’s free directory at menopause.org, use its telehealth filter, and select your state. That’s the official source. For services you can book online, Alloy, Gennev, and Evernow each show Menopause Society certification on their clinician pages. Whichever route you choose, confirm the clinician is licensed in your state and accepting patients before you pay.

Here’s the honest situation, with real numbers. The AAMC reported in September 2025 that there are now about 4,100 Menopause Society Certified Practitioners, up from roughly 1,000 a decade earlier. [AAMC-1]That’s real growth — but it’s still a small group. Every year, about 1.3 million American women reach menopause. [AAMC-1]That mismatch is exactly why a certified clinician can be hard to find, especially one who’s online, in your state, and taking new patients.

So before you spend a single appointment, get clear on one thing: “I want an MSCP online” and “I want good menopause care online” are two different requests. Most women think they’re asking the first. Many actually want the second. Knowing the difference is what saves you weeks of dead ends. Let’s make it clear.


What does “Menopause Society Certified Practitioner” actually mean?

A Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP) is a licensed healthcare professional who passed The Menopause Society’s competency exam in menopause care. The Menopause Society (formerly the North American Menopause Society, or NAMS) says any licensed clinician may sit for the exam. It signals dedicated, tested menopause training, lasts three years, and is renewed by re-exam or continuing education. [MS-1]

A few things worth knowing in plain terms:

It used to be called “NCMP” or “NAMS certified.” The Menopause Society was formerly the North American Menopause Society, and the credential was the NAMS Certified Menopause Practitioner. The 2023 rename changed the letters to MSCP, not the meaning. So if you’ve been searching “NAMS certified menopause practitioner online,” you’re looking for the same thing. [MS-2]

It’s open to more than just OB-GYNs.The Menopause Society says all licensed healthcare professionals are eligible to sit for the exam — physicians (MD, DO), nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, pharmacists, and others. A menopause-focused nurse practitioner who holds it can be exactly who you need. [MS-1]

It signals training, not a guarantee. This is the part most pages skip. The MSCP credential tells you a clinician studied menopause deeply and passed a test. It does notmean The Menopause Society endorses them, that they’re the right fit for yoursymptoms, or that they’ll prescribe hormones. The Society says so directly: its directory identifies members and MSCPs, but it is not a complete list and is not an endorsement. [MS-3]

That last point matters for what comes next.


Where can you find a Menopause Society Certified Practitioner online? (4 routes)

There are four practical routes: the free Menopause Society directory (the official source), plus three telehealth services that display Menopause Society certification on their clinician pages — Alloy, Gennev, and Evernow. Start with the directory if you want a specific named, individually-certified clinician; choose one of the services if you’d rather book care directly.

Route 1: The free Menopause Society directory

This is the official source. It’s free, and it lists clinicians who are Society members or MSCPs.

How to use it without wasting time:

  1. Go to menopause.org and open “Find a Menopause Practitioner.”
  2. Choose the telehealth search option (“Search By – Telehealth, USA State Only”). This is the step most people miss.
  3. Select your state. Telehealth treatment and prescribing depend on state licensure, so this filters to clinicians who can legally treat you.
  4. Confirm they’re taking new patients.The directory lists members and MSCPs who opted in and are accepting patients — but availability changes fast, so check directly. [MS-3]
  5. Then ask the 7 questions in our checklist below before you pay.

One honest caveat: the directory is a lookup, not a comparison. It’s the official credential starting point, but it won’t show prices, insurance, medication types, or wait times. You’ll do that legwork yourself — or use the services below, where certification is already visible.

Routes 2–4: Alloy, Gennev, and Evernow

If you’d rather book a service than vet an individual, three telehealth providers show Menopause Society certification right on their clinician pages:

Alloy, Gennev, and Evernow each show certification publicly — that’s why they’re here for the literalsearch you typed. (Of these three, Evernow is the only one we have an affiliate relationship with; we’d name all three regardless, because that’s the honest answer.)

Decision point #1 — you now know where the certified clinicians are.

