Best Telehealth Clinics in New Hampshire (2026)
Compare TRT, GLP-1, HRT, hair loss, and ED clinics available in New Hampshire. True annual cost — labs and startup fees included.
Testosterone (TRT) in New Hampshire
See all Testosterone (TRT) clinics →GLP-1 Weight Loss in New Hampshire
See all GLP-1 Weight Loss clinics →HRT in New Hampshire
See all HRT clinics →Sexual Health (ED) in New Hampshire
See all Sexual Health (ED) clinics →Telehealth in New Hampshire
Telehealth services in New Hampshire operate under state medical board regulations that require prescriptions from licensed physicians based on proper diagnostic evaluation. All clinics listed on ClinicLayer are licensed to practice in New Hampshire or work with New Hampshire-licensed physicians.
Most telehealth programs ship medication directly to your New Hampshire address within 5–7 business days of prescription approval. No in-person visits required.
Telehealth laws in New Hampshire
New Hampshire's telehealth statute is RSA 329:1-d (Telemedicine), most recently amended by SB 252 (signed June 2025, effective August 2025). SB 252 was a significant liberalization: it removed the prior in-person examination requirement for controlled substance prescribing via telehealth and replaced it with an annual evaluation requirement. Physicians, PAs, and APRNs can now prescribe Schedule II through IV controlled substances via telemedicine without a prior in-person visit.
This makes New Hampshire one of the most telehealth-friendly states in the country for controlled substance prescribing. The only ongoing requirement is an annual evaluation, which can be conducted via telehealth. This is a marked departure from the pre-2025 framework.
New Hampshire is an active IMLC member. Out-of-state physicians can obtain expedited licensure through the compact.
New Hampshire is a full practice authority state for nurse practitioners. NPs can prescribe independently, including controlled substances.
Medicaid telehealth coverage includes remote patient monitoring and store-and-forward (RSA 167:4-d per SB 258). New Hampshire Medicaid previously covered GLP-1s for obesity but eliminated that coverage in late 2025. Coverage is now limited to diabetes indications.
New Hampshire has no state income tax (the Interest & Dividends tax was repealed effective January 1, 2025) and no state sales tax. This means prescription drugs are inherently untaxed. New Hampshire is one of only two states (along with Alaska, which also has no statewide sales tax and no income tax) with neither tax.
Provider availability in New Hampshire
New Hampshire has 1.4 million residents. Provider availability is strong, supported by IMLC membership, full NP practice authority, no in-person requirement (post-SB 252), and the state's generally permissive telehealth environment.
All major TRT providers serve New Hampshire. Maximus ($100/mo), Hone Health ($25/mo), TRT Nation ($99/mo including NH), BraverX ($129/mo), PeterMD ($99/mo), DudeMeds ($77/mo), and Titan Medical ($99/mo) are available.
GLP-1 availability is unrestricted. All national GLP-1 providers serve New Hampshire. Medicaid GLP-1 obesity coverage was dropped in late 2025.
All HRT, hair loss, and ED providers with national coverage serve New Hampshire. No known provider exclusions.
Cost comparison in New Hampshire
TRT pricing: DudeMeds $77/mo ($1,124/year), TRT Nation $99/mo ($1,446/year), PeterMD $99/mo ($1,188/year), Maximus $100/mo ($1,300/year), BraverX $129/mo ($1,548/year).
GLP-1 ranges from $99/mo to $399/mo. Median is $179/mo. New Hampshire Medicaid no longer covers GLP-1s for obesity (coverage dropped late 2025).
New Hampshire has no income tax and no sales tax. Prescription drugs are inherently untaxed.
HRT: Midi Health (insurance), PlushCare ($20/mo), Evernow ($35/mo). ED: Hims $17/mo to MEDVi $119/mo.
Regulations by treatment type in New Hampshire
TRT (testosterone replacement therapy)
New Hampshire removed the in-person requirement for controlled substance prescribing via telehealth (SB 252, effective August 2025). Annual evaluation required, which can be via telehealth. Full NP practice authority. IMLC member. Both compounded and FDA-approved testosterone available.
GLP-1 weight loss
No state-specific GLP-1 restrictions. Federal FDA compounding rules apply. Medicaid GLP-1 obesity coverage was dropped in late 2025.
HRT (hormone replacement therapy)
HRT follows standard federal prescribing rules. No additional state restrictions.
Hair loss
Hair loss treatment follows standard federal prescribing rules. No additional state restrictions.
ED (erectile dysfunction)
ED treatment follows standard federal prescribing rules. No additional state restrictions.
Peptides
Peptide therapy follows standard federal rules. The liberalized telehealth framework supports peptide provider availability.