Also analyzed in: 4 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
47
/ 100
Present

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
72
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Teladoc Health without web search.

LLM Authority?
14
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
93
/ 100
Category Ruler

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Teladoc Health from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
72/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.67
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.72
Top associations for Teladoc Health
mental health support 6 not for emergencies 4 virtual healthcare 3 telemedicine services 3 convenient virtual care 3 strong brand recognition 3 long wait times 3 billing and insurance confusion 3 heavy competition 2 strong brand recognition 2 broad telehealth service offering 2 broad telehealth product suite 2 inconsistent doctor quality 2 long wait times 2 telemedicine services 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
direct-to-consumer telehealth 3 prescription delivery 2 treatment for common conditions 2 quick virtual care 1 virtual doctor visits 1 no in-person visit needed 1 sexual health care 1 mental health services 1 urgent care visits 1 convenient online doctor access 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Teladoc Health is firmly in the model's "direct-to-consumer telehealth provider" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Teladoc Health known for?

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services, especially online doctor visits, remote care, and access to medical advice through digital platforms.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Teladoc Health known for?

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services—connecting patients with doctors remotely for general medical, mental health, and chronic care support.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
14/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
26

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
1

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits? #1 #2
discovery What are the best telehealth services for cold and flu treatment? #1 not mentioned
discovery Which virtual care providers are best for skin problems? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best online doctor services for UTIs? #4 not mentioned
discovery What telehealth providers are good for birth control prescriptions? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best telehealth options for mental health care? #5 not mentioned
discovery What are the best telehealth services for men’s health? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best telehealth providers for women’s health? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which online care services are best for chronic condition check-ins? #1 #1
discovery What are the best virtual doctor options for minor infections? #1 not mentioned
discovery What telehealth providers are best for kids? #4 #3
discovery What are the best telehealth services for busy professionals? #1 #2
discovery What are the best online medical services for rural areas? #1 not mentioned
discovery Which telehealth apps are best for follow-up care? #1 not mentioned
discovery What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers for refills? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best telehealth providers for acne treatment? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best online doctors for allergies? #4 not mentioned
discovery What are the best virtual care services for sinus infections? #2 not mentioned
discovery What are the best telehealth options for getting care fast? #3 not mentioned
discovery What are the best telehealth providers with 24/7 access? #1 #1
comparison What are the best alternatives to full-service telehealth platforms? #7 not mentioned
comparison How do direct-to-consumer telehealth providers compare on price? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to app-based online doctor services? #1 not mentioned
comparison Which virtual care providers are better for prescriptions than urgent care clinics? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What is better for minor illnesses: telehealth or walk-in clinics? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to traditional primary care for simple visits? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do online telehealth services compare for same-day availability? #1 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to in-person urgent care for a rash? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which consumer telehealth services are better for messaging a doctor than video visits? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to emergency room visits for non-emergencies? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get a prescription online for a common condition? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I see a doctor online without going to a clinic? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I treat a minor illness quickly at home? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get medical advice after hours? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a virtual doctor for a UTI? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I get help for a skin rash online? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I refill a prescription without an in-person visit? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get care when I can’t get a same-day appointment? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I talk to a doctor about birth control online? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get treatment for a sinus infection without visiting urgent care? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does a telehealth visit usually cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there any free telehealth services? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest online doctor service? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do telehealth providers accept insurance? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which telehealth services have low copays? #1 #2
transactional How much does online urgent care cost without insurance? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What telehealth providers have subscription plans? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are virtual doctor visits covered by my health plan? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the price for an online doctor visit? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which telehealth services offer affordable prescriptions? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits? · discovery · recall mode

Some of the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, fast urgent-care access, good for common issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies.
  • MDLive — strong 24/7 urgent care coverage, easy app, often covered by employers/insurers.
  • Amwell — solid on-demand urgent care and good if you want both primary care and specialty options.
  • PlushCare — great if you want higher-touch care and follow-up; often praised for quality doctors.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — reliable same-day urgent care, especially good for straightforward visits.
  • K Health — lower-cost option with AI-assisted intake; useful for quick symptom checks and common urgent issues.

Best overall for most people: Teladoc or MDLive Best for more personalized follow-up: PlushCare Best low-cost option: K Health

A few quick checks before choosing:

  • Is it in-network with your insurance?
  • Are visits available 24/7?
  • Can they prescribe meds if needed?
  • Do they treat your specific issue?

If you want, I can also rank them by cost, speed, or insurance coverage.

Prompt: What are the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits? · discovery · retrieval mode

Here are the strongest urgent-care telehealth options in the U.S. right now:

  • Best overall: MDLIVE — 24/7/365 urgent care, broad condition list, app/web/phone access, and can be as low as $0 with some benefits plans; self-pay is quoted at $0–$89. (mdlive.com)
  • Best for insurance-covered access: Teladoc Health — strong nationwide virtual urgent care, 24/7 access, and many people get it through a health plan or employer; Teladoc lists $89/visit for uninsured urgent care. (teladochealth.com)
  • Best for integrated health-system care: Amwell — widely used by health plans and hospital systems, with 24/7 urgent care and short visits; good if your insurer already partners with Amwell. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Best for straightforward self-pay: UrgentCare.com — advertises $35/visit with no insurance required and on-demand telemedicine. (urgentcare.com)
  • Best brick-and-mortar chain with virtual option: CareNow Virtual Care — set $75 self-pay telehealth urgent care sessions, plus in-network/plan-based pricing if insured. (carenow.com)
  • Best for booking multiple local providers: Solv — lets you compare and book same-day virtual urgent-care visits from local clinics, often with insurance accepted. (solvhealth.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can also give you a “best by insurance plan / state / price” shortlist.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
93/100
Category Ruler
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers? 40 2/5 2, 2
What are the top telehealth companies for online doctor visits? 260 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
Which online telehealth services are most popular right now? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best virtual care platforms for patients? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What telehealth providers do people recommend most? 0 4/5 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best app-based telehealth services? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
Which telehealth provider is best for getting prescriptions online? 0 0/5
What are the best online doctor services for adults? 50 4/5 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the most trusted telehealth options for consumers? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best virtual urgent care providers? 40 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the top-rated telehealth apps? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best telehealth services for primary care? 0 2/5 3, 1
Which direct-to-consumer telehealth providers are worth using? 0 0/5
What are the best online care providers for same-day visits? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 2, 1
What are the best telehealth providers for diagnosing common conditions? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 2, 1
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers? (no web search)

The “best” direct-to-consumer telehealth provider depends on what you need. Top picks:

  • PlushCare — best overall for general primary care, labs, and follow-up care.
  • Teladoc Health — best for broad availability and employer-style telehealth coverage.
  • Amwell — solid all-around option, especially for urgent care and specialist access.
  • Sesame — best for cash-pay, transparent pricing, and fast self-booking.
  • K Health — best for AI-assisted symptom intake and basic primary care/urgent care.
  • Ro — best for men’s health, weight loss, hair loss, and sexual health.
  • Hims/Hers — best for men’s/women’s health, mental health, hair loss, and ED.

Quick rule of thumb:

  • General care: PlushCare or Teladoc
  • Lowest-friction cash pay: Sesame
  • Condition-specific care: Ro or Hims/Hers
  • Fast symptom check + care plan: K Health

If you want, I can also rank them for cost, mental health, urgent care, or prescription convenience.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers? (no web search)

Here are some of the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • PlushCare — best overall for primary care, ongoing prescriptions, and follow-ups
  • Teladoc Health — best for broad availability and general medical visits
  • Amwell — strong all-around telehealth, especially if you want coverage through employers/insurance
  • Sesame — best for upfront cash pricing and self-pay visits
  • K Health — good low-cost option for primary care and AI-assisted symptom triage
  • Ro — best for men’s health, weight loss, hair loss, and sexual health
  • Hers — best for women’s health, weight loss, skincare, and mental health
  • Nurx — best for birth control, STI care, migraines, and acne
  • MDLive — solid for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: PlushCare
  • Best cheapest/self-pay: Sesame
  • Best for specialty care: Ro / Hers / Nurx

If you want, I can also rank them by price, prescription support, mental health, or best for uninsured patients.

Iteration: 2 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Teladoc Health

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Defend retrieval position

You score 26 on recall but only 1 on retrieval (gap of +24.3). Training-data authority is outpacing your current web footprint. Publish fresh, well-cited content to keep search-augmented responses including your brand.

Close the fragility gap

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 2:02 AM

All 210 AI responses for Teladoc Health

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Teladoc Health known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services, especially online doctor visits, remote care, and access to medical advice through digital platforms.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services—connecting patients with doctors remotely for general medical, mental health, and chronic care support.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for virtual healthcare and telemedicine services, including on-demand doctor visits, remote medical consultations, and virtual care for chronic and mental health management.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services, especially connecting patients with doctors remotely for medical advice, diagnoses, and ongoing care.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services, including online doctor visits, telehealth consultations, and remote care management.

What are Teladoc Health's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its large telehealth platform, broad brand recognition, strong employer/health-plan relationships, and wide service mix (general medical, mental health, chronic care, and specialty care). It also benefits from being an early mover in virtual care and from having a national scale that smaller competitors often lack.

Its main weaknesses are persistent profitability pressure, heavy competition, dependence on payer and employer reimbursement, and exposure to shifting telehealth demand after the pandemic boom. It has also faced skepticism from investors because growth has been uneven, and some parts of the business have had integration and execution challenges.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its large scale and brand recognition in virtual care, broad service offering (general telehealth, mental health, chronic care, and specialty care), strong enterprise/employer and health-plan relationships, and a data-rich platform that can support integrated care delivery. Its weaknesses include pressure on profitability, reliance on healthcare utilization and reimbursement dynamics, intense competition, and some investor concern about growth slowing after the pandemic-era telehealth boom. It also faces challenges in proving long-term clinical and cost outcomes at scale and in differentiating itself in a crowded market.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in virtual care, broad service offering (general medical, mental health, chronic care, and specialist support), large provider network, and scale/integration with employers, health plans, and health systems. It also has experience operating globally and a data-rich platform built for telehealth delivery.

Its main weaknesses are ongoing profitability challenges, pressure from slowing post-pandemic telehealth growth, heavy competition, and dependence on reimbursement, employer demand, and healthcare utilization trends. It has also faced execution issues in integrating acquisitions and proving durable growth beyond basic virtual doctor visits.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in virtual care, broad product suite (general medical, mental health, chronic care, and employer/health-plan solutions), large member base, and scale/network effects from serving employers, insurers, and health systems. It also benefits from telehealth being a familiar care channel and from its ability to integrate multiple services under one platform.

Main weaknesses: heavy competition and commoditization in telehealth, dependence on employer and payer contracts, pressure on margins and profitability, and challenges proving long-term utilization and clinical outcomes. It has also faced mixed investor sentiment due to slower growth after the pandemic surge, integration/execution complexity across acquired businesses, and exposure to regulatory and reimbursement changes.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in virtual care, broad telehealth product suite, large enterprise and health-plan relationships, and scale in integrated care across medical, behavioral health, and chronic-condition support. It also benefits from a large user base and experience operating at national scale.

Its main weaknesses include persistent profitability challenges, heavy competition in telehealth, pressure on growth after the pandemic surge, and dependence on employer/insurer contracts. It has also faced integration complexity from acquisitions and, at times, investor concern about execution and slowing demand.

Who should use Teladoc Health? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient, non-emergency medical access by phone or video—like primary care questions, minor illnesses, prescription refills, mental health support, dermatology, or chronic-condition follow-up.

It’s a good fit if you:

  • want care from home or while traveling
  • need quick access outside normal office hours
  • have a simple issue that can be handled virtually
  • already have insurance that covers telehealth

You should avoid relying on it if you:

  • have a medical emergency (chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding)
  • need an in-person exam, imaging, labs, or procedures right away
  • have a serious injury or rapidly worsening symptoms
  • need urgent pediatric or obstetric care that requires hands-on evaluation

If you’re unsure, Teladoc can be a good first step for guidance—but not a substitute for emergency care or in-person treatment when needed.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient, non-emergency care by phone/video: colds/flu, rashes, minor infections, allergies, medication questions, mental health support, and chronic-condition follow-ups.

It’s not a good fit for emergencies or urgent symptoms like chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke signs, severe bleeding, major injury, suicidal thoughts, or anything needing an in-person exam/test.

People who may want to avoid relying on it as their only option include those without reliable internet/phone access, those who need hands-on evaluation, and anyone whose condition is complex or worsening.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally good for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues like colds, allergies, rashes, minor infections, mental health support, medication questions, and chronic-condition follow-up. It can also help people who have trouble getting to a doctor, live far away, or want fast access to a clinician.

People should avoid using Teladoc for emergencies or anything that could be life-threatening, such as chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, major injury, or suicidal thoughts with immediate danger. It’s also not ideal when you need a hands-on physical exam, urgent in-person testing, or procedures. In those cases, go to urgent care, the ER, or see a local doctor in person.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues, such as colds/flu, minor skin problems, allergies, mental health support, chronic-condition follow-ups, or general medical questions. It can also help people who have limited access to in-person care or want faster access to a clinician.

