Some parts of BHRT may be covered, but it depends on your plan and the specific medications. Many insurers cover FDA-approved estradiol patches/gels and micronized progesterone capsules (often with copays or prior authorization). Compounded bioidentical hormones are usually not covered because they’re not FDA-approved. Office visits and medically necessary labs may be covered per your benefits; HSAs/FSAs can often be used for eligible expenses. Always check your plan details before starting.
Key Points
- What’s often covered: FDA-approved estradiol patches/gels and micronized progesterone are frequently on formularies (copay/coinsurance may apply).
- What’s usually not covered: Compounded bioidentical preparations (custom creams, troches, certain combinations) are typically excluded by insurance.
- Visits & labs: Initial consults and medically necessary labs may be covered depending on in-network status, deductibles, and prior authorization rules.
- Out-of-pocket planning: Expect copays/coinsurance, potential prior auth, and cash pay for compounded meds; HSA/FSA can help with eligible costs.
- Pharmacy tips: Ask for generic FDA-approved options when appropriate; compare in-network vs cash-price pharmacies to lower costs.
- We can help you navigate coverage questions and provide pricing transparency for any cash-pay items.
What It Means
Insurance coverage for hormone therapy usually follows a simple rule: FDA-approved medications are more likely to be covered; compounded medications are not. “FDA-approved” means a product has standardized dosing and labeling that insurers recognize on their formularies. Examples include transdermal estradiol patches/gels and oral micronized progesterone. These may require a copay, coinsurance, or prior authorization.
Compounded BHRT (custom-mixed doses or combinations prepared by a compounding pharmacy) can be helpful for specific needs, but insurers typically don’t cover them because they aren’t FDA-approved. In those cases, patients generally pay cash. Your clinic should explain why a compounded option is being recommended and offer FDA-approved alternatives when appropriate.
How Coverage Typically Works
- Medication coverage
- Likely covered: FDA-approved estradiol patches/gels; micronized progesterone (depending on plan/formulary).
- Sometimes covered with caveats: Brand-name versions may require prior authorization or have higher tiers.
- Usually not covered: Compounded creams/troches/pellets (cash pay).
- Visits & follow-ups
- Your initial consultation and follow-up visits may be covered if your clinic is in-network and the visit is billed under eligible codes.
- Some integrative/functional clinics operate out-of-network or bundle services; ask for superbills if you plan to submit claims.
- Laboratory testing
- Many standard blood labs (CBC/CMP, lipids, A1C/fasting glucose, thyroid markers) are commonly covered when medically necessary.
- If your clinician recommends advanced testing (e.g., urine hormone metabolites like DUTCH, certain saliva or genetic panels), these are often cash pay unless your plan explicitly covers them.
- HSA/FSA & receipts
- HSA/FSA funds can usually be used for eligible medical expenses (copays, many prescriptions, covered labs).
- Keep itemized receipts and prescriptions for your records.
Will BHRT Be Covered For Me?
It depends on your specific plan, formulary, and network status. To avoid surprises:
- Call the number on your insurance card and ask if estradiol transdermal patch/gel and micronized progesterone are covered under your plan, and whether prior authorization is required.
- Ask your pharmacy to check benefits for the generic option first.
- If your clinician recommends a compounded medication, request a cash-price quote and ask whether there’s an FDA-approved alternative that could work for you.
We explain coverage scenarios, offer pricing transparency for cash-pay items, and help you compare options (FDA-approved vs compounded) based on your clinical needs, budget, and preferences.
Safety, Side Effects & Monitoring
Coverage aside, safe hormone therapy requires intake review, baseline labs (as indicated), dose selection, and follow-up in 4–12 weeks to adjust therapy. Common, usually temporary effects when starting or changing BHRT include breast tenderness, bloating/water retention, skin irritation (patch/gel), spotting/irregular bleeding, headaches, or mood shifts.
Call the clinic if side effects persist or disrupt life. Seek urgent care for chest pain, shortness of breath, severe headache/vision changes, calf pain/swelling, one-sided weakness/numbness, or heavy vaginal bleeding.
Next Steps
Want help sorting through coverage and medication options for BHRT? Our team can review your plan, discuss FDA-approved and compounded bioidentical choices, and outline costs up front so there are no surprises.
- Ready to talk it through? Book a discovery call
Sources:
- North American Menopause Society (NAMS). The 2022 Hormone Therapy Position Statement.
- Endocrine Society. Compounded Bioidentical Hormone Therapy Scientific Statement.
- ACOG. Compounded Bioidentical Menopausal Hormone Therapy (Clinical Consensus, 2023).NIH/NCBI. Menopausal Hormone Therapy—risks and benefits overview.
- NIH/NCBI. Menopausal Hormone Therapy—risks and benefits overview.




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