Skip to main content

Editorial reviews. Affiliate fees from some providers don't affect rankings. Disclosure

No advertiser influenceAffiliate fees disclosedReviewed by board-certified clinicians
Skip to article body

guide

Telehealth vs in-person HRT: when each works best

Telehealth HRT has become clinically robust. In-person care still has specific advantages — knowing when each fits prevents both unnecessary clinic visits and inappropriate telehealth dependence.

Written by Sarah Editor, MA Journalism, Certified Menopause CoachMedically reviewed by Jane Smith, MD, MD, NAMS-certifiedUpdated Clinically reviewed
Why you can trust this article

Editorial independence. Our reviewers and writers operate independently from any telehealth partner. Recommendations are based on published clinical evidence and direct evaluation of provider services.

Corrections policy. Errors are flagged at the top of the page and logged in our public corrections register.

Affiliate disclosure. Some links may earn us a commission at no extra cost to you. This never influences what we recommend. See our full affiliate disclosure.

Telehealth HRT in 2026 is not a workaround — it's a primary care delivery model. For many women, it's actually a higher-quality experience than the typical 12-minute in-person visit with a generalist OB-GYN who doesn't have menopause training. But it's not the right fit for every situation.

When telehealth HRT works well

Standard initiation for women in late perimenopause or early postmenopause with typical symptoms (vasomotor, sleep, mood) and no major contraindications: telehealth menopause-specialized brands generally outperform generalist in-person care. They typically employ NAMS-certified clinicians, run their playbook frequently, and follow current guidelines (which the average generalist OB-GYN may not have updated since residency).

Stable maintenance: once a regimen is dialed in, async or video follow-up every 6–12 months is clinically adequate for most women. Asynchronous messaging for dose adjustments, side effect management, and refill renewal is appropriate and efficient.

Genitourinary symptom management: vaginal estrogen, DHEA, ospemifene, prasterone — straightforward to manage remotely. Symptom relief is the indication; in-person exam isn't required for prescription.

When in-person care still wins

Complex medical history: significant cardiovascular history, prior VTE, breast cancer history, BRCA mutation carriers, prior endometrial pathology. Risk-benefit conversations need a clinician with full chart access and the ability to coordinate with oncology, cardiology, or surgery.

Bleeding workup: any abnormal perimenopausal bleeding or any postmenopausal bleeding requires in-person evaluation — pelvic exam, ultrasound, possible endometrial biopsy. Telehealth can identify the need for workup but can't perform it.

Pelvic pain or known fibroids requiring monitoring: serial ultrasounds, exam tracking, and possible interventional referral.

Pellet therapy: requires in-office insertion every 3–4 months. Some telehealth brands partner with local in-person providers for the insertion specifically.

New hormonal symptoms in surgical menopause: post-oophorectomy hormone management is complex and often benefits from coordination with the surgical team.

Hybrid models

Increasingly common: initial in-person visit for thorough history and exam, then telehealth follow-up for dose tuning and stable maintenance. Several brands (Tia and others with physical locations) offer this natively. For women in metropolitan areas, this is often the highest-quality option — combining in-person rigor at initiation with telehealth efficiency for ongoing.

State law considerations

Roughly 15 US states require an initial in-person visit before a clinician can prescribe via telehealth for an ongoing chronic condition. Rules vary by state and by specific situation. Brands operating nationally usually handle this transparently — if your state requires it, they'll flag it during intake. If a brand doesn't mention state-by-state rules at all, that's a yellow flag worth questioning.

Specialty matters more than channel

A NAMS-certified clinician via telehealth often delivers better menopause care than a non-specialist in-person generalist. The most important variable isn't telehealth vs in-person — it's whether the clinician has current menopause training and runs the protocol frequently. The North American Menopause Society practitioner directory is the standard credential to look for.

Informational only — your personal situation determines which model fits.

Sources & credits

Medically reviewed by

Jane Smith, MD, MD, NAMS-certified

Board-certified OB/GYN and NAMS-certified menopause practitioner with 15 years of clinical experience in midlife women's health.

See full credentials →