People should avoid using Teladoc Health for emergencies or anything that needs immediate hands-on care, such as chest pain, trouble breathing, signs of stroke, severe injury, or heavy bleeding—call emergency services instead. It’s also not ideal when you likely need a physical exam, lab work, imaging, procedures, or a specialist visit that can’t be done virtually.

If you’re unsure, Teladoc can be a good first step, but urgent or severe symptoms should be treated in person.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues, including colds/flu symptoms, minor skin problems, mental health support, medication questions, and ongoing chronic-care check-ins. It can also be useful for people with limited access to local doctors, busy schedules, or who prefer remote visits.

People should avoid relying on Teladoc Health for emergencies or urgent symptoms like chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, major injury, or anything life-threatening—those need immediate in-person emergency care. It’s also not ideal for problems that require a physical exam, tests, procedures, or hands-on treatment. If someone needs a diagnosis that depends on an in-person exam, they should see a local clinician instead.

How does Teladoc Health compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally the best-known pure-play virtual care company, with the broadest mix of telehealth, chronic care, mental health, and integrated employer/health-plan services. Compared with its main competitors:

  • Amwell: Similar telehealth focus, but Teladoc is usually stronger in scale, brand recognition, and broader care offerings. Amwell has been more focused on software/platform partnerships.
  • MDLive / Doctor On Demand: Strong consumer telehealth brands, but smaller than Teladoc and typically less diversified.
  • CVS Health / MinuteClinic / Aetna virtual care: These have the advantage of retail and insurance integration, but Teladoc is more specialized and often more flexible across payers and employers.
  • Amazon Clinic: Very consumer-friendly and easy to use, but narrower in scope and not as established in chronic care or enterprise healthcare.
  • Included Health / Grand Rounds and similar care-navigation firms: These can be very strong in navigation and member advocacy, but Teladoc has a broader direct-care footprint.

Overall, Teladoc’s strengths are scale, breadth of services, and enterprise relationships. Its weaknesses are intense competition, reimbursement pressure, and slower growth than in its pandemic-era peak.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is one of the best-known virtual care platforms, and it’s strongest in broad, enterprise-focused telehealth rather than single-point consumer apps. Compared with its main competitors:

  • Amwell: Similar in broad telehealth, but Teladoc generally has stronger brand recognition, larger scale, and a more established direct-to-consumer and employer presence. Amwell is often seen as more hospital/health-system oriented.
  • MDLive (now part of Cigna/Evernorth): Strong in on-demand urgent care and behavioral health, but Teladoc usually has a wider suite of services and a larger overall platform.
  • Included Health / Doctor On Demand: Often strong in navigation and integrated care, with good consumer experience, but Teladoc has more scale and deeper enterprise penetration.
  • Hims & Hers / Ro and similar consumer telehealth brands: These tend to be more specialized and consumer marketing-driven, while Teladoc is more comprehensive and B2B/B2B2C focused.
  • Traditional healthcare systems with virtual care offerings: They can compete well on local integration and continuity, but Teladoc usually wins on breadth, speed of deployment, and national reach.

Overall: Teladoc’s advantages are scale, breadth of services, and enterprise relationships. Its weaknesses are execution consistency, pressure on margins, and intense competition from both specialized telehealth players and large health plans/providers.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally the best-known pure-play virtual care platform, and it tends to be strongest in broad scale, brand recognition, and its integrated offering across urgent care, mental health, and chronic-condition management. Compared with Amwell, Teladoc has usually had more consumer reach and a bigger direct-to-employer/health-plan footprint, while Amwell has been more focused on health-system partnerships and enterprise infrastructure. Compared with Included Health, Teladoc is broader in telehealth and chronic care, while Included Health is often viewed as stronger in navigation and advocacy for self-insured employers. Compared with insurer-owned offerings like MDLIVE/Evernorth, Teladoc is more independent and more horizontal, but it lacks the embedded distribution advantage those competitors have through a payer. Overall, Teladoc is a category leader, but it faces pressure on pricing, differentiation, and profitability as virtual care becomes more commoditized.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally the best-known broad virtual care platform, but its position depends on the category.

  • vs. Amwell: Teladoc is usually stronger in scale, brand recognition, and integrated services. Amwell is more focused on health-system partnerships and enterprise telehealth infrastructure.
  • vs. MDLive / other direct-to-consumer telehealth: Teladoc typically has a larger footprint and broader service mix, including virtual mental health, chronic condition support, and second opinions.
  • vs. Included Health / Carenet-style navigation platforms: Teladoc is more of a direct care provider plus platform, while some competitors are stronger in care navigation, advocacy, or employer benefit integration.
  • vs. specialty digital health players (mental health, dermatology, etc.): Teladoc offers a wider umbrella, but niche competitors can be better in depth and user experience within one specialty.

Overall: Teladoc’s strengths are scale, breadth of services, and brand recognition. Its weaknesses are profitability pressure, competition from both large platform rivals and specialized point solutions, and the challenge of differentiating beyond basic virtual visits.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is one of the best-known broad telehealth platforms, and it’s usually compared with Amwell, Doctor On Demand/Included Health, MDLive, and increasingly with direct-to-consumer virtual care offerings from large health systems and insurers.

Compared with Amwell: Teladoc generally has stronger brand recognition, larger scale, and a broader consumer-facing offering. Amwell is often seen as more enterprise/health-system oriented and focused on software/platform partnerships.

Compared with Included Health (Doctor On Demand): Teladoc is more diversified across virtual urgent care, primary care, chronic care, and mental health. Included Health is often viewed as stronger in navigation and employer/benefits integration.

Compared with MDLive: Teladoc is usually considered the more comprehensive and larger platform. MDLive is a solid competitor but tends to be narrower in scale and visibility.

Compared with insurer or health-system virtual care: Teladoc has the advantage of being a standalone national telehealth brand with broad access, but those rivals can win on integration, lower friction for members, and tighter coordination with local care.

Overall: Teladoc’s strengths are scale, brand, breadth of services, and national reach. Its main weaknesses are intense price competition, dependence on enterprise and payer contracts, and pressure to prove better outcomes and profitability than simpler competitors.

What do people typically complain about with Teladoc Health?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health around a few themes: long wait times or trouble getting connected to a doctor, inconsistent visit quality, limited ability to resolve complex issues compared with in-person care, prescription/referral hassles, and billing or insurance confusion. Some also mention app/technical glitches and customer support being hard to reach.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health’s long wait times, difficulty getting timely appointments, inconsistent provider quality, billing or insurance coverage confusion, app/technical glitches, and prescriptions or follow-up care not always being handled smoothly.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health being hard to reach, long wait times, inconsistent doctor quality, billing/insurance confusion, app or technical issues, and limited resolution for more serious or specialized problems. Some also say appointments feel rushed and that follow-up care can be weak.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health’s long wait times, difficulty getting timely appointments, inconsistent doctor quality, billing or insurance coverage issues, and customer support problems. Some also mention that telehealth visits can feel impersonal or limited for more complex medical concerns.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health for long wait times, appointment availability, billing/insurance confusion, inconsistent doctor quality, technical/app issues, and difficulty getting prescriptions or follow-up care. Some also say visits feel too limited for anything beyond minor issues.

What is a typical direct-to-consumer telehealth provider known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical direct-to-consumer telehealth provider is known for offering convenient online doctor visits, virtual urgent care, prescription services, and treatment for common conditions through an app or website.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A direct-to-consumer telehealth provider is typically known for offering convenient virtual doctor visits, online consultations, prescription services, and treatment for common conditions without needing an in-person clinic visit.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical direct-to-consumer telehealth provider is known for offering convenient online access to doctors and prescriptions, often for common issues like urgent care, mental health, and sexual health, without needing an in-person visit.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical direct-to-consumer telehealth provider is known for offering virtual doctor visits, online diagnoses, e-prescriptions, and quick access to care for common conditions without requiring an in-person appointment.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A direct-to-consumer telehealth provider is typically known for offering online doctor visits, prescriptions, and treatment for common conditions through an app or website—often quickly and without an in-person clinic visit.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some of the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, fast urgent-care access, good for common issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies.
  • MDLive — strong 24/7 urgent care coverage, easy app, often covered by employers/insurers.
  • Amwell — solid on-demand urgent care and good if you want both primary care and specialty options.
  • PlushCare — great if you want higher-touch care and follow-up; often praised for quality doctors.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — reliable same-day urgent care, especially good for straightforward visits.
  • K Health — lower-cost option with AI-assisted intake; useful for quick symptom checks and common urgent issues.

Best overall for most people: Teladoc or MDLive Best for more personalized follow-up: PlushCare Best low-cost option: K Health

A few quick checks before choosing:

  • Is it in-network with your insurance?
  • Are visits available 24/7?
  • Can they prescribe meds if needed?
  • Do they treat your specific issue?

If you want, I can also rank them by cost, speed, or insurance coverage.

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Here are the strongest urgent-care telehealth options in the U.S. right now:

  • Best overall: MDLIVE — 24/7/365 urgent care, broad condition list, app/web/phone access, and can be as low as $0 with some benefits plans; self-pay is quoted at $0–$89. (mdlive.com)
  • Best for insurance-covered access: Teladoc Health — strong nationwide virtual urgent care, 24/7 access, and many people get it through a health plan or employer; Teladoc lists $89/visit for uninsured urgent care. (teladochealth.com)
  • Best for integrated health-system care: Amwell — widely used by health plans and hospital systems, with 24/7 urgent care and short visits; good if your insurer already partners with Amwell. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Best for straightforward self-pay: UrgentCare.com — advertises $35/visit with no insurance required and on-demand telemedicine. (urgentcare.com)
  • Best brick-and-mortar chain with virtual option: CareNow Virtual Care — set $75 self-pay telehealth urgent care sessions, plus in-network/plan-based pricing if insured. (carenow.com)
  • Best for booking multiple local providers: Solv — lets you compare and book same-day virtual urgent-care visits from local clinics, often with insurance accepted. (solvhealth.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can also give you a “best by insurance plan / state / price” shortlist.

What are the best telehealth services for cold and flu treatment? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
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Some of the best telehealth options for cold and flu care are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, fast urgent-care visits, good for flu symptoms and prescriptions if needed.
  • Amwell — solid doctor/video visits, often covered by insurance.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — strong for same-day virtual urgent care.
  • MDLIVE — good for 24/7 visits and prescription support.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient if you want a simple, low-friction visit and already use Amazon.
  • K Health — affordable, app-based, good for symptom checking and quick treatment plans.

If you want the easiest “sick today” option, I’d shortlist Doctor on Demand, Teladoc, and MDLIVE.

For OTC symptom relief, common products people use include:

  • Tylenol (acetaminophen) for fever/aches
  • Advil (ibuprofen) for fever/aches
  • Mucinex (guaifenesin) for chest congestion
  • DayQuil/NyQuil for multi-symptom relief
  • Zyrtec or Claritin if allergies are part of the issue

Seek in-person care urgently if you have trouble breathing, chest pain, confusion, blue lips, dehydration, or a high fever that won’t come down.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or fastest appointment.

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Here are the best telehealth options for cold/flu care right now:

  1. Sesame — best for cash-pay / no insurance. It shows upfront prices, has 24/7 availability, and says cold/flu visits can start at $34. (sesamecare.com)
  2. Teladoc — best if you want a big national provider and may already have access through work or insurance. Teladoc says it treats flu and other non-emergency conditions by phone or video, 24/7. (teladoc.com)
  3. Amwell — best for traditional urgent-care style video visits. Amwell says it treats flu online, can provide a treatment plan, and may prescribe antivirals when appropriate; its urgent care visits are listed at $69. (patients.amwell.com)
  4. MDLIVE — best for insurance-linked urgent care. MDLIVE says it offers 24/7/365 care for cold, flu, and COVID-19, with urgent care costing $0–$89 depending on benefits. (mdlive.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best cheapest self-pay: Sesame
  • Best if your employer/plan includes it: MDLIVE or Teladoc (sesamecare.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, insurance, or fastest same-day availability.

Which virtual care providers are best for skin problems? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best virtual care options for skin problems:

  • Curology — best for acne, dark spots, and prescription skincare; custom treatment formula.
  • Nurx — good for acne, rosacea, anti-aging, and melasma; quick online visits.
  • SkyMD — strong choice for board-certified dermatologist visits for a wide range of rashes, acne, eczema, and hair/scalp issues.
  • First Derm — best for fast photo-based triage if you want a quick opinion on a rash, spot, or mole.
  • Teladoc / Amwell — good for broader urgent care-style skin issues if you already use one of these platforms.

If you want the best overall for acne, I’d pick Curology. If you want the most dermatologist-like experience, try SkyMD.

Important: if it’s a changing mole, spreading infection, severe swelling, trouble breathing, or a painful blistering rash, get in-person care urgently.

If you want, I can also rank them for acne vs eczema vs rash vs mole checks.

