Category: Comparison
Quick take (save you the scroll)
PlushCare = insurance-first primary care.
Ro = premium experience + insurance concierge (and a smoother “done-for-you” vibe).
Best fit if you’re…
- Trying to pay the least out-of-pocket with insurance: PlushCare (especially if you want a real primary-care style visit)
- Self-pay, busy, and want a polished program with strong guidance: Ro
Where to start
- Ro review (internal): https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
- PlushCare review (internal): https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
The lens we’re using: insurance-first vs. self-pay optimization
At GLP-1 Reviews, we try to judge programs the way patients actually experience them: intake flow, pricing reality, how meds get filled, and what happens after month 1.
This specific matchup is less “who’s better?” and more which model fits your life:
- PlushCare’s model: Use insurance (and real doctor visits) to make brand-name GLP-1s financially possible.
- Ro’s model: Charge a higher membership for a more guided, app-forward program, and run an insurance concierge to try to lower your medication costs.
(If you’re curious how we evaluate providers generally, see our methodology page: https://glp-1.reviews/review-methodology/)
At-a-glance: PlushCare vs. Ro (what you’re really buying)
| What matters | PlushCare | Ro |
|---|---|---|
| Core strategy | Insurance coverage + primary care | Premium convenience + concierge help |
| Membership | $19.99/mo | $145/mo (first month promo shown on our Ro review) |
| Visits | $129 per visit (typical self-pay visit pricing) | Usually feels “bundled” into membership (program-style) |
| Medication types | Brand-name only (no compounding) | Brand-name only (no compounding) |
| Best for | People with insurance who want a straightforward doctor visit | Self-pay professionals who want higher-touch support + smoother app experience |
| Internal “deep dive” | https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/ | https://glp-1.reviews/ro/ |
Pricing reality check (membership is the easy part)
PlushCare pricing (insurance-friendly structure)
From our PlushCare review page, the baseline structure is clear:
- $19.99/month membership + $129/visit (self-pay visit pricing)
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
What that means in real life:
- If your insurance covers GLP-1 meds and you can get prior auth approved, PlushCare can be a very logical “low admin overhead” path.
- If insurance doesn’t cover your GLP-1 medication, the medication itself can still be the expensive part (often $1,000+/month for brand-name GLP-1s depending on drug/dose/pharmacy). Our site’s cost breakdown puts many brand-name GLP-1 list prices in the ~$800–$1,400/month range uninsured.
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/glp-1-cost-breakdown/
Ro pricing (premium membership, then meds)
From our Ro review:
- $145/month membership (with a first-month promo shown on-page) + medication costs
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
This is the big mental model shift:
- With Ro, you’re paying a higher monthly fee because the product is the program (care team, app experience, labs, dietitian access, ongoing support), not just a visit.
About that “~$199/month Wegovy intro pricing”
You’ll see “intro pricing” numbers floating around the GLP-1 world via partnerships, limited promotions, and certain pharmacy programs. Those deals can be real, but they’re usually time-limited, eligibility-dependent, and not the same as “my long-term monthly cost.”
If your goal is budgeting with minimal surprises, treat any intro price as:
- “Nice if I get it,” not
- “My stable cost for 12 months.”
Medication access: both are brand-name only (this is huge)
A big similarity: PlushCare and Ro are both positioned around FDA-approved, brand-name GLP-1 medications: not compounded copies.
From our reviews:
Ro meds listed: Ozempic, Wegovy, Zepbound
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
PlushCare meds listed: Ozempic, Wegovy, Zepbound, Mounjaro, Saxenda, Victoza, Rybelsus
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
Why this matters (quickly):
- Brand-name only tends to mean more consistency in supply chain + known dosing devices.
- It also usually means higher cash-pay prices, which is why insurance strategy (and/or concierge work) becomes the whole game.
If you’re specifically trying to stay brand-name only, you may also want:
See also: “Brand-name GLP-1 online” hub page: https://glp-1.reviews/brand-name-glp1-online/
The patient experience: how starting feels on each platform
PlushCare: “book a real doctor visit” energy
PlushCare’s intake is short because the actual clinical depth happens in the live appointment. Our review notes it’s structured around a scheduled video appointment with a licensed physician, with the intake acting as a safety gate and qualification check.
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
The vibe: if you’re someone who wants to talk things through with an actual clinician (and maybe manage other health issues too), PlushCare feels more like “telehealth primary care” than “weight-loss startup program.”

Ro: “program-first + app-first” energy
Ro’s intake is notably more structured and multi-step: more like onboarding to a subscription product. Our walkthrough captured a long, staged intake flow and a checkout into the Ro Body membership.
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
The vibe: Ro is built for people who want a modern app workflow, consistent check-ins, and fewer “figure it out yourself” moments.

