Disclosure: This guide is published by August (meetaugust.ai). August runs a free AI symptom checker and a flat-fee online urgent care service for general health issues; it does not provide birth control, hormone, or weight-loss subscriptions and is not ranked among the women's health services below. We compare the real platforms on their own merits. No company paid for placement. Verify pricing and your state's availability on each provider's site before signing up.

Hers is a polished women's wellness platform, but it has one feature gap that sends people looking for a Hers alternative: it does not take insurance. It also offers a fairly narrow birth control selection and no emergency contraception. If you are weighing whether to cancel, the right replacement depends on what you use Hers for, whether that is birth control, weight loss, hair, or mental health. This guide compares eight strong alternatives to Hers and shows which one fits each need.

Why people switch from Hers

A few reasons come up often. Hers is cash-pay only, so if you have insurance that would cover contraception or care, you are leaving money on the table. Its birth control menu is smaller than some rivals, with around 13 mostly generic pills and no Plan B. And like most subscription platforms, separate categories such as weight loss carry their own membership and medication costs that add up. None of this makes Hers a bad service. It just means another app may fit your specific need or budget better. For a full breakdown, see our Hers review.

How we compared these Hers alternatives

We looked at four things: whether the service takes insurance, the range of treatments, total cost, and how convenient it is to start and refill. Prices come from each provider's public pages and recent 2026 reviews and change often, so verify before signing up.

The 8 best Hers alternatives in 2026

1. Nurx: best overall for birth control variety and insurance

Nurx is the strongest all-around apps-like-Hers pick if contraception is your main use. It offers 50-plus birth control options, including the pill, patch, ring, and the only widely available self-administered shot, and it accepts many insurance plans, so some members pay as little as $0 for medication plus a consultation fee of roughly $15 to $25 [1]. The trade-off is availability: Nurx operates in a limited set of states and does not serve California, so confirm it covers yours. For a closer look, see our Nurx review.

Best for: the widest birth control selection with insurance.

2. Wisp: best for sexual and reproductive health

Wisp focuses almost entirely on sexual and reproductive health and serves all 50 states. Birth control runs about $5 to $29 a month depending on how far ahead you pay, and unlike Hers it offers emergency contraception, including Plan B and ella, plus fast STI treatment [2]. It is cash-pay but accepts HSA and FSA funds. For UTIs, BV, birth control, or emergency contraception handled quickly and discreetly, it is the most specialized option here. See our Wisp review for details.

Best for: birth control plus sexual-health treatment nationwide.

3. Twentyeight Health: best for insurance and low-cost access

Twentyeight Health is built around access. It offers more than 100 birth control brands after a roughly $26 consultation, and it accepts insurance, including Medicaid, so many people pay little or nothing [3]. It serves younger patients and underserved communities and ships discreetly. If cost or coverage is your reason for leaving Hers, this is one of the most affordable alternatives to Hers.

Best for: insurance, including Medicaid, and budget access.

4. Pandia Health: best for set-and-forget birth control

Founded by physicians, Pandia Health specializes in birth control delivery, accepts insurance, and offers free shipping with auto-refills. Its focus on contraception means a smooth, reliable refill experience rather than a broad menu of services. For women who just want their pill to arrive on time without thinking about it, Pandia is a dependable choice.

Best for: hands-off, insurance-friendly birth control delivery.

5. PlushCare: best for insurance and comprehensive care

If you want a Hers replacement that bills insurance and covers more than wellness products, PlushCare works like a digital doctor's office with live video visits. It is in-network with many insurers and can handle birth control, women's health, mental health, and primary care with the same clinician over time. Cash visits run higher, around $129, but with insurance you pay your standard copay.

Best for: insurance-billed, full-service care with a real doctor.

6. Sesame: best for transparent cash-pay visits

Sesame is a cash-pay marketplace with upfront prices and no subscription. You compare providers and book a visit, often from about $29, and it offers lower cash prices on some medications without markups, including weight-loss drugs. For a one-time women's health visit at a clear price, it beats subscription lock-in.

Best for: the lowest transparent cash price on a single visit.