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Best picks depend on the skin issue:

  • MDLIVE — best for broad, fast tele-dermatology if you want insurance-friendly care and async photo-based visits. It treats acne, eczema, rashes, fungal infections, suspicious spots/moles, and more; diagnosis/treatment is usually within 24–72 hours. (mdlive.com)
  • Sesame — best for cash-pay, same-day video dermatologist visits. It’s good for acne, eczema, rashes, rosacea, warts, and can include messaging before/after the visit. (sesamecare.com)
  • Apostrophe (YoDerm) — best for acne, rosacea, and anti-aging treatment plans with board-certified dermatologists and custom prescription meds. It’s subscription-like and does not take insurance. (apostrophe.com)
  • Curology — best if your main problem is acne and you want a personalized Rx skincare plan delivered to your door. (curology.com)
  • Teladoc — solid general virtual-care option if you already get it through work/benefits; it covers dermatology issues like eczema, acne, and skin rash. (teladoc.com)

If you want one simple recommendation: MDLIVE for most skin problems, Sesame for self-pay speed, and Apostrophe/Curology for acne-focused care. (mdlive.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best one for acne, eczema, rash, or suspicious moles.

What are the best online doctor services for UTIs? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some of the best online doctor services for UTIs are:

  1. Amazon Clinic – Fast, simple UTI visits in many states; often a good first stop for same-day treatment.
  2. PlushCare – Strong option if you want a board-certified doctor and follow-up care.
  3. GoodRx Care – Usually affordable; good for quick UTI treatment without a subscription.
  4. Teladoc Health – Widely available through employers/insurance; reliable for basic UTI evaluation.
  5. Nurx – Convenient women’s health-focused service; good for recurrent UTI-type care and prescriptions.
  6. K Health – AI-guided intake plus clinician review; fast and usually straightforward for common UTIs.

Best picks by need:

  • Fastest/most convenient: Amazon Clinic
  • Best overall care: PlushCare
  • Best budget option: GoodRx Care
  • Best for women’s health: Nurx

Important: Online care is fine for typical UTI symptoms, but get urgent in-person care if you have fever, back/flank pain, vomiting, blood in urine, pregnancy, or symptoms that keep getting worse.

If you want, I can also give you the best option for your state, insurance, or budget.

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Here are solid online options for UTI care in the U.S.:

  • Best overall: Doctor On Demand — 24/7 virtual urgent care, UTI treatment, and prescription antibiotics when appropriate; visits can be $0–$99 depending on coverage. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Best for transparent pricing: Sesame — online UTI visits in all 50 states, with upfront pricing and 24/7 availability. (sesamecare.com)
  • Best for fast text-based care: K Health — 24/7 chat-based urgent care, including UTI treatment; their UTI page says adult women in the continental U.S. can get diagnosis/treatment online. (khealth.com)
  • Best if you want a home test + telehealth: AZOVA via Walmart — at-home UTI test kit plus telemedicine; Walmart lists visits available in all 50 states, 7 days a week. (walmart.com)
  • Best for primary-care-style follow-up: PlushCare — board-certified doctors, online UTI treatment, and it accepts patients with or without insurance. (plushcare.com)

Go in person instead if you have fever, back/flank pain, vomiting, are pregnant, or symptoms suggest a kidney infection. (plushcare.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest, fastest, or best with insurance.

What telehealth providers are good for birth control prescriptions? discovery 170/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Good telehealth options for birth control prescriptions:

  • Nurx — very popular for pill, patch, ring, and emergency contraception; also STI testing.
  • Pandia Health — strong choice if you want birth control pills delivered automatically; women-led, often praised for refill management.
  • Lemonaid Health — straightforward for birth control pills and quick visits.
  • SimpleHealth — easy online consults, especially for pill refills and delivery.
  • Planned Parenthood Direct — good if you want a trusted reproductive health brand and may already use Planned Parenthood.
  • The Pill Club (now part of Nurx in many places) — if you see it referenced, it’s generally under the Nurx umbrella now.

If you want the easiest all-around pick: Nurx or Pandia Health.

If you tell me your state and whether you want pills, patch, ring, or something else, I can narrow it down.

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Good options in the U.S. include:

  • Planned Parenthood Direct — good if you want a trusted reproductive-health brand; it offers birth control pills, patch, and ring, with mail delivery for pills and pharmacy pickup options in select states. (plannedparenthooddirect.org)
  • Nurx — good for lots of options; it offers 50+ birth control options and online prescribing, with home delivery. (nurx.com)
  • Pandia Health — good if you want a doctor-led service focused on birth control delivery; it prescribes pills, patch, and ring, and says it accepts many insurance plans. (pandiahealth.com)
  • Wisp — good if you want fast online access; it has birth control and notes licensed providers can follow up same day in some cases. (hellowisp.com)
  • GoodRx Care — good if you want a telehealth visit tied to a familiar savings brand; it offers birth control prescriptions online, including pills, patches, or shots. (goodrx.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down by lowest cost, insurance, or most discreet delivery.

What are the best telehealth options for mental health care? discovery 2,400/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top telehealth options for mental health care:

  • BetterHelp — Best for easy access to talk therapy. Large therapist network, flexible messaging + video sessions.
  • Talkspace — Best for therapy plus psychiatry. Good if you may want medication management.
  • Cerebral — Good for therapy and medication, but availability varies by state and service plans.
  • Amwell — Strong general telehealth platform with licensed therapists and psychiatrists.
  • Teladoc Health — Widely available, good for therapy and psychiatric visits through many employers/health plans.
  • Brightside Health — Strong for anxiety/depression treatment, includes therapy + psychiatry + structured care plans.
  • Grow Therapy — Best if you want to use insurance and choose from many local-licensed therapists.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for therapy: BetterHelp
  • Best for psychiatry + therapy: Talkspace or Brightside Health
  • Best if you want insurance: Grow Therapy
  • Best through employer/health plan: Teladoc or Amwell

What to check before choosing:

  • Whether they take your insurance
  • If you need therapy, psychiatry, or both
  • Your state’s availability
  • Session format: video, phone, or messaging
  • Cost per visit and cancellation rules

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, insurance, or your specific needs (anxiety, ADHD, depression, etc.).

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If you want the best telehealth mental health options in the U.S., I’d narrow it by need:

  • Best overall for insurance + therapy + psychiatry: Rula — in-network with many major plans, therapy and psychiatry, clear upfront estimates, no monthly subscription. (rula.com)
  • Best for medication-focused psychiatry: Talkiatry — 100% online, in-network with major insurers, psychiatrist-only care. (talkiatry.com)
  • Best for broad therapy + psychiatry with strong insurance support: Grow Therapy — pay-per-session, insurance-friendly, therapy/psychiatry/med management. (growtherapy.com)
  • Best if you want a big, established telehealth brand: Talkspace — therapy + psychiatry, messaging/video options, many insurance plans, Medicare for online therapy in some cases. (talkspace.com)
  • Best classic telehealth alternative: Amwell or MD Live — both offer therapy and psychiatry, accept many major plans, and publish per-visit pricing. (go.amwell.com)

A few quick notes:

  • BetterHelp is best if you want therapy only and a subscription model, but it does not offer psychiatry/prescriptions. (betterhelp.com)
  • SonderMind is another solid option for therapy + psychiatry, with online or in-person care and availability across all 50 states. (sondermind.com)
  • If you may need medication, check whether the platform handles controlled substances—some telehealth services restrict them. (go.amwell.com)

If you tell me: 1) your insurance, 2) therapy vs psychiatry, and 3) adult/teen/couple care,

I can give you the single best pick.

What are the best telehealth services for men’s health? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Here are some of the best-known telehealth services for men’s health:

  • Hims — best all-around for ED, hair loss, anxiety, and basic primary care
  • Roman — especially strong for ED, hair loss, and testosterone-related care
  • Ro — good for ED, weight loss, hair loss, and men’s sexual health
  • Keeps — best if your main focus is hair loss
  • Lemonaid Health — solid for general men’s health issues and straightforward prescription visits
  • BlueChew — specifically for chewable ED meds
  • MangoRx — another strong option for ED and sexual health
  • PlushCare — better if you want broader primary care, not just men’s-specific treatments

Quick picks:

  • ED: Roman or Hims
  • Hair loss: Keeps or Hims
  • Testosterone/TRT: Roman or Ro
  • General care: PlushCare or Lemonaid

If you tell me what you need help with—ED, hair loss, TRT, weight loss, or general checkups—I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

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If you want the best telehealth services for men’s health in the U.S., I’d shortlist these:

  • Ro — best all-around for ED, hair loss, premature ejaculation, and weight-loss support. (ro.co)
  • Hims — strong for ED + hair loss with a broad men’s-health product lineup. (hims.com)
  • Lemonaid Health — good for straightforward, lower-friction hair-loss care and related men’s issues. (get.lemonaidhealth.com)
  • Hone — best if you’re specifically looking into testosterone/low-T evaluation and TRT, with lab-based care. (honehealth.com)

Quick picks:

Safety note: Stick to services that use licensed clinicians and FDA-approved meds; the FDA warns that many “male enhancement” supplements can contain hidden drug ingredients. (fda.gov)

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or best for ED vs hair loss vs TRT.

What are the best telehealth providers for women’s health? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Here are some of the best telehealth providers for women’s health, depending on what you need:

  • Maven Clinic — best overall for women’s health, especially fertility, pregnancy, postpartum, and menopause. Strong specialist network.
  • Tia — best for ongoing primary care + gynecology in one place; good for preventative care and hormone-related issues.
  • Nurx — best for birth control, STI testing/treatment, and HPV/HSV care; very convenient and widely used.
  • Evernow — best for perimenopause/menopause care and hormone therapy support.
  • Wisp — best for sexual health, including UTIs, BV, yeast infections, and birth control.
  • Hers — best for women’s wellness, including hair loss, weight management, sexual health, and mental health.
  • Planned Parenthood Direct — good low-cost option for birth control, emergency contraception, and STI care in many states.

If you want, I can also rank these by:

  1. lowest cost
  2. best for birth control
  3. best for menopause
  4. best for fertility/pregnancy
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Here are strong telehealth options for women’s health in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • Maven Clinic — best for pregnancy, postpartum, fertility, and menopause support. It offers virtual visits with OB-GYNs, midwives, fertility specialists, lactation consultants, and more. (mavenclinic.com)
  • Planned Parenthood Telehealth / Planned Parenthood Direct — best for birth control, STI care, emergency contraception, and abortion-related care where legal. They offer video/phone or messaging, with some services by mail or pickup. (plannedparenthood.org)
  • Evernow — best for menopause and perimenopause. It’s built around virtual menopause care, with pay-per-visit or membership options. (evernow.com)
  • Wisp — best for sexual and reproductive health like birth control, UTIs, BV/yeast infections, STI care, and menopause consults. It says its providers are board-certified and available in all 50 states. (hellowisp.com)
  • Hers — best for women’s mental health, sexual health, and some primary-care style care. It has licensed providers in all 50 states and DC, plus online therapy/mental health services. (forhers.com)

My quick picks:

  • Fertility/pregnancy/postpartum: Maven
  • Birth control/STIs/UTIs: Planned Parenthood or Wisp
  • Menopause: Evernow
  • Mental health + broader women’s telehealth: Hers

If you want, I can also narrow this to the best options for your specific issue (birth control, menopause, UTI, fertility, etc.).

Which online care services are best for chronic condition check-ins? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For chronic condition check-ins (refills, symptom review, ongoing monitoring, basic advice), the best online care services are:

  1. Teladoc Health – best overall for broad chronic care support
    • Good for conditions like diabetes, hypertension, asthma, anxiety/depression
    • Strong app, easy follow-ups, often covered by employers/insurers
  2. PlushCare – best for primary-care-style ongoing management
    • Good if you want one clinician for recurring check-ins and prescriptions
    • Works well for blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes med refills, etc.
  3. Amwell – best if you want insurance-backed telehealth
    • Solid for routine follow-ups and care coordination
    • Often available through health plans
  4. Included Health – best for care navigation + specialist routing
    • Helpful if your chronic condition needs the right specialist, not just urgent visits
    • Good for complex cases
  5. One Medical – best for hybrid primary care
    • Great if you want online check-ins plus in-person options
    • Strong for ongoing primary care, labs, and medication management

If you want the simplest pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best PCP-style care: PlushCare
  • Best for complex care navigation: Included Health
  • Best hybrid option: One Medical

If you tell me your condition, insurance, and whether you want med refills vs specialist follow-up, I can narrow it down.

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For chronic condition check-ins, the strongest options are usually:

  • Teladoc Health Chronic Care Complete — best if you want a dedicated chronic-condition program for multiple conditions. (ir.teladoc.com)
  • Omada Health — best for diabetes, prediabetes, hypertension, and MSK-style ongoing coaching/monitoring. (omadahealth.com)
  • Amazon One Medical — best for primary-care-style follow-ups with 24/7 virtual care, messaging, and chronic condition care. (health.amazon.com)
  • Included Health — best if you want a virtual primary care team that explicitly supports longitudinal chronic care like diabetes and hypertension. (includedhealth.com)
  • PlushCare — a solid general teleprimary-care option if you want ongoing doctor visits for chronic disease management. (plushcare.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to your condition, insurance, or budget.

