How Online Prescriptions Work in the US: A Plain-Language Guide
Online prescriptions are legal in the US, but they are not a legal shortcut around ordinary medical rules. A prescription still has to come from a licensed clinician, and the clinician still has to decide that the medication is appropriate for the patient. What changes online is the format of the visit, not the basic standard.
That is where a lot of consumer confusion starts. People hear “telehealth” and assume either that anything goes online or that online prescribing is somehow less legitimate than in-person care. Neither is true. The real answer is more practical: some medications are commonly prescribed through telehealth, some require more caution, and some are still subject to tighter federal and state limits.
Are Online Prescriptions Legal in the US?
Yes. In general, clinicians can prescribe medications through telehealth if they are licensed and the visit meets the applicable legal and clinical requirements. The main complication is controlled substances, which are governed in part by the Ryan Haight Act and related federal telemedicine rules. As of 2026, DEA and HHS have extended many COVID-era telemedicine flexibilities for prescribing controlled medications through December 31, 2026, while permanent rules are still being finalized.
That does not mean every online service can prescribe every drug in every situation. State licensure rules still matter, medication category still matters, and the provider may still decide that an in-person visit, lab work, or a physical exam is necessary before prescribing. Legitimate platforms such as gents.co, Hims, and Ro all describe a licensed-clinician review process rather than instant, automated approval.
Who Can Prescribe Online?
A chatbot cannot prescribe. An algorithm cannot prescribe. In the US, prescribing authority belongs to licensed healthcare professionals acting within the scope of their license and under the rules of the state where the patient is located. Depending on the service and the medication, that may mean a physician, nurse practitioner, or another authorized clinician. HHS notes that licensure requirements vary across states and across telehealth arrangements.
That is one of the easiest ways to judge whether a service is serious. If a site is vague about who reviews your case, where those clinicians are licensed, or how prescribing decisions are made, that is a warning sign. FDA consumer guidance also warns people to be careful with online sellers that bypass prescription requirements or do not clearly identify a licensed US pharmacy or provider relationship.
How the Process Usually Works
The online prescribing process is usually simpler than people expect, but it should still feel medical.
| Step | What happens | What to expect |
| 1. Intake | You answer questions about symptoms, history, medications, and goals | A detailed form, sometimes with identity and state verification |
| 2. Clinical review | A licensed provider reviews the information | The provider may message you or request more details |
| 3. Live visit if needed | Some cases require video or phone follow-up | More likely when the case is unclear, or the medication is sensitive |
| 4. Prescription decision | The provider approves, declines, or redirects you to in-person care | Approval is never supposed to be automatic |
| 5. Fulfillment | The prescription goes to a pharmacy or pharmacy partner | Shipping or pickup depends on the service |
| 6. Follow-up | You may get refill review, side-effect checks, or secure messaging | Ongoing monitoring varies by platform and medication |
That basic workflow is common across legitimate telehealth services. The details vary by platform and by medication, but the important point is that prescribing is supposed to involve clinician review, not instant approval.
A few things patients should expect from a real service:
- forms that ask more than one or two superficial questions
- the possibility of follow-up questions before a decision
- a real chance the answer will be “not appropriate”
- some explanation of what happens after prescribing, not just at checkout
What Can and Cannot Be Prescribed Online?
Many common telehealth medications are prescribed online every day. Depending on the platform and the state, that may include treatments for weight management, erectile dysfunction, hair loss, some hormone-related care, and other non-controlled medications.
Controlled substances are more complicated. Federal telemedicine flexibilities currently allow certain controlled-medication prescribing without a prior in-person visit in some circumstances, but those rules are temporary and still evolving. Even where legally allowed, a platform may choose not to prescribe certain medications online, and a clinician may require in-person evaluation first.
The safest takeaway is simple: online access does not guarantee online eligibility.
What to Check Before You Sign Up
Before using any online prescription service, it helps to focus less on the branding and more on the process behind it. Different telehealth providers handle this category in slightly different ways. Gents focuses on men’s health, including GLP-1, ED, and hormonal treatments; Hims offers broader direct-to-consumer men’s care across categories like sexual health and hair loss; and Ro combines telehealth prescribing with a wider primary-care-style platform. For patients, though, the more useful question is not which name is most familiar, but whether the service clearly explains who is prescribing, how review works, what follow-up looks like, and how medication is actually fulfilled.
A few things are worth checking before you sign up:
- whether the provider is licensed in your state
- whether the prescribing process includes real clinical review
- whether the pharmacy partner is clearly identified
- whether follow-up support is available after treatment begins
- whether the privacy policy is easy to find and understand
The Bottom Line
Online prescriptions in the US are real, legal, and increasingly normal, but they are not supposed to be casual. The underlying rule is still the same one patients would want offline: a licensed clinician reviews the case and decides whether the medication is appropriate.
That is the plain-language version. Telehealth changes the front door to care. It does not erase the need for licensure, clinical judgment, privacy safeguards, or pharmacy oversight. If a service is transparent about those things, patients usually have a much better chance of knowing what they are signing up for.