If “must show Menopause Society certification” is non-negotiable for you, use the directory, Alloy, Gennev, or Evernow. Done. But if you’re not sure the credential is the thing you need — and many women aren’t — keep reading. The next section saves you the most time and money.

Not sure? Take the 60-second match →See Evernow’s certified providers

Do you need a certified clinician, or care that follows the same guidelines?

For many women — clear symptoms, a straightforward history, and a preference for fast access — a board-certified, menopause-focused clinician who follows Menopause Society and ACOG guidance can be the right starting point, even without the individual MSCP credential. The credential matters most when your case is complex, you’ve been dismissed before, or you simply want that specific assurance.

Think of it this way. The MSCP exam tests a clinician on the same guidelines that good menopause clinicians follow. The credential proves they studied those rules and passed. A board-certified OB-GYN or menopause-focused nurse practitioner can follow the same guidelines without having sat that particular exam.

An individually-certified clinician is worth holding out for if:

Fast, guideline-following online care can be the smarter move if:

Straight talk:

Our affiliate partners — Winona, Midi, Hers, Sesame, and Inner Balance — are notmarketed as MSCP-certified, and we won’t imply they are. Their clinicians are board-certified and menopause-focused, but none of them advertises that every prescriber holds the individual MSCP credential.

If an individually-certified clinician is your hard requirement, use the menopause.org directory, Alloy, Gennev, or Evernow. That’s the honest answer, and we’d rather lose your click than fake a credential.

Here’s why that admission points you somewhere good: becausethese services don’t gate on the credential, they can offer what most women searching this actually need next — faster access, more states covered, and (for some) insurance you can use. The credential isn’t the only mark of good care. Fit, follow-up, and whether someone listens matter just as much.

Tell me which option fits my situation →

Which online providers show certified or menopause-trained clinicians?

Several telehealth services deliver menopause care using board-certified, menopause-focused clinicians. Some display Menopause Society certification (Alloy, Gennev, Evernow); others use board-certified clinicians and follow published guidelines without claiming the individual credential. Below is exactly what each one states, what it prescribes (FDA-approved vs. compounded, labeled separately), the price where it’s public, and who it fits. Verified June 2026 — confirm pricing at checkout, since it changes.

First, the honest credential ledger. This is the table no competitor has built, because it means reading every provider’s own pages and refusing to round “menopause-trained” up to “individually certified.”

What each provider actually claims about clinician credentials

ProviderWhat they say about cliniciansShows MSCP certification?Affiliate?Last checked
Menopause Society directoryLists members + MSCPs taking patientsYes — it’s the credential sourceNoJun 2026
Alloy“All consult doctors certified by The Menopause Society for more than 10 years” [ALL-1]YesNoJun 2026
GennevRoster shows many MDs/DOs with MSCP or NCMP [GEN-1]Yes (many clinicians)NoJun 2026
Evernow affiliateExperts page labels providers “Menopause society certified” [EVN-1]Yes (verify assigned clinician)YesJun 2026
Winona affiliate“Board-certified… specializes in menopause” [WIN-1]NoYesJun 2026
Midi Health affiliate“All clinicians trained in perimenopause and menopause care” (internal Midi University) [MIDI-1]NoYesJun 2026
Hers affiliateBoard-certified providers; OB-GYN advisor on staff [HERS-1]NoYesJun 2026
Sesame affiliateLicensed providers; named Medical Director (MD) [SES-1]NoYesJun 2026
Inner Balance (Oestra) affiliateFounded by a board-certified MD, licensed in all 50 states [OES-1]NoYesJun 2026

Sources: each provider’s own clinician, credentials, or about pages, plus the Menopause Society directory. “No” means the provider does not publicly state its prescribing clinicians hold the individual MSCP credential — not that its clinicians are unqualified. Verify your assigned clinician before booking.