What are the best virtual doctor options for minor infections? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For minor infections (like a mild UTI, sinus infection, pink eye, yeast infection, or a skin infection), the best virtual doctor options are usually:

Best overall
  • Teladoc Health — broad urgent care coverage, easy same-day visits.
  • Amwell — good for quick video visits with U.S. board-certified clinicians.
  • MDLIVE — strong for urgent care and follow-up prescriptions.
Best through insurance / employer
  • Included Health (formerly Doctor On Demand / Grand Rounds) — great if your plan offers it.
  • UnitedHealthcare Virtual Visits, Aetna CVS Health Virtual Care, Cigna Telehealth — often cheapest if already in-network.
Best for common infections with fast treatment
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient for things like UTIs, sinusitis, and pink eye.
  • K Health — app-based, fast symptom check plus clinician visit.
  • Amazon Clinic — useful for straightforward issues in supported states.
If you want the easiest pharmacy pickup
  • Walmart Health Virtual Care or CVS MinuteClinic — often simple if you want the prescription sent to a nearby pharmacy.
Avoid virtual care and get urgent in-person help if you have:
  • High fever
  • Trouble breathing
  • Severe pain
  • Facial swelling
  • Spreading redness
  • Confusion
  • Symptoms in a baby, pregnant person, or immunocompromised person

If you want, I can also give you the best option by infection type (UTI, sinus, eye infection, skin infection, etc.).

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For minor infections, the best virtual options are usually:

  1. Your primary care doctor’s telehealth portal — best if you already have a PCP, because they know your history and can decide if you need treatment or in-person care. (bcbsm.mibluedaily.com)
  2. MDLIVE — good for quick urgent-care-style visits; it treats common issues like sinus infections, pink eye, and UTIs. (mdlive.com)
  3. Teladoc — broad general telehealth option; it says it can diagnose and treat many non-emergency conditions such as respiratory infections and sinus conditions. (teladoc.com)
  4. Doctor On Demand — solid for same-day video visits; it lists upper respiratory infections, yeast infections, UTIs, and rashes among treatable conditions. (doctorondemand.com)
  5. Sesame — good if you want to pay cash and book fast; it offers telehealth for sinus infection, ear infection, and UTI visits. (sesamecare.com)
  6. PlushCare — another strong general option; it offers online doctor visits and accepts patients with or without insurance. (plushcare.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: MDLIVE or Teladoc
  • Best if you want cash-pay simplicity: Sesame
  • Best if you already have a doctor: your PCP’s telehealth

Go in person / urgent care now if you have trouble breathing, chest pain, or other severe/concerning symptoms. (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this down by infection type (UTI, sinus, ear, skin, throat) and whether you have insurance.

What telehealth providers are best for kids? discovery 70/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For kids, the best telehealth options are usually:

  • PM Pediatric Care — best for pediatric urgent care (fever, ear pain, rashes, minor illnesses)
  • Children’s Mercy Virtual Care — strong for pediatrics and family-friendly care
  • Amwell — good all-around, with pediatric visits in many plans
  • Teladoc Health — widely available; solid for basic pediatric urgent care
  • MDLIVE — convenient for quick sick visits and common childhood issues

Best picks by need:

  • Most kid-focused: PM Pediatric Care
  • Best if you want a big national brand: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best for behavioral/mental health for kids: Brightline (very strong for children and teens)

Before booking, check:

  1. Age limits (some start at 2+, others all ages)
  2. Insurance coverage
  3. Whether they can prescribe/handle your child’s issue

If you want, I can narrow this down by your state, your child’s age, or insurance.

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It depends on what your kid needs:

  • Best overall for pediatric specialty care: Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) or Children’s National Hospital if you want hospital-based pediatric experts and follow-up care. CHOP offers video visits through MyCHOP, and Children’s National has telehealth for pediatric specialists. (chop.edu)
  • Best for quick urgent-care-style visits: Teladoc Health and Amwell both offer pediatric virtual visits; Teladoc says its pediatric team is available 24/7, and Amwell offers online pediatrics with licensed pediatricians. (teladochealth.com)
  • Best for behavioral health / therapy: Brightline is one of the strongest kid-focused options for mental health, and Children’s Health also offers virtual behavioral health visits for kids and teens. (brightline.com)
  • Best if your child is already established with a pediatrician: your own pediatric practice’s telehealth is often best, because they already know your child’s history. Many pediatric practices offer this for follow-ups and non-urgent issues. (americanpediatrics.com)

My short pick list:

  1. CHOP / a children’s hospital system — for serious or complex care.
  2. Teladoc — for convenience and 24/7 access.
  3. Brightline — for anxiety, behavior, and family mental health.
  4. Your child’s own pediatrician’s portal — if available. (chop.edu)

AAP supports telehealth for appropriate visits, but it’s not a substitute for in-person care when a hands-on exam is needed. (healthychildren.org)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best options for your state, insurance, and your child’s age.

What are the best telehealth services for busy professionals? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
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For busy professionals, the best telehealth services are usually the ones with fast same-day access, app-based scheduling, prescription support, and broad insurance acceptance.

Best overall

Teladoc Health

  • Strong for general urgent care, primary care, and chronic care
  • Easy app, fast visits, widely recognized
  • Good if you want one platform for multiple needs
Best for employer-based care

Included Health

  • Great if your company offers it
  • Strong care navigation, referrals, and virtual primary care
  • Good for people who don’t want to manage a bunch of appointments
Best for mental health

Talkspace

  • Messaging plus live sessions
  • Best for flexible scheduling around work
  • Good if you want ongoing therapy without commute
Best for fast urgent care

Amwell

  • Good same-day virtual visits
  • Often covered by insurance
  • Solid for common issues like infections, rashes, allergies, and travel needs
Best for women’s health

Maven Clinic

  • Strong for fertility, pregnancy, postpartum, and family care
  • Very good employer benefit if available
Best for dermatology

Curology or Apostrophe

  • Easy photo-based skincare treatment plans
  • Good for acne, rosacea, and prescription skincare
Best for basic, low-cost visits

Doctor On Demand

  • Simple to use
  • Good for quick primary care and urgent care visits
What to look for
  • Same-day appointments
  • Mobile app
  • Prescription sending
  • Insurance coverage
  • Evening/weekend availability
  • Specialists included

If you want, I can also rank these by best for insurance, best without insurance, or best for executives who travel a lot.

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For busy professionals, the best telehealth services are usually the ones that combine fast access, messaging, prescription renewals, and optional primary care/mental health in one app. My top picks:

  • One Medical — best overall for convenience + continuity. It offers 24/7 on-demand virtual care, messaging, prescription renewals, and same/next-day in-person or remote visits in many U.S. cities. (onemedical.com)
  • Teladoc Health — best for all-in-one virtual care. Its Primary360 combines primary care, 24/7 general medical care, mental health, and dermatology in one platform. (teladochealth.com)
  • Amwell — best if you want broad urgent-care access and strong behavioral health options. Amwell offers 24/7 online urgent care and also supports behavioral health services like therapy and psychiatry. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Sesame — best for paying out of pocket and wanting quick, straightforward visits. Sesame offers online doctor visits starting at $37 and same-day telehealth options. (sesamecare.com)
  • Talkspace — best for therapy/psychiatry on a packed schedule. It offers live sessions plus messaging, and psychiatry can include medication management when appropriate. (talkspace.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this down by insurance, budget, or whether you need primary care vs mental health.

What are the best online medical services for rural areas? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For rural areas, the best online medical services are usually the ones that offer:

  • 24/7 video visits
  • Primary care + urgent care
  • Prescription support
  • Good broadband/phone flexibility
  • Coverage with Medicare/major insurers

Top options:

  1. Teladoc Health

Good all-around choice for urgent care, primary care, mental health, dermatology, and chronic care. Widely available in the U.S.

  1. Amwell

Strong for doctor-on-demand video visits and often used by employers and health plans. Good if you want a more traditional telemedicine setup.

  1. MDLive

Good for urgent care, therapy, psychiatry, and dermatology. Often easy to use and commonly covered by insurance.

  1. Doctor on Demand by Included Health

Excellent for primary care and mental health. Good option if you want ongoing care, not just one-off visits.

  1. Amazon Clinic

Convenient for common conditions like UTIs, allergies, acne, and more. Best for simple issues, not ongoing chronic care.

  1. K Health

Useful if you want lower-cost primary care-style chats and symptom-based care. Good for people without easy access to local clinics.

For rural areas, also check these:

  • Local hospital telehealth programs
  • Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) with telemedicine
  • State rural telehealth networks
  • VA Video Connect if you’re a veteran

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best low-cost options
  • the best for Medicare
  • the best for mental health
  • the best for chronic conditions
retrieval Not mentioned

For rural areas, the best online medical services are usually the ones that offer 24/7 urgent care, virtual primary care, and mental health, plus easy access if you don’t have local specialists. HHS says telehealth can improve access in rural communities, and HRSA’s Telehealth Resource Centers can help you find local telehealth support. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

Top picks:

  • Teladoc — strong all-around option for 24/7 medical care, plus mental health and broad U.S. coverage. (teladoc.com)
  • Amwell — good for urgent care, virtual primary care, therapy, psychiatry, and other specialties. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Doctor On Demand — best if you want virtual primary care and mental health in one app; urgent care is available 24/7/365. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Sesame — best cash-pay / no-insurance choice; it offers transparent pricing for virtual urgent care, primary care, therapy, and other specialties. (sesamecare.com)
  • K Health — worth considering if you want a budget-friendly virtual primary care membership and urgent care from home. (khealth.com)

Quick recommendation:

If you want, I can also narrow this down by insurance, lowest cost, mental health, or chronic-condition care.

Which telehealth apps are best for follow-up care? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For follow-up care, the best telehealth apps are usually the ones that make it easy to see the same clinician again, message between visits, and share records/photos.

Top picks:

  • Teladoc Health — strong for broad follow-up care, chronic condition check-ins, and easy repeat visits.
  • Amwell — good general telehealth platform; solid for quick follow-ups and specialist access.
  • MDLive — convenient for routine follow-ups and prescription-related visits.
  • Zocdoc — best if you want to book follow-up appointments with the same doctor across many practices.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — good for ongoing primary care-style follow-up.
  • K Health — useful for text-based follow-up and quick care guidance, especially for common issues.

If you need mental health follow-up:

  • BetterHelp
  • Talkspace
  • Brightside (more medication-management focused)

Best overall:

  • Teladoc Health for all-around follow-up care
  • Zocdoc if continuity with the same provider matters most

If you want, I can also narrow this down by:

  1. primary care
  2. mental health
  3. specialist follow-up
  4. insurance-covered options
retrieval Not mentioned

For follow-up care, the best picks are usually:

  • Included Health — best if you want care coordination plus virtual primary/urgent care. It has follow-up support, lab/pharmacy coordination, and one app for benefits + care. (includedhealth.com)
  • Teladoc — strong for ongoing primary care and care plans with reminders/nudges for follow-ups and action items. (ir.teladoc.com)
  • Amwell — a good fit for specialty follow-up and post-visit care, including provider follow-up workflows and EHR-connected care. (business.amwell.com)
  • MDLIVE — solid if you want scheduled follow-up appointments and broad availability; it also offers primary care and mental health. (mdlive.com)
  • Sesame — best for cash-pay follow-ups and simple messaging/visit summaries after appointments. (sesamecare.com)

Quick takeaway:

  • Best overall for follow-up care: Included Health
  • Best for chronic/ongoing care plans: Teladoc
  • Best for specialist follow-up: Amwell
  • Best budget/self-pay option: Sesame

If you want, I can narrow this to insurance-covered, cheap self-pay, or mental-health follow-up.

What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers for refills? discovery 210/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers for refills depend on the type of medication:

  • Amazon One Medical — best overall for general primary-care refills and ongoing care
  • Teladoc — best if you want broad insurer coverage and routine virtual visits
  • PlushCare — best for primary-care-style refills and continuity with one clinician
  • K Health — best for fast, app-based visits and common maintenance meds
  • Nurx — best for birth control, acne, cold sores, and some women’s health meds
  • Ro — best for men’s health, hair loss, ED, and weight-loss meds
  • Hims / Hers — best for simple recurring refills in men’s/women’s health and wellness

If you want the most reliable refill experience, I’d rank them like this:

  1. Amazon One Medical
  2. PlushCare
  3. Teladoc
  4. K Health

A few quick notes:

  • They’re best for non-controlled, routine medications.
  • Some meds still require labs, blood pressure checks, or an in-person visit.
  • For controlled substances or complex conditions, telehealth refill options are much more limited.

