I’m assuming you mean birth-control options like the Xulane patch or the NuvaRing (vaginal ring). Availability and which products a telehealth service will prescribe vary by country and state, so first — what country/state are you in? If you’re in the U.S., these services are widely used and worth checking: Nurx — Easy app/website, discrete mail delivery, and a good selection of contraceptive options including the ring and (in many states) the patch. Fast turnaround and a user-friendly refill system. Planned Parenthood Direct (telehealth) — Runs through the same trusted Planned Parenthood clinics; good if you want clinic continuity, sliding-scale/insurance options, and reliable counseling about side effects and alternatives. Maven Clinic — A larger women’s/ family health telehealth platform; better if you want broader reproductive-health follow-up or more complex care alongside contraception (they can prescribe and coordinate care). Local pharmacy telehealth (CVS MinuteClinic / Walgreens Find Care) — Useful if you prefer prescriptions tied to a nearby pharmacy for same-day pickup and insurance use; many pharmacies now do virtual visits and will prescribe patch or ring when appropriate. How to pick: confirm the service prescribes the specific product you want (ring vs. patch), check whether they accept your insurance (or cost for out-of-pocket), delivery speed, and whether they require lab tests or an in-person visit first. If you tell me your country/state and whether you have insurance, I can recommend the single best option for you and link to how to start.
Mentioned in position 7 of 7
Read full answer with sources →