Verbatim response from Perplexity
The online birth control services in your results that explicitly mention prescribing for teens or under 18 are Twentyeight Health and, more conditionally, some services listed by Free The Pill that depend on state law.[7][2] Planned Parenthood Direct, Hers, Walgreens Virtual Care, and Nurx are listed here, but the provided results do not clearly state teen/under-18 eligibility for all of them.[4][3][5][8]
- Twentyeight Health: says it serves people starting at age 13+ without parental consent in certain states, with lower minimum ages in some states and 18+ in others depending on local law.[7]
- Free The Pill listings: show several online providers with age ranges like 13+, 14+ depending on state law, 12+ depending on state law, and 18+ (under 18 with guardian approval), but the snippet does not name every provider in the visible text.[2]
- Planned Parenthood Direct: offers birth control through an app and is available in 46 states and Washington, D.C., but the result here does not specify under-18 prescribing rules.[4]
- Hers: describes online birth control prescriptions, but the result does not say whether they prescribe for minors.[3]
- Walgreens Virtual Care: explicitly says providers prescribe birth control to women ages 18–55, so it is not an under-18 option in the result shown.[5]
- Nurx: explains the online prescribing process, but the result does not state a minimum age for birth control.[8]
If you want, I can turn this into a state-by-state shortlist of online services that may work for teens based on where you live.