If you tell me the medication type (e.g. blood pressure, antidepressant, birth control, ADHD, thyroid), I can point you to the best specific provider.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth options for refills, depending on what you need:

  • Best overall for ongoing refills: One Medical — strong if you want continuity, since it offers 24/7 virtual care, messaging, and prescription renewals in the app, plus in-person care if needed. (onemedical.com)
  • Best low-cost one-off refill: GoodRx Care — it explicitly offers short-term refills (up to 90 days), with no insurance required, and is meant for situations where you can’t get in with your usual doctor. (goodrx.com)
  • Best for broad availability / chronic-care feel: K Health — it offers prescription refills online, with 24/7 chat access for virtual check-ins and refill support. (khealth.com)
  • Best for fast access: DrHouse — it advertises 24/7 visits, often a doctor in about 15 minutes, and refills after a virtual evaluation. (drhouse.com)
  • Best for condition-specific refills: Lemonaid Health — good for things like birth control, hair loss, and some chronic meds; it also ships meds and supports local-pharmacy e-prescriptions. (support.lemonaidhealth.com)

Important caveat: most of these services won’t refill controlled substances via telehealth, and refills always depend on the clinician’s evaluation and state rules. (goodrx.com)

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the cheapest refill option,
  2. the best for same-day refills, or
  3. a provider-by-provider comparison for your specific medication.
What are the best telehealth providers for acne treatment? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best telehealth acne treatment providers:

  1. Curology — Best overall for custom prescription acne formulas
    • Good for: hormonal acne, stubborn acne, fine-tuning topicals
    • Offers: custom cream with ingredients like tretinoin, clindamycin, azelaic acid
  2. Nurx — Best for prescription acne meds + birth control
    • Good for: acne tied to hormones, people who want an all-in-one option
    • Offers: spironolactone, tretinoin, doxycycline, and birth control options
  3. Apostrophe (if available in your area) — Best for dermatology-style acne care
    • Good for: prescription-strength treatment plans
    • Offers: tretinoin, clindamycin, spironolactone, oral antibiotics
  4. Hers — Best for women seeking simple acne care
    • Good for: hormonal acne
    • Offers: spironolactone, topical prescriptions, and sometimes birth control
  5. Hims — Best for men with mild to moderate acne
    • Good for: straightforward treatment plans
    • Offers: topical acne prescriptions and oral meds in some cases
  6. Amazon One Medical / tele-derm services — Best if you want fast access and broader care
    • Good for: quick visits, easier follow-up
    • Can help prescribe common acne treatments like tretinoin or doxycycline

Best pick for most people: Curology Best pick for hormonal acne: Nurx or Hers

If you want, I can also rank them by price, best for severe acne, or best for teens.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best telehealth providers for acne in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • Honeydew — best for more serious acne, including spironolactone and isotretinoin (Accutane) when medically appropriate. It offers dermatologist-led care, no insurance required, free first consult, and memberships from $25/month billed yearly. (honeydewcare.com)
  • Curology — best for personalized prescription skincare and ongoing support. Curology says treatment is prescribed by a licensed dermatology provider and customized to your skin goals. (curology.com)
  • Nurx — best for clear pricing and mild-to-moderate acne. Nurx offers a one-year care plan, charges a $40 consult, and says meds start at $25/month topical or $15–30/month oral without insurance; it does not prescribe isotretinoin. (nurx.com)
  • MDLIVE Dermatology — best if you want insurance coverage / broad access. MDLIVE says it treats acne, has board-certified dermatologists, gives a diagnosis/treatment plan in usually within 24 hours, and costs $0–95 depending on plan. (mdlive.com)
  • PlushCare — best for fast prescription visits. PlushCare says acne treatment can start in as little as 15 minutes with board-certified primary care doctors. (plushcare.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Honeydew
  • Best budget: Nurx
  • Best insurance option: MDLIVE
  • Best personalized topical formula: Curology (honeydew.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best one for hormonal acne, severe acne, or the cheapest option.

What are the best online doctors for allergies? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want online help for allergies, these are strong options in the U.S.:

  1. Zocdoc — best for finding a board-certified allergist with telehealth appointments
  2. PlushCare — best for prescriptions and ongoing allergy treatment
  3. Amwell — good for general allergy symptoms and quick video visits
  4. Teladoc Health — convenient for same-day virtual doctor visits
  5. Cleveland Clinic Virtual Visits — best if you want a top-tier hospital system
  6. One Medical — solid if you want a primary care doctor who can manage allergies and refer you if needed

For real allergy testing, severe allergies, or immunotherapy shots, you’ll usually want a board-certified allergist, not just a general telehealth doctor.

If you tell me your country/state and whether it’s seasonal allergies, food allergies, eczema, or asthma, I can narrow it to the best specific option.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want the best online care for allergies, I’d prioritize these:

  1. AAAAI “Find an Allergist / Immunologist” — best if you want a true allergy specialist; AAAAI notes allergists have extra training in diagnosing and treating allergies, asthma, and immune disorders. (aaaai.org)
  2. Sesame — good for affordable virtual allergist visits, especially if you want self-pay pricing and same-day prescription pickup. (sesamecare.com)
  3. Amwell — solid for fast 24/7 video visits; their doctors treat allergies and can prescribe or refer you if needed. (patients.amwell.com)
  4. LiveHealth Online — another strong option for allergy advice and prescriptions through online visits. (livehealthonline.com)
  5. Teladoc — convenient nationwide general telehealth that treats common allergies, often with insurance coverage depending on your plan. (teladoc.com)

My short recommendation:

  • Best overall: AAAAI-listed allergist
  • Best budget/self-pay: Sesame
  • Best quick 24/7 visit: Amwell or Teladoc

If you want, I can narrow this down by insurance, price, or whether you need seasonal allergies vs food allergy.

What are the best virtual care services for sinus infections? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For sinus infections, the best virtual care options are usually the ones that can prescribe antibiotics if appropriate and offer same-day visits:

Best virtual care services
  • PlushCare — strong for adult sinusitis, easy same-day appointments, good if you may need a prescription.
  • Teladoc Health — widely available, quick access, good for straightforward sinus symptoms.
  • MDLIVE — solid urgent-care style telehealth, often available evenings/weekends.
  • Amwell — good national coverage and easy video visits.
  • K Health — convenient app-based triage and treatment for common infections.
  • GoodRx Care — often affordable cash-pay visits; simple for minor sinus issues.
  • Amazon One Medical — best if you already use it; smooth messaging and video care.
Best pick by need
  • Fastest same-day care: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best overall for sinus infection treatment: PlushCare
  • Lowest-cost option: GoodRx Care
  • Best if you want integrated primary care: Amazon One Medical
Important

Virtual care works best for uncomplicated sinus symptoms. Get in-person care if you have:

  • swelling around the eyes
  • severe facial pain
  • high fever
  • symptoms >10 days without improvement
  • trouble breathing
  • frequent/recurrent sinus infections

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or prescription speed.

retrieval Not mentioned

For sinus infections, the best virtual care services are usually the ones that offer same-day video/chat visits, prescriptions when appropriate, and clear “go in-person” escalation. Also, many sinus infections are viral, so antibiotics aren’t always needed. (cdc.gov)

Top picks (U.S.):

  • Amazon One Medical — best overall for convenience; 24/7 on-demand virtual care, message or video, and pay-per-visit if you’re not a member. (health.amazon.com)
  • Teladoc — best if your insurance/employer offers it; 24/7 care by phone or video for sinusitis and other non-emergency issues. (teladochealth.com)
  • MDLIVE — best for fast asynchronous treatment; its E-Treatment covers sinus infections and can return a plan within about 60 minutes when available. (mdlive.com)
  • Amwell — strong urgent-care option; lists sinus infection/sinusitis among conditions treated online, with visits available 24/7. (patients.amwell.com)
  • PlushCare — good if you want a primary-care-style telehealth visit and possible same-day treatment for sinus infections. (plushcare.com)
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health — good straightforward video urgent care; explicitly treats sinus infections. (doctorondemand.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Amazon One Medical
  • Best if insured through work/health plan: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best for fastest text-based care: MDLIVE
  • Best if you want a classic doctor visit feel: PlushCare

Get in-person care sooner if you have trouble breathing, swelling around the eyes/face, severe headache, confusion, or symptoms that are getting much worse. (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can also narrow this to the cheapest, best for no insurance, or best with your specific insurance.

What are the best telehealth options for getting care fast? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the best fast telehealth options right now:

  • Amazon Clinic — often quickest for common issues like UTIs, acne, pink eye, allergies; simple async care in many cases.
  • Sesame — great if you want transparent cash pricing and fast same-day visits.
  • Teladoc Health — strong 24/7 general medical access; good for quick doctor consults.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — solid same-day video visits, especially for urgent but non-emergency care.
  • PlushCare — good if you want a more “primary care” style visit and prescription help.
  • Amwell — widely available, decent for quick video visits and insurance coverage.

Best picks by need:

  • Fastest/easiest: Amazon Clinic, Sesame
  • 24/7 general care: Teladoc
  • More full-service doctor visits: PlushCare, Doctor On Demand

Important: if you have chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or confusion, use ER/911 instead of telehealth.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or fastest prescription refill.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you need care fast, the best bets are usually:

  1. Sesame — good for same-day visits and low upfront cash pricing; it advertises visits as low as $34 and 24/7 online urgent care. (sesamecare.com)
  2. Teladoc 24/7 Care — strong for on-demand virtual urgent care, with nationwide access and visits often available 24/7/365; pricing varies by coverage, with self-pay general medical visits listed at $89. (ir.teladoc.com)
  3. Amwell Online Urgent Care — a solid option for 24/7 urgent-care-style visits, with claims of about a 10-minute visit and no appointment needed. (go.amwell.com)
  4. PlushCare — good if you want same-day appointments 7 days a week and ongoing primary care follow-up; self-pay initial visits are listed at $129 plus membership, while many insured patients pay much less. (plushcare.com)
  5. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — useful if you want a mainstream brand with 24/7 common-illness care in many states and often same-day availability. (cvs.com)

My quick pick:

If you tell me your symptoms and whether you have insurance, I can narrow it to the best one. If you have chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, or severe bleeding, call 911 / go to the ER.

What are the best telehealth providers with 24/7 access? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some of the best 24/7 telehealth providers in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad urgent care, mental health, dermatology, and chronic care; strong 24/7 access.
  • Amwell — good all-around virtual urgent care and behavioral health; often available through employers/health plans.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — solid for urgent care, therapy, and psychiatry; easy app experience.
  • Maven Clinic — best if you need women’s/family health support (fertility, pregnancy, postpartum); not general urgent care.
  • MDLIVE — 24/7 urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health; widely used by insurers.
  • LiveHealth Online — convenient for urgent care and therapy; often covered by major plans.
  • Amazon Clinic / One Medical — convenient messaging-based care; availability can vary by issue and location, so it’s not always true 24/7 live video.

Best picks by need:

  • General urgent care: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Mental health: Doctor On Demand or Amwell
  • Women’s health: Maven Clinic
  • Best through insurance/employer: whichever is already included in your plan

Quick tip: “24/7 access” usually means you can reach a clinician any time, but wait times and service types vary by state and insurance.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or best app experience.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want 24/7 telehealth, my best picks are:

  1. Teladoc Health — strong all-around option, with 24/7 access to non-emergent urgent care by web, phone, or app, and broad U.S. availability. (teladochealth.com)
  2. MDLIVE — great for quick urgent care; it offers 24/7/365 urgent care and also has primary care, mental health, and dermatology. (mdlive.com)
  3. Amwell — good mainstream choice for online urgent care, with doctors available 24/7 and a published self-pay urgent care option. (patients.amwell.com)
  4. Included Health (Doctor On Demand) — best if your employer/health plan includes it; it offers 24/7 on-demand virtual urgent care and broader virtual care support. (includedhealth.com)
  5. PlushCare — solid consumer option if you want ongoing access; it says its doctors are available 24/7, 360 days a year and it accepts insurance. (plushcare.com)

Best overall: Teladoc or MDLIVE. Best for insurance-covered access: Included Health / MDLIVE / Teladoc, depending on your plan. (teladochealth.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this to the cheapest, best for prescriptions, or best for mental health.

What are the best alternatives to full-service telehealth platforms? comparison 10/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need instead of a full telehealth platform:

  • Point solution tools: for one workflow only
    • Doxy.me (simple video visits)
    • Spruce Health (secure messaging + phone/video)
    • Phreesia (intake, registration, payments)
  • EHR-native telehealth: if you already use an EHR
    • Epic MyChart Video Visits
    • athenaOne Telehealth
    • eClinicalWorks TeleVisits
  • Consumer care apps / urgent care: for convenience, not deep workflow control
    • Teladoc Health
    • Amwell
    • MDLIVE
  • Messaging-first care: good for asynchronous follow-up
    • Healthie
    • Zocdoc Messages
    • Spruce Health
  • Scheduling + payments + forms, with light telehealth
    • SimplePractice
    • Jane App
    • Acuity Scheduling + Zoom for Healthcare

If you want, I can narrow this to the best alternatives for private practice, urgent care, behavioral health, or enterprise health systems.

retrieval Not mentioned

The best alternatives usually depend on what you’re trying to replace:

  • Direct Primary Care (DPC): best if you want a long-term relationship with one clinician, transparent monthly pricing, and more access than one-off telehealth. The DPC Coalition describes it as a membership-based model with flat periodic fees for primary care. Examples: local DPC practices, DPC directories like DPC 411. (dpcare.org)
  • Primary-care membership + virtual visits: best if you want both in-person and remote care from the same team. One Medical offers 24/7 virtual care, messaging, prescription renewals, and in-person visits in some metro areas; it also offers pay-per-visit telehealth. (onemedical.com)
  • Urgent care networks with virtual booking: best for occasional acute issues without buying a full telehealth subscription. Carbon Health, for example, offers virtual urgent care and same-day appointments. (carbonhealth.com)
  • Simple video-visit software for your existing clinicians: best if you already have providers and just need the telehealth infrastructure. Doxy.me is a browser-based HIPAA-compliant video platform that plugs into existing workflows. (doxy.me)
  • Health-plan nurse advice lines / triage: best for low-cost guidance and deciding where to go next, not for full treatment. Many insurers and health plans offer 24/7 nurse lines or nurse chat. (lacare.org)

