GLP-1 clinics in North Carolina

We track 23 GLP-1 and weight-loss clinics in North Carolina. Graded dossiers publish as our editorial team reviews each one.

23
Clinics tracked
15
In-person clinics
2
Offer telehealth
0
Graded so far

Where can I find GLP-1 (semaglutide/tirzepatide) clinics in North Carolina?

North Carolina is a compact, in-person-first GLP-1 market. We currently track 23 clinics prescribing semaglutide, tirzepatide, or related weight-loss medications, most of them physical clinics, with only a couple offering a formal telehealth option.

The GLP-1 landscape in North Carolina

GLP-1 care in North Carolina is largely cash-pay and delivered in person, through medical weight-loss practices and med spas. Some prescribe FDA-approved brand drugs; many offer compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide, which is a different product with different oversight. See our compounded vs. brand guide for what to confirm before paying.

Formal telehealth is limited among the clinics we track here, so most patients visit in person. Any clinic treating you online should use a North Carolina-licensed provider. Pricing varies by clinic and coverage depends on your plan; we do not track state insurance rules, so check your own plan directly.

Provider density in North Carolina

Tracked clinics cluster in the central Piedmont: Charlotte (7) and Raleigh (5) lead our database, with Cary and Matthews adding a couple each and outliers as far west as Asheville. The mountains and eastern counties are thinner, where telehealth, though limited here, can help.

GLP-1 medications offered in North Carolina

How many tracked clinics offer each medication.

MedicationClinics offering it
semaglutide21
tirzepatide16
liraglutide1

Where clinics cluster in North Carolina

Charlotte (7)Raleigh (5)Cary (2)Matthews (2)Apex (1)Asheville (1)

How to find and vet a GLP-1 clinic in North Carolina

We are building graded dossiers on GLP-1 clinics, but that work is rolling out one clinic at a time, so most listings in North Carolina are tracked, not yet graded. Until a clinic has a published dossier, do your own diligence. A few things worth confirming before you pay:

  • Who prescribes. Confirm a licensed clinician (physician, NP, or PA) licensed in North Carolina evaluates you, not just an intake form.
  • Brand or compounded. Ask whether the medication is an FDA-approved brand drug or a compounded version. They are not the same; our compounded vs. brand guide explains why.
  • Total cost. Get the all-in monthly price in writing, including the medication, visits, and any membership. See our cost guide for typical ranges.
  • Follow-up. Check how dose changes, side effects, and refills are handled, and how you reach a clinician between visits.

When you have a shortlist, line them up side by side with our compare tool, and read how we grade to see the standards our dossiers will hold clinics to. If you are considering an online provider, our telehealth guide covers what to check.

Want to line clinics up head-to-head? Use the compare tool →

Last updated: July 14, 2026Sourcing method: Clinic database + public web sourcesReviewed by: GLP-1 Grades Editorial Team

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these North Carolina clinics graded?

No. We track 23 GLP-1 clinics in North Carolina and have not published graded dossiers yet. A listing means we track the provider, not that we have scored it.

Is telehealth available for GLP-1 in North Carolina?

It is limited among the clinics we track. Only 2 offer a formal telehealth option, so most care here is in person. An online provider generally needs a North Carolina license.

Which cities have the most GLP-1 clinics in North Carolina?

In our database, Charlotte (7) and Raleigh (5) lead, with a handful more in Cary, Matthews, Apex, and Asheville.