What we actually verified (June 2026):We read The Menopause Society’s directory and credential pages, the AAMC’s 2025 reporting on certified-practitioner numbers, the FDA’s hormone therapy and compounding pages, and the public clinician and pricing pages for Alloy, Gennev, Evernow, Winona, Midi, Hers, Sesame, and Inner Balance. What still has to be confirmed by you at intake or checkout: your assigned clinician, your exact insurance benefit, the specific medication recommended, state-specific availability, and your final price. Where we couldn’t confirm a number from a public page, we say so rather than guess.

The price and fit comparison

“Affiliate” above is disclosure, not ranking. And the order below isn’t a quality grade — a board-certified clinician following published guidelines can deliver excellent care.

ProviderBest fit forPrice (where public)FDA-approved or compoundedThe honest limitation
Midi affiliateWomen who want to use insuranceIn-network with most PPO plans; self-pay $250 initial / $150 continued-care visit (excludes labs and medications) [MIDI-2]Standard path is FDA-approved MHT; also has a separate “Custom Rx” compounded pathwayCannot treat Medicaid/Medi-Cal — even self-pay; not covered by Medicare (Medicare beneficiaries may self-pay) [MIDI-2]
Evernow affiliateInsurance-eligible video visits with certified providersMembership from $35/mo; pay-per-visit insurance-eligible (BCBS, Anthem, UnitedHealth, Aetna) [EVN-1]FDA-approved options (estradiol patch/pill, progesterone)Assigned provider and state coverage confirmed at intake
Winona affiliateSimple menopause HRT with route choice (patch/pill/cream)Varies by prescription; no insurance, HSA/FSA-eligible — confirm at checkout [WIN-1]Both: FDA-approved patches, tablets, and progesterone capsules; and compounded body creams that are not FDA-approvedNo insurance billing; does not prescribe testosterone (uses DHEA)
Sesame affiliateLowest-cost cash-pay with a real video visitMenopause subscription listed at $59/mo; medication not included; labs included if ordered [SES-1]Hormonal and non-hormonal options; if a compounded option is offered, it is not FDA-approvedDoes not bill insurance; lab logistics vary by state
Hers affiliateLow-friction subscription startSubscription; confirm current price at checkout [HERS-1]FDA-approved estradiol/progesterone; states HRT is not FDA-approved for perimenopause and may be prescribed off-labelNot available in all 50 states
Inner Balance (Oestra) affiliateOne-cream regimen, low long-term price$199/mo for the first 6 months, then $99.50/mo [OES-1]Compounded Oestra cream (estradiol + progesterone); not an FDA-approved finished drugCompounded; pricier up front — compare total cost across paths

Midi — best if you want to use your insurance

Midi is the strongest pick if insurance matters most. It’s in-network with most PPO plans, its clinicians are menopause-focused, and it operates in all 50 states. The clinicians complete Midi’s internal training program (“Midi University,” 50+ courses) — solid menopause training, but not the individual MSCP exam, and Midi doesn’t claim otherwise. [MIDI-1]

The one limitation you must know: Midi cannot treat Medicaid or Medi-Cal patients — even if you pay cash — and it isn’t covered by Medicare, though Medicare beneficiaries can use it self-pay. [MIDI-2]That’s a real dealbreaker for some women. On Medicaid or Medi-Cal? Use the Menopause Society directory to find a clinician who takes your coverage, or take our quiz and we’ll route you to a better fit.

A note on medications: Midi’s standard menopause path uses FDA-approved hormone therapy, and it also offers a separate “Custom Rx” compounded pathway. If that’s ever recommended to you, ask whether your prescription is FDA-approved or compounded — they’re different categories, which we explain below. Also see: full Midi Health review and does Midi take insurance?