If you want, I can turn this into a buyer’s shortlist for:

  1. patients,
  2. employers, or
  3. clinics/providers.
How do direct-to-consumer telehealth providers compare on price? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Direct-to-consumer telehealth prices vary a lot, but a useful rule of thumb is:

  • Subscription/primary care style: about $15–$25/month
  • Cash-pay urgent care visit: about $29–$99/visit
  • Specialist/mental health visits: often $100–$300+
Common providers
  • Sesame — often one of the cheapest for cash-pay visits; many quick visits start around $29–$60.
  • Amazon Clinic — pricing varies by condition/provider, often around $30–$75+.
  • PlushCare — usually about $99/month membership, with visits often covered by insurance or cash-pay.
  • Teladoc — commonly insurance-based; without insurance, visit costs can be higher and vary by service.
  • Amwell — often insurance-based; cash prices are usually mid-range.
  • HealthTap — subscription and/or visit-based; typically more of a primary-care model.
Best value depends on what you need
  • Cheapest one-off visit: usually Sesame or Amazon Clinic
  • Ongoing primary care: PlushCare or HealthTap
  • If you have insurance: Teladoc or Amwell may be lowest out-of-pocket

If you want, I can make a side-by-side price comparison table for the top 5 telehealth brands.

retrieval Not mentioned

Roughly, cash-pay telehealth pricing tends to cluster around $19–$49 per visit, with some membership-based services costing more upfront. Sesame’s U.S. Health Care Price Index put the average cash price for a primary-care telehealth visit at $54.09 in October 2024, so the cheapest DTC options undercut the market average. (sesamecare.com)

Quick comparison:

  • GoodRx Care: $19/visit with Gold, or $39–$70+ without membership. (support.goodrx.com)
  • Lemonaid Health: typically $25 consultation fee. (support.lemonaidhealth.com)
  • Sesame: provider sets prices; Sesame adds a fee, and example pricing shows $29 for primary care visits in some Costco-linked pricing. (help.sesamecare.com)
  • One Medical/Amazon: $29 message visit / $49 video visit on pay-per-visit, or membership-based virtual care included with $9/mo or $99/yr for Prime members and $199/yr non-Prime. (health.amazon.com)
  • PlushCare: $129 initial visit without insurance plus $19.99/mo membership; with insurance, many patients pay $30 or less. (plushcare.com)
  • Teladoc: pricing depends on your plan/coverage and isn’t usually a simple public cash price. (teladoc.com)

Bottom line: if you’re paying cash, the cheapest common names are usually GoodRx Care, Lemonaid, and Sesame; PlushCare and One Medical can be pricier unless you value membership/included ongoing care. (support.goodrx.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a cheapest-by-use-case list (UTI, acne, ED, primary care, mental health, etc.).

What are the best alternatives to app-based online doctor services? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need:

  • Your primary care doctor (best overall)

Good for ongoing care, prescriptions, referrals, and follow-up. Ask if they offer same-day visits, patient portal messaging, or video visits.

  • Insurance telehealth services

Often cheaper and more integrated with your records. Examples: Teladoc Health, Amwell, MDLIVE.

  • Retail clinics (good for minor issues)

Walk-in care at places like CVS MinuteClinic and Walgreens Healthcare Clinic.

  • Urgent care centers (best for quick in-person help)

Good for sprains, infections, minor injuries, and labs. Examples: CityMD, Concentra, CareNow.

  • Nurse advice lines

Useful for triage when you’re not sure where to go. Many plans include a 24/7 nurse line.

  • Direct primary care / membership clinics

Monthly-fee clinics with longer visits and easier access. Examples vary by city, but they can be a strong alternative if you want more personal care.

  • Specialist direct booking

For recurring issues, booking directly with a dermatologist, therapist, or OB-GYN can be better than app-based general visits.

If you want, I can also rank these by cheapest, fastest, or best for prescriptions.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want alternatives to app-based online doctor services, the best options are usually: your regular primary care doctor, urgent care, retail clinics/walk-in clinics, community health centers, and for serious symptoms, the ER/911. (newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org)

Quick guide:

  • Primary care office: best for ongoing care, refills, preventive visits, and chronic issues. Many clinics now offer video visits too. (newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org)
  • Urgent care: good for things like sprains, minor cuts, earaches, UTIs, rashes, vomiting, and similar non-emergency problems. (newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org)
  • Retail/walk-in clinic: useful for simple, routine problems and basic primary care-type visits. (ahrq.gov)
  • Community health center: often the best low-cost option if you need affordable primary care. HRSA says these centers provide comprehensive primary care and you can find them through HRSA’s locator. (data.hrsa.gov)
  • ER/911: use this for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or other emergencies. (newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org)

If you want, I can also rank these by cost, speed, or best for mental health / antibiotics / prescriptions.

Which virtual care providers are better for prescriptions than urgent care clinics? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For prescriptions, virtual primary-care/telehealth providers are usually better than urgent care clinics, because they’re set up for ongoing meds, refills, and follow-up, not just one-time acute visits.

Good options:

  • PlushCare — strong for ongoing prescription management and refills.
  • Lemonaid Health — good for common meds like birth control, acne, anxiety/depression, ED, and hair loss.
  • Teladoc — broad coverage, decent for non-urgent prescription needs.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for common conditions and some prescriptions.
  • Sesame Care — good if you want cash-pay low prices and direct booking.
  • GoodRx Care — useful for affordable visits and basic prescriptions.

When urgent care is better:

  • you need same-day in-person evaluation
  • the provider needs to do tests first
  • it’s a new, complex, or controlled-medication request

Avoid using either for:

  • opioids, benzos, stimulants unless you’re already established with a clinician
  • anything that seems severe or unsafe

If you tell me what prescription type you need, I can point you to the best option.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean getting new prescriptions or refills, these are usually better than walk-in urgent care clinics:

  • Virtual primary care: best overall for ongoing meds, refills, and continuity. Examples: K Health, PlushCare, and Kaiser Permanente virtual care. They explicitly support prescription renewals/new prescriptions and follow-up care. (khealth.com)
  • Membership/health-system virtual care: best if you already use that system. Kaiser Permanente can prescribe in virtual visits and route refills through its pharmacy/mail-order options. (healthy.kaiserpermanente.org)
  • Fast telehealth urgent care: good for simple, same-day meds, but more “one-off” than primary care. Sesame and Teladoc offer same-day virtual urgent care with prescriptions when appropriate. (sesamecare.com)

My short take:

If you want, I can narrow this to cheap cash-pay options, best for anxiety/ADHD/weight-loss meds, or best in the U.S. for same-day refills.

What is better for minor illnesses: telehealth or walk-in clinics? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For minor illnesses, telehealth is usually better if it’s straightforward; walk-in clinics are better if you may need an exam or test.

Telehealth is best for:

  • Colds, mild flu-like symptoms
  • Sore throat, sinus issues
  • Rashes/photos you can show on camera
  • Simple medication refills or advice

Walk-in clinic is better for:

  • Fever that’s lingering
  • Ear pain, strep testing, flu/COVID testing
  • UTI symptoms
  • Anything that may need an in-person exam or prescription

Good telehealth options:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • Doctor on Demand

Good walk-in options:

  • CVS MinuteClinic
  • Walgreens Healthcare Clinic
  • Local urgent care centers

Rule of thumb: If you can describe it well and don’t need a test, use telehealth. If you need to be checked physically or tested, go walk-in.

If you tell me your symptoms, I can suggest which is more appropriate.

retrieval Not mentioned

For minor illnesses, telehealth is usually the better first stop if you’re comfortable with a video/phone visit and the issue is something like a cold, sore throat, mild rash, sinus symptoms, or medication refill. It’s faster, cheaper, and avoids waiting rooms. Telehealth can also handle common problems like infections and headaches, though it can’t do a hands-on exam. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

Choose a walk-in clinic if you likely need a physical exam, testing, a strep/flu/COVID test, stitches, an ear exam, or you want someone to check you in person. Walk-in/urgent care centers are designed for everyday illnesses and minor injuries, and they’re a good option when virtual care may be too limited. (my.clevelandclinic.org)

Go to urgent care/ER instead of either if you have trouble breathing, chest pain, severe dehydration, confusion, signs of stroke, or a rapidly worsening condition. (my.clevelandclinic.org)

Rule of thumb:

  • Simple + low-risk = telehealth
  • Need exam/testing/procedure = walk-in clinic
  • Serious symptoms = emergency care

If you want, I can help you decide for a specific symptom.

What are the best alternatives to traditional primary care for simple visits? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For simple, low-risk visits, the best alternatives to traditional primary care are:

  1. Telehealth
    • Best for: colds, rashes, allergies, UTIs, medication refills, mental health, minor infections.
    • Good options: Teladoc, Amwell, Doctor On Demand, Amazon Clinic.
  2. Retail clinics
    • Best for: strep tests, flu/COVID testing, vaccines, simple skin issues, minor illness.
    • Good options: CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Healthcare Clinic, Walmart Health (where available).
  3. Urgent care
    • Best for: simple injuries, sprains, cuts, ear infections, fevers, mild asthma flares.
    • Good options: CityMD, Concentra, Patient First, FastMed.
  4. Direct Primary Care (DPC)
    • Best for: people who want easy access without insurance complexity.
    • Good options: local DPC practices; networks like AFC DPC or Hint Health directories can help you find one.
  5. Online-first primary care
    • Best for: ongoing basic care, prescriptions, labs, chronic condition check-ins.
    • Good options: K Health, Parsley Health, One Medical.

Rule of thumb:

  • Cheapest/easiest: telehealth
  • Best for quick tests/vaccines: retail clinic
  • Best for same-day in-person issues: urgent care
  • Best for frequent access: DPC or One Medical

Don’t use these for: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, stroke symptoms, major injury, or anything potentially serious—go to the ER.

retrieval Not mentioned

For simple, non-emergency visits, the best alternatives are usually:

  1. Telehealth / virtual visits — best for rashes, colds/flu, allergies, medication questions, pink eye, UTIs, and follow-ups. Many systems offer video or message-based care, and some can order labs or tests if needed. (mayoclinic.org)
  2. Urgent care — best when you need same-day in-person care, but it’s not an ER problem. It’s commonly used for minor injuries, sore throats, cuts, and other prompt-but-not-emergency issues. (newsroom.clevelandclinic.org)
  3. Retail/walk-in clinics — best for quick, low-complexity issues like minor infections, vaccines, and basic testing; CMS even distinguishes “walk-in retail health clinic” from urgent care as a separate place of service. (cms.gov)

Rule of thumb:

  • Need fastest, cheapest convenience? Telehealth.
  • Need hands-on exam, test, or procedure? Urgent care.
  • Need a very simple one-off visit? Retail clinic. (mayoclinic.org)

Go to the ER instead for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, major injuries, or anything severe. (medlineplus.gov)

If you want, I can also give you a “best option by symptom” cheat sheet.

How do online telehealth services compare for same-day availability? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For same-day availability, the main differences are:

  • Best for fastest general medical care: Teladoc Health, Amwell, Doctor on Demand
    • Often offer on-demand visits in minutes to a few hours, depending on time of day.
  • Best for urgent-but-not-emergency care: Carbon Health Virtual Care
    • Good same-day scheduling when available; often faster in metro areas.
  • Best if you want a specific doctor/PCP style visit: K Health, Sesame Care
    • Same-day slots can be very good, but availability varies more by state and provider.
  • Best for low-cost quick visits: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care and Walmart Health Virtual Care (where available)
    • Same-day is common, but more limited service scope.
Quick comparison
  • Fastest “see someone now”: Teladoc, Doctor on Demand
  • Best same-day scheduled appointments: Amwell, Carbon Health
  • Most variable but sometimes cheapest: Sesame, K Health
  • Best if you already use a health system: your local hospital/health network telehealth can be same-day and better integrated
Rule of thumb

If you need a visit today, start with:

  1. Teladoc
  2. Doctor on Demand
  3. Amwell
  4. Sesame Care if price matters

If you want, I can also compare them by price, insurance acceptance, or prescription support.

retrieval Not mentioned

For same-day availability, the main difference is on-demand vs. scheduled:

  • Amwell: strongest for instant/on-demand urgent care — no appointment needed, and if no clinician is free you go into a waiting room. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Teladoc: also 24/7 on-demand; it says you can connect in minutes, and many plans support same-day care. (member.teladoc.com)
  • MDLIVE: offers on-demand urgent care in minutes plus same-day appointments for primary care and mental health, but same-day slots are not guaranteed. (mdlive.com)

Bottom line:

  • If you want the best odds of being seen today, pick urgent-care-style telehealth first.
  • If you want a same-day scheduled slot, MDLIVE is the clearest about offering that.
  • If you want immediate care without scheduling, Amwell and Teladoc are the most straightforward. (go.amwell.com)

If you want, I can rank them by price, insurance acceptance, or fastest mental-health access.

