Reordering and Refills: How the Subscription Model Works Across Providers
Understanding the ongoing relationship before you commit avoids surprises three months in.
Most of the providers on this site build treatment around an ongoing relationship rather than a single one-time purchase — refills, check-ins, and adjustments over time. Understanding how that actually works before you commit avoids surprises later.
Why ongoing beats one-and-done for most people
ED treatment usually isn't a single-use fix — it's something you'll need consistently, which is exactly why most providers build their model around recurring fulfillment rather than a single transaction. That's not a trick to lock you in; it reflects how the treatment is actually used in practice.
What varies between providers
Some platforms require an ongoing subscription commitment as part of the model; others are structured closer to pay-per-fill. FeelGood's continuity-of-care framing leans into the ongoing relationship explicitly. A more transactional provider may make each refill feel more like a standalone decision. Neither is inherently better — it depends on whether you want the structure of a subscription or the flexibility of deciding fresh each time.
FeelGood
A telehealth platform built specifically around men's health, with ED as its core offering. Fast online evaluation, ongoing clinical support if you need to adjust treatment.
View Offer Paid LinkWhat to ask before you commit
Whether you can pause or cancel easily, whether refills require a new evaluation or just a quick check-in, and what happens if your needs change — dose adjustment, switching formats, or stopping altogether. A provider that answers these clearly before you sign up is telling you something good about how they'll treat you as an ongoing customer, not just a first-time conversion.