7. Strut Health: best for compounded, customized treatment

Strut Health offers telehealth with compounded, customized formulations across women's health and skin concerns, and it earns high marks in birth control and reproductive care in the states it serves. Its tailored approach appeals to women who want a formulation matched to their needs rather than an off-the-shelf product.

Best for: customized, compounded prescriptions.

8. Mochi Health: best for weight management

If you use Hers mainly for weight loss, Mochi Health is a dedicated GLP-1 weight-management program worth comparing. It focuses entirely on metabolic health, which can mean deeper provider expertise in dosing and side effects than a generalist platform. One caution that applies to all compounded GLP-1 programs: compounded semaglutide is not FDA-approved and is not equivalent to brand-name Ozempic or Wegovy, so ask about the pharmacy and the medication source. See our Mochi Health review.

Best for: focused GLP-1 weight management.

Hers alternatives compared

Service Takes insurance Best use Notable
Nurx Yes Birth control variety 50+ options, limited states
Wisp No (HSA/FSA) Sexual/reproductive All 50 states, emergency contraception
Twentyeight Health Yes (incl. Medicaid) Low-cost access $26 consult, 100+ brands
Pandia Health Yes Birth control delivery Free auto-refills
PlushCare Yes Comprehensive care Live video, primary care
Sesame No (cash marketplace) One-off visits From ~$29, no subscription
Strut Health Varies Compounded care Customized formulas
Mochi Health Varies Weight management Compounded GLP-1

Prices and availability reflect 2026 public info and change often. Verify on each provider's site.

How to choose the right alternative to Hers

Start with insurance. If you have it, Nurx, Twentyeight Health, Pandia, or PlushCare can lower or zero out your cost, which Hers cannot. If you want sexual-health care or emergency contraception, Wisp leads. For a one-off visit at a clear price, Sesame fits. For weight management, compare Mochi. Match the app to your main reason for using Hers, and confirm it operates in your state before you switch.

If a general, non-women's-health issue comes up, like a sudden UTI question or a sinus infection, August's flat-fee online urgent care and free AI symptom checker can help with everyday concerns, though it does not provide birth control or hormone subscriptions.

Frequently Asked Questions

It depends on what you use Hers for. For birth control variety with insurance, Nurx leads. For sexual and reproductive health nationwide, Wisp is best. For low-cost or Medicaid access, Twentyeight Health wins. For comprehensive insurance-billed care, PlushCare fits. Match the alternative to your specific need rather than looking for one winner.

Hers does not accept insurance, but several alternatives do. Nurx, Twentyeight Health, Pandia Health, and PlushCare bill many insurance plans, and Twentyeight Health accepts Medicaid. Cash-pay options like Wisp and Sesame skip insurance but accept HSA and FSA funds. If coverage is your reason for switching, start with the insurance-friendly options.

Yes. Wisp birth control starts around $5 a month on longer plans, Nurx can be $0 with insurance plus a small consult fee, and Twentyeight Health costs about $26 for a consultation with low or no medication cost on Medicaid. The cheapest option depends on whether you use insurance and how far ahead you pay.

Wisp is the standout, offering both Plan B and ella, which Hers does not provide. Nurx also offers emergency contraception. If quick access to the morning-after pill matters to you, choose a platform that lists it directly, since not every women's health app carries it.

Yes. PlushCare bills many insurers and offers live video visits, and Nurx, Twentyeight Health, and Pandia accept insurance for contraception. Coverage and copays vary by plan and state. In states with telehealth parity laws, your insurer may cover an online visit the same as an in-person one, so confirm your benefits first.

Yes. The platforms here use licensed clinicians and ship from licensed pharmacies. As with any telehealth service, give an accurate medical history, confirm the service operates in your state, and discuss side effects with the provider. For compounded products, ask about the pharmacy and the medication source before starting.

Common reasons include that Hers does not accept insurance, its birth control menu is narrower than some rivals, it does not offer emergency contraception, and separate categories like weight loss carry their own fees. People who want coverage, more options, or a single comprehensive provider often switch to one of the alternatives above.