What are the best alternatives to in-person urgent care for a rash? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives to in-person urgent care for a rash:

  1. Telehealth/video visit
    • Good for most mild-to-moderate rashes.
    • Common options: Amazon Clinic, Teladoc, Amwell, PlushCare, CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care.
  2. Primary care doctor
    • Best if it’s not urgent and you can be seen within a few days.
    • They know your history and can prescribe treatment if needed.
  3. Pharmacist
    • Helpful for likely irritant/contact rashes, hives, or eczema flare-ups.
    • They can suggest OTC options like Cetaphil, CeraVe, Aquaphor, 1% hydrocortisone, or an oral antihistamine such as Zyrtec or Claritin.
  4. Nurse advice line
    • Many insurers, hospitals, and clinics offer 24/7 phone triage.
    • Useful if you’re unsure whether it needs urgent care.
  5. Picture review / e-visit
    • Some clinics and apps let you upload photos and get a treatment plan without a visit.

Go to urgent care or ER now if the rash comes with:

  • trouble breathing, lip/tongue swelling
  • high fever, severe pain, or rapidly spreading redness
  • blisters, skin peeling, or sores in mouth/eyes
  • purple spots, signs of infection, or you feel very ill

If you want, I can also help you decide which option fits your rash based on symptoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best non–in-person-urgent-care options for a mild, stable rash are:

  • Telehealth / virtual urgent care
  • Your primary care clinician (same-day message/visit if available)
  • Nurse advice line / symptom checker
  • Pharmacist for over-the-counter help if it seems like irritation, allergy, or hives
  • Home care if it’s clearly minor and improving. Virtual visits can be appropriate when it doesn’t seem to need urgent care, and many systems offer same-day or on-demand video visits for rashes. (mayoclinichealthsystem.org)

Go in person or to the ER now if the rash comes with trouble breathing, swelling of the lips/tongue/face, severe allergic reaction, high fever, confusion, rapidly spreading rash, purple/bruised-looking spots, or you suspect a serious infection. (massgeneralbrigham.org)

If you want, I can also help you decide which option fits your rash based on symptoms, location, and how long it’s been there.

Which consumer telehealth services are better for messaging a doctor than video visits? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want messaging-first care (text/chat with a clinician) rather than video, these are usually the better consumer options:

Best for messaging a doctor
  • Sesame — often has chat/message visits and low-cost one-off consults; good if you want straightforward, cash-pay care.
  • K Health — built around AI chat + clinician messaging for many common issues; strong for quick follow-up and routine concerns.
  • Amazon One Medical — very good secure messaging with clinicians if you’re a member; better for ongoing primary care than one-time urgent issues.
  • Teladoc — offers messaging-based care for some plans/services, though video is still common.
  • Doctor on Demand (now included in Included Health for some users) — messaging exists in some offerings, but it’s more video-oriented overall.
Usually better than video for
  • acne / dermatology follow-ups
  • UTI / yeast infection symptoms
  • cold, flu, allergies
  • medication refills
  • simple follow-up questions
My quick picks
  • Best overall messaging experience: Amazon One Medical
  • Best low-cost one-off chat: Sesame
  • Best app-style chat triage: K Health

If you want, I can narrow this down by price, insurance acceptance, or condition.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want messaging over video, the best consumer options are usually health-plan/provider portals, not pure DTC telehealth apps.

Best bets:

  1. Kaiser Permanente — strongest messaging-first option: secure message center, e-visits, and doctor/nurse replies for nonurgent issues. (healthy.kaiserpermanente.org)
  2. Doctor On Demand / Included Health — you can “Message Your Care Team” in the app, though the core visit flow is still video. (doctorondemand.com)
  3. Circle Medical — has a care-team chat alongside video appointments, so it’s more messaging-friendly than most. (circlemedical.com)
  4. Sesame — good for before/after visit messaging, especially for dermatology, but the appointment itself is video-based. (sesamecare.com)
  5. Carbon Health — app-based follow-up and updates, but it’s still primarily a visit/appointment model rather than true doctor chat. (carbonhealth.com)

Short version:

  • If you want ongoing message access, pick Kaiser Permanente.
  • If you want consumer cash-pay + some messaging, try Circle Medical or Sesame.
  • If you mainly want a quick clinician response, Doctor On Demand is decent, but it’s still video-first. (healthy.kaiserpermanente.org)

If you want, I can narrow this down by insurance vs cash-pay, mental health vs primary care, or text-only vs photo-based messaging.

What are the best alternatives to emergency room visits for non-emergencies? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives to the ER for non-emergencies:

  • Urgent care clinics — best for same-day issues like sore throat, ear infection, minor cuts, sprains, mild fevers.
    • Examples: CityMD, GoHealth Urgent Care, FastMed, CareNow
  • Telehealth / virtual urgent care — good for rashes, UTIs, sinus symptoms, medication refills, minor illnesses.
    • Examples: Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE, Doctor on Demand
  • Primary care doctor — best for ongoing or less urgent problems, and follow-up care.
  • Retail clinics — convenient for simple issues and basic tests.
    • Examples: CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Healthcare Clinic
  • Nurse advice line — useful if you’re unsure where to go. Many insurers offer 24/7 lines.
  • Home treatment / pharmacy care — for mild symptoms like colds, allergies, or minor pain; ask a pharmacist for OTC options.

Go to the ER now for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, head injury with confusion, or a major allergic reaction.

If you want, I can also give you a “where should I go?” quick guide by symptom.

retrieval Not mentioned

For non-emergencies, the best alternatives to the ER are usually:

  • Your primary care doctor / same-day appointment — best for ongoing issues, medication refills, mild infections, rashes, and follow-up care. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Urgent care — good for problems that need prompt attention but aren’t life-threatening, like minor cuts, sprains, fever, ear pain, or simple infections. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Telehealth / virtual care — useful for many minor illnesses, skin issues, and quick medical advice without leaving home. (telehealth.hhs.gov)
  • Nurse advice line / on-call clinician — good when you’re unsure where to go and want triage guidance. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Retail clinics (often in pharmacies or big-box stores) — can handle simple, low-acuity problems in some areas. (medlineplus.gov)

Go to the ER / call 911 instead for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, severe allergic reaction, overdose, seizures, or anything that could be life-threatening. (medlineplus.gov)

If you want, I can also give you a “where should I go?” cheat sheet by symptom.

How do I get a prescription online for a common condition? problem 3,600/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a licensed telehealth service.

How it works:

  1. Pick a reputable platform: Teladoc, Amwell, PlushCare, or Doctor on Demand.
  2. Create an account and fill out a short medical questionnaire.
  3. Meet a clinician by video, phone, or chat.
  4. If appropriate, they send the prescription to your local pharmacy.

Tips:

  • Be honest about symptoms, meds, allergies, and past conditions.
  • Have your pharmacy name and insurance info ready.
  • Some conditions may need an in-person exam or tests, so a prescription isn’t guaranteed.

If you want, tell me the condition and your country/state, and I can suggest the best telehealth option.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually:

  1. Book a telehealth visit with a licensed clinician.
  2. Describe your symptoms/condition and share meds, allergies, and history.
  3. If appropriate, they can send an e-prescription to a pharmacy. Telehealth can be used to obtain a diagnosis or prescription, and many common conditions can be managed this way. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

A few safety tips:

  • Use a real clinic/telehealth service, not a website that just sells meds.
  • A legit online pharmacy should require a prescription, list a U.S. address and phone number, and be licensed where it operates and where you live. (fda.gov)
  • If the medication is a controlled substance, telehealth prescribing may still be possible, but it has extra rules; current federal flexibilities run through December 31, 2026. (hhs.gov)

If you tell me the condition (for example: acne, allergies, birth control, UTI, hair loss), I can tell you what the online prescription process usually looks like for that specific one.

How do I see a doctor online without going to a clinic? problem 170/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use telehealth: a video, phone, or chat visit with a licensed doctor.

Popular options:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health)
  • Sesame
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
  • K Health

How it works:

  1. Download the app or visit the website.
  2. Create an account and enter your symptoms.
  3. Choose a doctor and time, or do a same-day visit.
  4. Pay with insurance or cash price.
  5. Talk by video/phone/chat; prescriptions can often be sent to your pharmacy.

Good for:

  • Colds, flu, allergies
  • Rashes
  • UTIs
  • Minor infections
  • Medication refills
  • General medical advice

Go to urgent care/ER instead if you have:

  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Severe bleeding
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Very high fever with confusion
  • Serious injury

If you want, I can help you pick the best telehealth service for your insurance or situation.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use telehealth or virtual urgent care.

Simple ways:

  • Your primary care doctor’s portal: many offer video or phone visits.
  • Telehealth apps/sites: e.g. Teladoc, Amwell, MDLive, Doctor on Demand, or your health insurer’s virtual care service.
  • Retail clinic apps: some pharmacies/health systems let you book video visits.

Typical steps:

  1. Create an account.
  2. Choose a reason for visit.
  3. Pick a time or start a same-day visit.
  4. Join by phone, tablet, or computer.
  5. The doctor can diagnose, prescribe, or tell you if you need in-person care.

Good for:

  • colds/flu
  • rashes
  • allergies
  • UTIs
  • mild anxiety/depression follow-up
  • medication refills

Not good for:

  • chest pain
  • trouble breathing
  • stroke symptoms
  • severe bleeding
  • emergencies

If you want, I can help you find the best telehealth option for your insurance or state.

How do I treat a minor illness quickly at home? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For a minor illness, the fastest home care is usually:

  • Rest and keep activity light
  • Hydrate: water, broth, electrolyte drinks like Pedialyte
  • Fever/aches: Tylenol (acetaminophen) or Advil/Motrin (ibuprofen) if you can take them safely
  • Cough/sore throat: Honey (not for kids under 1), Ricola lozenges, Cepacol throat lozenges, warm tea
  • Congestion: Afrin nasal spray for very short-term use only, or saline spray like Ocean / Simply Saline
  • Upset stomach: bland foods (toast, rice, bananas), sip fluids

Get medical help urgently if you have trouble breathing, chest pain, confusion, severe dehydration, a high fever that won’t come down, severe pain, or symptoms lasting more than a few days.

If you tell me your symptoms and age, I can suggest the best at-home treatment.

retrieval Not mentioned

If it’s truly minor, the fastest safe home approach is:

  • Rest
  • Hydrate: water, tea, broth, electrolyte drinks
  • Eat lightly if you can
  • Treat symptoms:
    • Fever/aches: acetaminophen or ibuprofen, if you normally can take them
    • Sore throat: warm salt-water gargles, honey
    • Stuffy nose: saline spray, steam, humidifier
    • Cough: honey (not for kids under 1), lozenges
  • Avoid alcohol, overexertion, and smoking/vaping

Get medical help urgently if you have:

  • trouble breathing
  • chest pain
  • confusion
  • severe dehydration
  • fainting
  • high fever that won’t come down
  • symptoms rapidly getting worse
  • illness lasting more than a few days or not improving

If you want, tell me the symptoms, age, and how long it’s been going on, and I can suggest the best home treatment.

How do I get medical advice after hours? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If it’s urgent or possibly life-threatening—chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, confusion, or a serious allergic reaction—call 911 or go to the ER now.

For non-emergency after-hours medical advice, try:

  • Your doctor’s after-hours line: many practices have an on-call clinician.
  • Nurse advice lines: if you have insurance, call the number on your card (often 24/7).
  • Telehealth: services like Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE can connect you with a clinician after hours.
  • Urgent care: if you need to be seen tonight, an urgent care clinic may be open late.

If you want, I can help you figure out which option fits your symptoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you need medical advice after hours, try this:

  1. Call your doctor’s office — many have an after-hours nurse line or on-call provider.
  2. Use telehealth/urgent care — many clinics and insurers offer 24/7 virtual visits.
  3. Go to urgent care if it’s not life-threatening but needs same-day help.
  4. Go to the ER / call 911 for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, confusion, or other emergencies.
  5. Call Poison Control in the U.S.: 1-800-222-1222 for poisoning/overdose questions, 24/7.

If you want, I can help you decide which option fits your symptoms.

How do I find a virtual doctor for a UTI? problem 20/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

You can usually see a virtual doctor for a possible UTI through a telehealth service or your health plan.

Good options to try:

  • Teladoc Health
  • Amwell
  • MDLive
  • PlushCare
  • Zocdoc (to book video visits with local clinicians)
  • Your insurance app/website (many plans include virtual urgent care)

What to look for:

  • Urgent care video visit
  • UTI treatment
  • Same-day availability
  • Ability to prescribe antibiotics if appropriate

Before the visit, have ready:

  • Your symptoms (burning, urgency, frequency, blood in urine, fever)
  • When they started
  • Any allergies
  • Pregnancy status
  • Meds you take
  • Your pharmacy name

Go to urgent care / ER instead of virtual care if you have:

  • Fever, chills, back/flank pain
  • Vomiting
  • Pregnancy
  • You’re a man
  • You have kidney disease, a weak immune system, or diabetes with severe symptoms
  • Severe pain or you feel very ill

One more note: If you want quick symptom relief while waiting, ask the clinician about phenazopyridine (Azo Urinary Pain Relief)—it can help burning, but it’s not an antibiotic.

If you want, I can help you find a telehealth option by country/state or by insurance plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

Look for a telehealth/virtual urgent care provider that can evaluate urinary symptoms and, if appropriate, prescribe treatment.