Check Midi’s PPO eligibility →

(affiliate link)

Winona — best for straightforward HRT with your choice of patch, pill, or cream

Winona is a clean fit if you want simple menopause hormone therapy and you like having route options. Its physicians are board-certified and specialize in menopause (not MSCP-certified, and Winona doesn’t claim it). Winona’s pages repeatedly follow Menopause Society and ACOG guidance on dosing and route. [WIN-1]

One thing to understand clearly, in Winona’s own words: its estrogen patches, estrogen tablets, and progesterone capsules are FDA-approved, while its compounded body creams are patient-specific and “not regulated or approved by the FDA” (though made with FDA-approved ingredients). These are different categories — more on that below. Winona runs its own 503A compounding pharmacies, doesn’t bill insurance (HSA/FSA-eligible), and does not prescribe testosterone — it uses DHEA instead.

See Winona’s pricing and state availability →

(affiliate link)

Sesame — best for the lowest-cost cash-pay visit

Sesame is the budget-friendly option with a real video visit and labs included if ordered. It has a named Medical Director (an MD) and licensed providers, and it doesn’t bill insurance — which is how it keeps prices low (HSA/FSA may still apply). Its menopause subscription is listed at $59/month; medication costs are not included, and lab logistics vary by state. [SES-1]If any compounded option is offered to you, remember it’s not FDA-approved — ask which you’re getting.

Check Sesame’s menopause subscription →

(affiliate link)

Inner Balance (Oestra) and Hers — for specific needs

Inner Balance makes sense if you want a single daily cream instead of juggling a patch and a pill. Its Oestra product is a compoundedcream containing estradiol and progesterone — mixed by a 503A compounding pharmacy and not an FDA-approved finished drug.Its pricing is $199/month for the first six months, then $99.50/month. If a one-cream routine appeals to you, it’s worth a look — just go in understanding it’s compounded, and compare the total cost (visit, medication, labs) against the other paths before calling any option the cheapest. [OES-1]

Hersis a fit for a simple, low-friction subscription start with FDA-approved estradiol and progesterone. Hers states its hormone therapy is not FDA-approved for the treatment of perimenopause and may be prescribed off-label at a provider’s discretion. It’s not available in every state, so check your state first. [HERS-1]

See Inner Balance (Oestra) pricing →See Hers menopause →

(affiliate links)

Compare these against your symptoms and state →

Can an online Menopause Society Certified Practitioner prescribe HRT?

Yes — if hormone therapy is medically appropriate for you, the clinician is licensed to treat you in your state, and the medication can legally be prescribed through that care model. The MSCP credential does not guarantee you’ll get hormones; it means the clinician passed The Menopause Society’s menopause-care competency exam. Hormone therapy isn’t right for everyone, and a good clinician will say so.

A responsible online evaluation should ask about your age, your last period, whether you have a uterus, your symptoms, your bleeding history, and your personal and family history of cancer, clots, stroke, heart disease, and liver disease — then recommend FDA-approved options where appropriate. HRT requires a prescription from a licensed clinician after that review. [FDA-1]

See which path fits your situation →

How much does online menopause care cost, and how are FDA-approved and compounded options different?

Online menopause care generally runs about $35 to $200 a month, depending on the service, whether labs are included, and whether your medication is FDA-approved or compounded. Before you pay, confirm four things: the exact total at checkout (not a “starting at” price), that your state is covered, whether your prescription is FDA-approved or compounded, and the cancellation terms.

FDA-approved vs. compounded — the difference that matters most

This is the one distinction that protects you, so here it is in plain language.

FDA-approved hormone therapy(like estradiol patches or oral micronized progesterone) is mass-manufactured and reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, and consistent dosing. You know exactly what’s in each dose. [FDA-1]

Compounded “bioidentical” hormones are mixed by a compounding pharmacy from a prescription. They are not FDA-approved, which means the FDA has not reviewed them for safety, effectiveness, or batch-to-batch consistency. The FDA has stated it does not have evidence that compounded bioidentical hormones are safer or more effective than FDA-approved options. A 2020 National Academies of Sciences report reached the same conclusion and recommended FDA-approved products as the first choice. ACOG similarly advises against routine use of compounded hormones when an FDA-approved option exists. [FDA-2][NASEM-1][ACOG-1]

Compounded is not“a cheaper version of the same thing.” It’s a different category. Even when a compounded cream is made with FDA-approved ingredients (as Winona notes for its creams), the finished compounded product itself is not FDA-approved. If a provider recommends compounded hormones, it’s fair to ask why an FDA-approved option won’t meet your need, which pharmacy compounds it, and what’s in it.

