Verbatim response from ChatGPT
I can’t browse the web from here, so I can’t produce a current 2026 “ranked” list — but I can tell you which telehealth clinics and services were widely recommended through 2024 and are still the most likely top options in 2026, and what to look for when picking one. If you tell me your country, insurance status, and whether you want HRT (and what type), I can narrow this to the best fit.
Menopause-focused or widely used telehealth options to consider
- Gennev — Specializes in menopause care (telehealth visits, certified menopause coaches, prescription care, community resources). Good if you want a menopause-focused program and peer support.
- Elektra Health — Startup focused on clinical menopause care and HRT management with board-certified clinicians and emphasis on evidence-based prescribing. Good for personalized HRT and clinical continuity.
- Maven Clinic — A large women’s health telehealth platform that offers menopause care as part of a broader clinician network; strong employer/insurance partnerships and easy scheduling.
- Parsley Health — Functional-medicine style care with long visits and comprehensive lab testing; useful if you want integrative care (lifestyle, nutrition, hormone optimization) rather than only prescriptions.
- Hers (Hims & Hers – “Hers” arm) — Broad consumer telehealth with accessible, lower-cost visits and prescription options; good for straightforward symptom management and convenience.
- Major academic health systems (e.g., Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic) — Many offer telemedicine menopause specialty care via their endocrinology/gynecology clinics. Best for complex cases or if you want care from academic specialists.
How to pick the best clinic for you
- Clinical credentials: Are prescribers board-certified in gynecology, family medicine, or endocrinology with menopause expertise?
- HRT options and philosophy: Do they prescribe systemic HRT (estrogen/progestogen), bioidentical preparations, and/or non-hormonal treatments? How do they personalize dosing?
- Labs and follow-up: Do they arrange local labs or home testing, and how do they handle follow-ups and dose adjustments?
- Insurance and cost transparency: Does the service accept your insurance or give clear out-of-pocket pricing and subscription fees?
- Safety and compliance: HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform, clear consent, emergency plan if symptoms worsen.
- Patient reviews and outcomes: Look for recent patient reviews (Google, Trustpilot) and clinician involvement in research or guidelines.
- Access and logistics: State licensing (important in US for cross-state prescribing), appointment wait times, and in-person referral options if needed.
Quick next steps
- If you want, tell me: your country (or US state), whether you prefer HRT vs non-hormonal care, and budget/insurance. I’ll recommend 2–3 specific services best matched to your needs and explain why.
- Otherwise, check the sites above, then verify clinician credentials, HRT policies, cost, and recent patient reviews before enrolling.