Weight Loss · GLP-1 / GIP

Tirzepatide

A dual-action GLP-1/GIP therapy for significant, sustainable weight loss — prescribed online and dosed around your biology. Available as a weekly injection or a daily needle-free oral.

From $179/mo

Prescription required · Provided only if a licensed provider deems it medically appropriate · Compounded, not FDA-approved.

What it is

The most comprehensive metabolic tool available today.

Tirzepatide is a dual-action peptide — a chain of amino acids — that targets two key metabolic pathways at once. It activates GLP-1 receptors, which slow digestion and signal fullness to the brain, quieting the constant pull toward food. It also activates GIP receptors, which sharpen insulin sensitivity, support glucose clearance, and improve how your muscles use energy.

Most GLP-1 medications work through a single pathway. Tirzepatide's combined GIP and GLP-1 activity produces a stronger, more complete effect on both appetite and metabolic function — which is why it's our flagship weight-loss program.

How it works

Two pathways, one result.

Quiets food noise

By activating GLP-1 receptors, tirzepatide slows gastric emptying and signals fullness — so hunger becomes manageable and the constant pull toward food fades.

Improves metabolism

GIP activity sharpens insulin sensitivity and glucose handling, helping your body partition energy and use the food you eat more efficiently.

Protects lean mass

Tirzepatide has no direct effect on muscle. With adequate protein and resistance training, you can lose fat while preserving — or even building — muscle.

Dosed to you

Your provider starts low and titrates gradually to your lowest effective dose — the one that keeps appetite in check with the fewest side effects.

What's included

One flat price. Everything in the box.

  • A consultation with a licensed US clinician who reviews your health history
  • A personalized prescription for compounded tirzepatide, if medically appropriate
  • Your medication shipped free in discreet, temperature-safe packaging
  • Everything you need: alcohol swabs, needles, and step-by-step instructions
  • Unlimited messaging with your care team and ongoing dose management
How to take it

Weekly injection or daily oral.

The injection

A once-weekly subcutaneous shot you give yourself at home with a small, hair-thin needle — usually in the stomach area, or wherever your clinician recommends.

The oral

Prefer no needles? Tirzepatide is also offered as a daily sublingual that dissolves under your tongue in about thirty seconds — same molecule, same flat price.

Safety

What to know about side effects.

Most patients tolerate tirzepatide well, but side effects can occur — especially when starting or increasing your dose. The most common are gastrointestinal: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, stomach pain, bloating, indigestion, fatigue and headache. These are most associated with higher doses and fast escalation, which is why we start low and titrate slowly. Serious side effects are uncommon but possible. Message your care team for guidance, and seek medical care for severe or persistent symptoms.

Questions, answered

Tirzepatide FAQ.

Tirzepatide is a dual-action peptide that activates both GLP-1 and GIP receptors. GLP-1 slows digestion and signals fullness to the brain, while GIP supports insulin sensitivity and glucose handling — together producing a strong, comprehensive effect on appetite and metabolism.

Both are available through Lennox. Most members use a once-weekly subcutaneous injection with a hair-thin needle. If you'd rather not inject, tirzepatide is also offered as a daily sublingual that dissolves under the tongue, with no needles.

Your licensed provider determines and titrates your dose. Most members start low — around 1.25 mg per week — and increase gradually based on response and tolerance. Starting low and going slow keeps side effects to a minimum.

The most common side effects are gastrointestinal — mild nausea, digestive sensitivity, constipation or diarrhea — and are most associated with higher doses and fast escalation. Most members experience little to none when starting low and titrating slowly. Message your care team for guidance and seek medical care for severe or persistent symptoms.

Yes. Tirzepatide is a prescription medication. A licensed US provider reviews your intake online and prescribes only if it is medically appropriate for you — no in-person visit required.

Ready to start with tirzepatide?

Complete a 5-minute intake. A licensed US provider reviews it — usually the same day.

Get started