Also see: FDA-approved vs. compounded HRT and HRT cost in 2026.

One thing that changed in 2026 — in your favor

On February 12, 2026, the FDA approved label changes for the first six menopause hormone therapy products, removing risk statements about cardiovascular disease, breast cancer, and probable dementia from the “boxed warning” — its most prominent safety warning. The FDA kept the boxed warning about endometrial (uterine) cancer for systemic estrogen-alone products. It’s a meaningful step toward clearer information. [FDA-3]

Your 7-question checklist before you book

Copy this. Ask every one before you pay. A good provider answers plainly instead of rushing you to checkout.

  1. 1Will the clinician I see be an MSCP, menopause-trained, board-certified — or some combination?
  2. 2Are you licensed to treat patients in my state?
  3. 3Do you take my insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, HSA, or FSA?
  4. 4Is the medication FDA-approved, compounded, or both — and which would I be getting?
  5. 5What's included in the price — and what costs extra (labs, medications, shipping)?
  6. 6What labs or in-person exams might I need?
  7. 7What happens if I need a follow-up, a dose change, or have side effects?
Match my route, medication preference, and safety flags →

(how we protect your health data)


When is online menopause care not the right starting point?

Telehealth menopause care can fit women with typical symptoms and no safety flags. But some situations need an in-person clinician first: vaginal bleeding after menopause, a history of certain cancers, a blood clot, stroke, or bleeding disorder, liver disease, an allergy to hormone therapy, or possible pregnancy. The flags below need a hands-on evaluation before you start.

Please don’t use any general web page — including this one — to decide whether hormone therapy is safe for you if any of these apply:

This isn’t caution for its own sake. It’s the line between care that helps and care that harms. Online services screen with questionnaires, and a responsible one will refer you to in-person care if you flag these — but you can skip the detour by starting in the right place. Once you’ve been evaluated, online care can absolutely be part of your team for ongoing management.


How did The HRT Index verify these provider claims?

The HRT Index Verification Standard is the documented process we use to review every provider: we read every published price, separate FDA-approved from compounded options, verify state availability and insurance language, and re-check on a fixed schedule — top providers monthly, the full roster quarterly. We evaluate on five things, in this order: clinical legitimacy, care quality, medication fit, price transparency, and access.

What that means here:

What we verified from public pages: credential language, published pricing where available, insurance language, medication-category language, and the directory’s limitations. What still requires checkout or intake:your assigned clinician, your exact insurance benefit, the specific medication recommended, state-specific availability, and your final price. We don’t medically review your personal suitability — that’s your clinician’s job — and we never treat forum posts as medical evidence. See our methodology and correction policy for the full process.


What women are really trying to avoid

The fear underneath this search usually isn’t “can I find a clinician online?” It’s “will this person take me seriously, actually know menopause, explain my options clearly — or will it be another wasted appointment?”

If you’ve been told you’re “too young,” that it’s “just stress,” or to “try yoga and come back in six months” — while you’re lying awake at 3 a.m. drenched in sweat and forgetting words mid-sentence — you already know why the credential question feels so loaded. You’re not looking for a prescription vending machine. You’re looking for someone who gets it.

Certification is one signal that someone gets it. It’s not the only one. A board-certified, menopause-focused clinician who follows the guidelines, listens, and adjusts your care as you go can be exactly that person. The map above is how you find them — without paying for the wrong consult first.