Insurance: who is actually optimized for what?
PlushCare: best when your plan is willing to play ball
PlushCare is straightforward for insured patients because the platform is fundamentally oriented around provider visits + insurance pathways.
If you have commercial insurance and your plan covers GLP-1s (or you can win a prior authorization), PlushCare’s pricing model can be a win: lower membership, pay-per-visit, then let insurance do what it’s going to do on the medication.
Where it can feel rough: if you’re not covered for GLP-1s, you’re basically in brand-name self-pay territory: meaning the medication cost can become the main bill.
Ro: best when you want a dedicated “coverage helper” (or you’re self-pay anyway)
Ro’s standout differentiator (as we describe it in our review) is the insurance concierge concept: built to help members navigate coverage for brand-name GLP-1s.
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
Even if you’re self-pay, Ro can still make sense if you value:
- a smoother program experience,
- consistent support,
- and less DIY research.
Tradeoff: you’re paying for that “premium convenience” every month.
Criteria breakdown (quick, 1–10 scoring)
Not provider rankings: just a decision aid for this specific choice.
PlushCare (insurance-first primary care)
- Insurance fit (commercial plans): 9/10
- Medicare / older patient accessibility: 9/10 (noted as a differentiator in our review)
- Self-pay friendliness (total cost predictability): 5/10
- Brand-name medication options: 9/10 (wide menu per our review)
- Onboarding speed: 9/10 (same-day noted)
- “Program” feel (coaching/app structure): 6/10
Source for core characteristics: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
Ro (premium convenience + concierge)
- Insurance navigation help: 9/10 (concierge model highlighted in our review)
- Self-pay experience: 8/10 (high monthly fee, but strong “white glove” structure)
- Brand-name medication integrity: 9/10 (no compounding)
- Clinical support bundle (labs, dietitian access, check-ins): 9/10
- Cost predictability (membership vs meds): 7/10 (membership predictable; meds depend on coverage)
- Best for busy professionals: 9/10
Source for core characteristics: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
Pros / Cons (super scannable)
PlushCare : Pros
- Lower ongoing platform cost ($19.99/mo membership) with pay-per-visit structure
- Insurance-focused approach that can be great if you’re covered
- Brand-name GLP-1s only (no compounding risk)
- Same-day appointment speed noted in our review
- Broad brand-name medication menu in our review (including Wegovy/Zepbound/Mounjaro)
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
PlushCare : Cons
- Per-visit fees add up if you need frequent follow-ups
- No compounded option for people priced out of brand-name meds
- If insurance denies coverage, you’re staring at brand-name cash-pay pricing (often $1k+/mo range)
Source/context: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/ and https://glp-1.reviews/glp-1-cost-breakdown/
Ro : Pros
- Premium, program-style experience (more guided than basic telehealth)
- Insurance concierge is a real differentiator for brand-name GLP-1 coverage attempts
- Strong included clinical structure (labs + dietitian access called out in our review)
- Brand-name only (no compounding)
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
Ro : Cons
- $145/month membership is meaningful (and meds are extra)
- If you can’t secure coverage, total cost can remain high
- No compounded lower-cost path (by design)
Source: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/

Who should pick what? (simple decision paths)
Pick PlushCare if…
- You have commercial insurance (or Medicare) and want the most insurance-native experience.
- You want a primary care telehealth relationship, not just a weight-loss subscription.
- You’re okay with the pay-per-visit model because you may not need constant coaching.
Where to get started: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
Pick Ro if…
- You’re a busy professional and want a smoother, “handled for me” program.
- You’re willing to pay more monthly for better structure + support.
- You want a program built around brand-name meds + insurance concierge (not compounding).
Where to get started: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
Conclusion (same verdict as the top)
PlushCare is the cleanest fit for people who want an insurance-first, doctor-visit-forward path (and can potentially win coverage).
Ro is the cleanest fit for people who want premium convenience, a stronger program wrapper, and concierge help: even if it costs more monthly.
See also
- Ro review: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/
- PlushCare review: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
- GLP-1 cost breakdown (budgeting reality): https://glp-1.reviews/glp-1-cost-breakdown/
Summary widget (bookmark this)
PlushCare
- Model: Insurance-first primary care telehealth
- Base pricing: $19.99/mo + $129/visit
- Meds: Brand-name only
- Best for: insured patients trying to minimize out-of-pocket
- Link: https://glp-1.reviews/plushcare/
Ro
- Model: Premium program + insurance concierge
- Base pricing: $145/mo + meds
- Meds: Brand-name only
- Best for: self-pay professionals who value convenience + support
- Link: https://glp-1.reviews/ro/

