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This article is educational and does not replace medical advice. Prescription medication requires review by a licensed clinician and, when appropriate, a valid prescription. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved, and the FDA does not verify their safety, effectiveness or quality before marketing. Treatment eligibility is an individual clinical decision.
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Written by Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC·Reviewed by Jonathan Snipes, MD·Published July 12, 2026·Last reviewed July 12, 2026·Prices verified July 12, 2026·Methodology v1.0

Sildenafil telehealth providers: how to evaluate them

Direct answer

Sildenafil is a PDE5 inhibitor, FDA-approved for erectile dysfunction and (as Revatio) for pulmonary arterial hypertension. It has a shorter half-life than tadalafil — roughly 4 hours — giving an effective window of about 4 to 6 hours, and it works best taken on an empty stomach. It is available as a low-cost generic.

How to evaluate a Sildenafil provider

We do not publish a ranked list of Sildenafil providers, for a specific reason: we have not captured and dated their pricing or verified their pharmacy relationships. Publishing a ranking we cannot substantiate would be worth less than nothing.

What we can give you is the evaluation framework we apply to the providers we have verified — the 19 GLP-1 telehealth companies in our pricing database.

What separates a legitimate provider from a storefront
SignalWhat good looks likeWhat should worry you
Prescribing clinicianNamed, licensed, verifiable NPIUnnamed 'medical team'
Medical evaluationReal review; some patients are declinedA form that approves everyone
PharmacyNamed facility, licence verifiable in a state board database'Our network of licensed pharmacies'
FormulationSalt form and concentration disclosedWill not tell you
Regulatory languageStates plainly that compounded is not FDA-approved'FDA-approved pharmacy' — a meaningless phrase
Evidence claimsDistinguishes mechanism from demonstrated outcomeCites mouse studies as if they were human results
PricingTotal cost stated up front, cancellation terms publishedHeadline rate that turns out to be a first month

How to verify any of this yourself

You should not take our word for a price, and you do not have to. Every figure here can be checked in a few minutes.

  1. Go to the provider's own pricing page. Not a comparison site — the provider's. Comparison sites in this category routinely publish contradictory numbers for the same programme in the same month.
  2. Find the ongoing price, not the headline. Look for the words "first month", "intro", "starting at" or "new patients". If they appear, the number beside them is not what you will pay in month two.
  3. Add the membership. If the medication and the membership are billed separately, add them. That sum is your real monthly cost.
  4. Ask what the highest dose costs. By email or chat, so you have it in writing.
  5. Ask about early cancellation before you commit to a plan longer than a month.
  6. Check the manufacturer. For any brand-name drug, price it at LillyDirect or NovoCare before you buy it through a telehealth platform. Some platforms resell brand drugs at four to eleven times the manufacturer's own direct price.

If a provider will not answer questions 4 or 5 in writing, that is itself information.

Frequently asked questions

What does Sildenafil cost through telehealth?

It is available as an inexpensive FDA-approved generic — price that at a pharmacy before paying a subscription for a compounded version.

Is Sildenafil FDA-approved?

Sildenafil is FDA-approved and available as an inexpensive generic. As with tadalafil, there is rarely a good reason to pay more for a compounded troche, a 'proprietary blend' or a stacked combination product. Those are not FDA-approved and have no demonstrated adva

Does Sildenafil work?

Extensively studied and clearly effective for erectile dysfunction across large randomised trials, with decades of post-marketing data. Along with tadalafil, this is among the best-evidenced treatments covered on this site.

Sources

  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration — approved labels and compounding guidance for this molecule.
  2. PubMed / NIH — indexed human clinical literature.
  3. ClinicalTrials.gov — registered trials, where they exist.
  4. Our source hierarchy and pricing-verification methodology.

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