Match my symptoms and situation to the right provider →

(how we protect your health data)


Frequently asked questions

What does Menopause Society Certified Practitioner mean?
A Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP) is a licensed healthcare professional who passed The Menopause Society's competency exam in menopause care. It signals dedicated, tested menopause training. The credential lasts three years and is renewed by re-exam or continuing education.
Is MSCP the same as a NAMS certified practitioner?
Yes. The Menopause Society was formerly the North American Menopause Society (NAMS), and the credential was called NCMP. The 2023 rename changed the letters to MSCP, not the meaning. Searches for "NAMS certified menopause practitioner online" are looking for the same thing.
Can I see a Menopause Society Certified Practitioner online?
Yes. The Menopause Society's free directory has a telehealth filter, and some certified clinicians offer telehealth. Services like Alloy, Gennev, and Evernow also show Menopause Society certification on their clinician pages and let you book online. Treatment still depends on your state's licensure rules.
Can nurse practitioners or physician assistants be MSCPs?
Yes. The Menopause Society says all licensed healthcare professionals are eligible to sit for the exam, including nurse practitioners and physician assistants. A menopause-focused NP or PA who holds the credential can be an excellent choice.
How many Menopause Society Certified Practitioners are there in the US?
About 4,100, according to the AAMC in 2025 -- up from roughly 1,000 a decade earlier. For the roughly 1.3 million American women who reach menopause each year, that's still a small group, which is why a certified clinician can be hard to find online.
Are Winona, Midi, Hers, or Sesame clinicians MSCP-certified?
No -- and none of them claims to be. Their clinicians are board-certified and menopause-focused, but they do not advertise that their prescribers hold the individual MSCP credential. If you specifically want a clinician who shows Menopause Society certification, use the menopause.org directory, Alloy, Gennev, or Evernow.
Does an MSCP guarantee I'll get hormone therapy?
No. A certified clinician reviews your symptoms, history, and risks and recommends what's appropriate for you -- which may or may not include hormones. Holding the credential means the clinician has menopause training, not that any specific treatment is guaranteed.
Should I choose FDA-approved or compounded hormones?
FDA-approved hormone therapy is reviewed for safety, effectiveness, and consistent dosing. Compounded hormones are mixed by a pharmacy and are not FDA-approved, so the FDA hasn't reviewed their safety or consistency. The FDA, ACOG, and the National Academies recommend FDA-approved products first. Compounded options exist for specific reasons, like an allergy or an unavailable dose -- ask your clinician why one is being recommended for you.
Does The Menopause Society endorse the clinicians in its directory?
No. The Menopause Society states that its directory identifies members and MSCPs but is not an endorsement or recommendation, and it is not a complete list -- it includes only those who asked to be listed and are accepting new patients.
Which online provider is best if I need to use insurance?
Among the services we track, Midi is in-network with most PPO plans, and Evernow offers insurance-eligible video visits. Note that Midi cannot treat Medicaid/Medi-Cal patients even self-pay, and it isn't covered by Medicare (though Medicare beneficiaries may self-pay) -- so confirm your specific coverage before booking.
What if I can't find an MSCP licensed in my state?
You have good options. A board-certified, menopause-focused clinician who follows the same guidelines can provide care online in your state -- the services mapped above operate in most or all states. Or take our quiz to match your state, insurance, and symptoms to the right path.

Still deciding?

Still not sure which HRT program is right for you? Take our free 60-second matching quiz.

It asks about your state, your insurance, whether you have a uterus, your symptoms, and your medication preferences — then points you to the path that fits, and flags when online care isn’t the right starting point.

Start Find My HRT Path →See Evernow certified providers

(how we protect your health data)

Related reading: Best Online HRT Providers · HRT Cost in 2026 · Midi vs. Alloy vs. Winona vs. Evernow · Our methodology · Menopause specialist near me (online)


Sources (verified June 2026)

The HRT Index is the independent menopause-HRT decision resource for women. We don’t diagnose, treat, or prescribe, and nothing here is medical advice. For decisions about starting, stopping, or changing hormone therapy, consult a licensed clinician who has reviewed your history. To find a Menopause Society Certified Practitioner near you, The Menopause Society maintains a free public directory at menopause.org. Pricing, insurance, state availability, and medication options change — re-check before you book. Found something out of date? Email corrections@thehrtindex.com.

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