Trust & Verification
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Reading the Fine Print Before You Commit

The Rounds · EdClinic.co Editorial Team

Every provider on this site is legitimate, but "legitimate" doesn't mean "identical in the fine print." Before you commit to any of the seven, here's exactly what to check — the questions worth answering before you enter payment information, not after.

Six things to confirm before you commit

  1. Is this a subscription or a one-time order? And if subscription, what's the cancellation process?
  2. What's the actual price after any starter or promotional pricing ends?
  3. Is the medication compounded or FDA-approved brand-name? Both are legitimate paths, but you should know which you're getting.
  4. What will appear on your card or bank statement? A reputable provider states this clearly, not vaguely.
  5. Is there a real clinician reviewing your intake, or does approval happen largely automatically?
  6. What's the process if the medication doesn't work for you? Follow-up support, dose adjustment, or are you on your own?

Where to actually find these answers

A provider's own FAQ or terms page usually has most of this, though sometimes you'll need to ask directly during intake or via customer support before committing. A provider that answers plainly is behaving differently than one that's vague or redirects you to marketing copy instead of a direct answer.

BraveRX ED-Focused Telehealth

Confirm current pricing, subscription terms, and evaluation process directly on their site before committing.

View Offer →

The honest bottom line

None of the seven providers on this site are trying to hide anything from you — but pricing structures, medication types, and support models genuinely differ, and it's on you to check the specifics that matter to your situation rather than assuming they're all interchangeable behind a "View Offer" button.

Advertising disclosure: EdClinic.co is an independent comparison site. We may earn a commission when you visit a provider through a link on this page — this does not affect the price you pay. Compounded medications referenced on this page are not FDA-approved; compounding pharmacies prepare medications under a licensed clinician's prescription. Nothing on this page is medical advice. Talk to a licensed healthcare provider about your specific situation.