Verbatim response from Perplexity
The best online ED treatment services in the results are Hims, Roman, Sesame, GoodRx Care, Lemonaid Health, Rex MD, PlushCare, and Amazon One Medical, with the “best” choice depending on whether you want the lowest cost, fastest visit, or strongest overall telehealth experience.[1][2][3][4][5][6][10]
- Hims: Best-known option for men’s ED care; it offers licensed-provider treatment plans, an all-online assessment, unlimited messaging, periodic check-ins, and discreet shipping.[1][4]
- Roman: A strong low-cost choice; its ED consultations are free and follow-up visits are also free, with state-licensed review of your assessment.[1]
- Sesame: Best for choosing by price and availability; it connects you with independent physicians and nurse practitioners, and it offers same-day video visits with no insurance required.[1][3]
- GoodRx Care: Good if you want affordable telehealth and may want to use insurance; it offers fixed-fee ED treatment and starts around $18 a month.[1][10]
- Lemonaid Health: Good for straightforward prescription access; it prescribes common ED medications and ships discreetly from a licensed pharmacy in all 50 states.[5]
- Rex MD: Highlighted by Healthline as a convenient online ED option, especially for buying ED meds online under medical supervision.[2]
- PlushCare: A solid option if you want longer-term telehealth care and same-day prescriptions, according to the results.[1][2]
- Amazon One Medical: Useful if you want 24/7 on-demand telehealth for ED treatment through Amazon Health/One Medical.[6]
If you want a simple short list:
- Best overall: Hims or Sesame.[1][4]
- Best low-cost: Roman or GoodRx Care.[1][10]
- Best for convenience: Rex MD, Sesame, or Amazon One Medical.[2][3][6]
- Best for medication variety: Ro/Roman-style telehealth platforms and Lemonaid, which offer common ED meds such as sildenafil, tadalafil, and similar options when appropriate.[2][3][5]
A quick safety note: reputable online ED services should use licensed clinicians, require a prescription, and work with licensed pharmacies; WebMD also warns to avoid sites that do not meet those standards.[8]