How to find one:

  • Search for: “virtual urgent care UTI” or “telehealth urinary tract infection”
  • Use your health insurance app/website if you have coverage
  • Check major telehealth platforms or your local hospital system’s virtual care
  • Make sure they can:
    • treat adult UTIs
    • prescribe antibiotics when appropriate
    • send prescriptions to a local pharmacy

When virtual care is okay:

  • Burning with urination
  • Frequent/urgent urination
  • Mild lower belly discomfort
  • No severe symptoms

Go to urgent care / ER instead if you have:

  • Fever
  • Back/flank pain
  • Vomiting
  • Pregnancy
  • Blood in urine
  • Symptoms in a male
  • You feel very ill or symptoms are rapidly worsening

If you want, I can help you figure out what to search for based on your insurance or state.

How do I get help for a skin rash online? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

You can get help for a skin rash online in a few ways:

  1. Use a telehealth doctor
    • Try Teladoc, Amwell, Doctor on Demand, or CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care.
    • If you have insurance, check your plan’s app/website first.
  2. Send clear photos
    • Take 2–3 photos in good light:
      • one close-up
      • one from a few feet away
      • one showing the body area
    • Note when it started, whether it itches/ hurts, and anything new (soap, detergent, meds, foods, plants, pets).
  3. Use a symptom checker carefully
    • WebMD Symptom Checker or Ada Health can help you decide how urgent it is, but they don’t replace a clinician.
  4. For mild itching while you wait
    • CeraVe Moisturizing Cream or Vanicream for dry/irritated skin
    • Aveeno Soothing Bath Treatment or Aveeno Calm + Restore if it’s itchy
    • 1% hydrocortisone cream (like Cortizone-10) for short-term itch, unless the rash is on the face, genitals, or is infected-looking

Get urgent care now if you have:

  • trouble breathing or swelling of lips/face
  • fever with a spreading rash
  • rash that’s purple, blistering, or very painful
  • rash in the eyes, mouth, or genitals
  • signs of infection: pus, warmth, rapidly worsening redness

If you want, I can help you figure out which online option fits your rash based on your symptoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

You can get online help for a rash by using telehealth/teledermatology through a dermatologist or primary care clinic. The AAD says dermatologists can review photos, a written description, and a video visit through telemedicine, and that some rashes still need an in-person exam. (aad.org)

What to do:

  1. Book a telehealth visit with a clinician or dermatologist.
  2. Upload clear photos of the rash in good light.
  3. Include:
    • when it started
    • where it is
    • whether it itches, hurts, blisters, or spreads
    • any new soaps, meds, foods, plants, or pets
    • fever or other symptoms
  4. Ask whether you should be seen in person. (aad.org)

Get urgent help now if the rash is widespread, blistering, rapidly spreading, painful, involves the eyes/lips/mouth/genitals, comes with fever/illness, or if you have trouble breathing or swallowing, or swelling of the eyes or lips. (aad.org)

If you want, I can also help you figure out whether your rash sounds like something safe for telehealth.

How do I refill a prescription without an in-person visit? problem 1,900/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Usually you can refill without an in-person visit by doing one of these:

  1. Request the refill from your pharmacy
    • Use the pharmacy app/website (like CVS Pharmacy, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Walmart Pharmacy, or Amazon Pharmacy).
    • Many pharmacies have auto-refill or refill by text.
  2. Message your doctor’s office
    • Use your patient portal (like MyChart) and ask for a refill.
    • A clinician may renew it after reviewing your chart, sometimes with just a virtual check-in.
  3. Schedule a telehealth visit
    • Services like Teladoc, Amwell, MDLive, or your own doctor’s telehealth platform can often renew prescriptions remotely.
  4. Check if your prescription is eligible
    • Most routine meds can be refilled remotely.
    • Controlled substances often have stricter rules and may require a visit or special e-prescribing limits.
  5. If you’re out of refills
    • Ask the pharmacy to send a refill request to your prescriber.
    • If needed, request a bridge refill through telehealth or your primary care office.

If you want, tell me your medication name and pharmacy, and I can tell you the fastest refill route.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually you can do it one of these ways:

  • Use your pharmacy’s refill request in its app/website, or call the pharmacy with your name, prescription number, and medication name. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Ask your prescriber for a telehealth visit if they need to renew it; some medications can be prescribed without an in-person visit when federal/state rules are met. (telehealth.hhs.gov)
  • Use mail-order or auto-refill if your plan/pharmacy offers it. (medlineplus.gov)
  • If it’s a controlled medication, telemedicine prescribing may still be possible in 2026 under current federal flexibilities, but rules are stricter and can vary by state and drug. (hhs.gov)

A few tips:

  • Don’t wait until you’re out; refills can take time.
  • If the pharmacy says it needs authorization, contact the prescriber’s office.
  • Be careful with online pharmacies; the FDA warns to avoid sites claiming they can prescribe without seeing you. (fda.gov)

If you want, I can help you figure out the fastest path for your specific medication.

How do I get care when I can’t get a same-day appointment? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you can’t get a same-day appointment, try this:

  1. Call your doctor’s office anyway

Ask for a cancellation, same-day triage, or a message to the nurse/doctor. Many offices can fit in urgent issues.

  1. Use telehealth today

Good options: Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE, or your insurer’s virtual visit app.

  1. Go to urgent care for non-emergencies

Examples: CVS MinuteClinic, CareNow, CityMD, FastMed, or a local urgent care center.

  1. Use a nurse advice line

If you have insurance, call the number on your card. They can tell you whether you need urgent care, telehealth, or the ER.

  1. Go to the ER now if you have red flags

Chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, confusion, fainting, or a high fever with worsening symptoms.

If you tell me your symptoms and your age, I can help you decide the best next step.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you can’t get a same-day appointment, use this rule of thumb: call your doctor’s office and ask for nurse advice, go to urgent care / a walk-in clinic for non-life-threatening problems, and go to the ER or call 911 for emergency symptoms. (medlineplus.gov)

Urgent care is a good next step if you’re worried and can’t be seen soon enough, but the problem is not life-threatening or likely to cause disability. Examples include mild fevers, sore throat, earache, sprains, minor cuts/burns, and minor broken bones. (medlineplus.gov)

Go to the ER / call 911 now for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, seizure, poisoning/overdose, severe bleeding, or if you might hurt yourself or others. (medlineplus.gov)

If you want, I can help you decide which option fits your symptoms right now.

How do I talk to a doctor about birth control online? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

You can use a telehealth visit to discuss birth control with a doctor or nurse practitioner.

How to do it:

  1. Pick a service: good options include Planned Parenthood Direct, Nurx, Wisp, or GoodRx Care.
  2. Fill out a short intake form: they’ll ask about your period, health history, migraines, smoking, blood pressure, and goals.
  3. Talk by video, phone, or chat: tell them what you want, like:
    • “I want birth control to prevent pregnancy.”
    • “I want fewer side effects.”
    • “I’d like something low-maintenance.”
  4. Get a prescription if appropriate: many places can send pills, the patch, the ring, or arrange an in-person visit for an IUD or implant.

What to ask:

  • Which option is best for my body and lifestyle?
  • What side effects should I expect?
  • What should I do if I miss a pill?
  • Does this interact with my other meds?

Important: If you have chest pain, severe headache, vision changes, leg swelling, or uncontrolled high blood pressure, mention it before starting hormonal birth control.

If you want, I can help you choose between the pill, patch, ring, shot, IUD, implant, or condoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

You can keep it simple and direct.

What to say:

  • “I want to talk about birth control options.”
  • “I’m interested in a method that fits my lifestyle.”
  • “I’d like something for pregnancy prevention, and maybe help with [heavy periods / acne / cramps / irregular periods].”
  • “I have questions about side effects, cost, and how soon it works.”

Helpful info to share:

  • Your age
  • Last menstrual period
  • Any chance you’re pregnant
  • Migraine history, high blood pressure, blood clots, smoking/vaping, or other medical conditions
  • Current meds/supplements
  • Whether you want hormones or non-hormonal options
  • Whether you want something daily, weekly, monthly, or long-acting

Good questions to ask:

  • Which options fit me best?
  • What side effects should I expect?
  • How effective is it?
  • How do I start it?
  • Do I need a prescription or exam?
  • What if I miss a dose?
  • Is it covered by insurance?

If you’re doing it online:

  • Use a telehealth visit, patient portal, or online clinic form
  • Be honest and specific
  • If possible, have your pharmacy name ready

If you want, I can also help you draft a short message to send to a doctor.

How do I get treatment for a sinus infection without visiting urgent care? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

You can often treat a sinus infection at home or through telehealth instead of urgent care.

What to do first

Most sinus infections are viral and get better on their own in 7–10 days.

Try:

  • Saline rinse: NeilMed Sinus Rinse or Naväge
  • Nasal steroid spray: Flonase (fluticasone) or Nasacort (triamcinolone)
  • Pain/fever relief: Tylenol (acetaminophen) or Advil/Motrin (ibuprofen)
  • Decongestant: Sudafed (pseudoephedrine) if you can take it safely
  • Humidifier/steam and lots of fluids
If you need prescription treatment

Use:

  • Primary care: call your doctor’s office
  • Telehealth: Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE, or your insurance’s virtual visit service

They can decide if you actually need antibiotics or if it’s just a viral infection.

Get urgent care / ER sooner if you have:
  • Trouble breathing
  • Swelling around the eye
  • Severe headache or stiff neck
  • High fever
  • Vision changes
  • Symptoms lasting more than 10 days, or getting better then suddenly worse

If you want, I can help you figure out whether your symptoms sound more like a viral cold, sinus infection, or allergies.

retrieval Not mentioned

You usually don’t need urgent care for a sinus infection. Most cases are viral and improve on their own, and you can often start with home care plus a regular doctor, telehealth, or a pharmacist/primary care visit if you need medication advice. (cdc.gov)

What you can do now:

  • Saline nasal rinse/spray
  • Warm compress on face
  • Steam/humidifier
  • OTC pain relievers as directed
  • Ask about a decongestant or allergy medicine if congestion is part of the problem. (cdc.gov)

How to get treatment without urgent care:

  1. Telehealth/virtual visit with your PCP or a same-day online clinic.
  2. Call your primary care office and ask for a sick visit.
  3. Ask a pharmacist for guidance on OTC options; in some places they can direct you to the right next step. (nhs.uk)

Get medical care sooner if you have severe facial/head pain, symptoms lasting more than 10 days without improving, worsening after initial improvement, fever lasting more than 3–4 days, or repeated sinus infections. (cdc.gov)

Go to urgent care/ER now if you have trouble breathing, swelling around the eyes, confusion, a very bad headache, stiff neck, or you’re very unwell. (nhs.uk)

If you want, I can help you decide whether your symptoms sound more like a cold, allergies, or sinusitis.

How much does a telehealth visit usually cost? transactional 70/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A typical telehealth visit costs about $40–$100 without insurance.

Common ranges:

  • Primary care / urgent care: $40–$90
  • Mental health therapy: $80–$200
  • Specialists: $100–$300+

With insurance, it may be:

  • $0–$50 copay, depending on your plan

Some services have flat pricing, like:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • Doctor on Demand
  • MDLIVE

If you want, I can also compare telehealth prices by provider or help you estimate based on your insurance.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually, a telehealth visit is $0–$50 with insurance (often just a copay), but self-pay/uninsured visits commonly run about $50–$200, depending on the provider and visit type. FAIR Health data has shown some telehealth office-visit codes averaging around $55. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

Best move: check your insurer or the clinic before the visit, since many plans cover telehealth differently. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

If you want, I can also tell you the usual cost for urgent care telehealth, mental health telehealth, or Medicare telehealth.

Are there any free telehealth services? transactional 50/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—sometimes.

Common free/low-cost telehealth options:

  • Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs): many offer free or sliding-scale telehealth.
  • County/public health clinics: often have no-cost virtual visits.
  • University medical schools / teaching hospitals: may run reduced-cost telehealth clinics.
  • Insurance plans: some include $0 telehealth for primary care or mental health.
  • Employer or school benefits: often include free virtual visits.
  • Nonprofits: some offer free telehealth for specific services (mental health, sexual health, etc.).

Well-known telehealth brands that sometimes offer $0 visits depending on insurance, promo, or membership:

  • Amwell
  • Teladoc
  • MDLIVE
  • Doctor On Demand
  • Sesame (often low-cost cash pay; occasionally free promos)

If you want, I can look up free telehealth options in your state/country and for your specific need (urgent care, mental health, prescriptions, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—though truly free telehealth is usually limited to specific programs or eligibility groups. Good options include:

  • VA telehealth for eligible veterans; VA says its telehealth visits are free and available to veterans across the U.S. (connectedcare.va.gov)
  • Community health centers / FQHCs: anyone can use them, and payment is based on a sliding scale; some free clinics charge nothing. (hrsa.gov)
  • 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: free, confidential call/text/chat support 24/7. (988lifeline.org)
  • National Maternal Mental Health Hotline: free, confidential support by call, text, or web chat. (hrsa.gov)

If you want, I can help you find free or low-cost telehealth near your ZIP code.

What is the cheapest online doctor service? transactional 880/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you’re in the U.S., Sesame Care and GoodRx Care are usually among the cheapest self-pay online doctor options.

Typical low-cost options:

  • GoodRx Care — often from $19+
  • Sesame Care — often from $19–$29
  • Amazon Clinic — often around $29+ for common issues

Best bet for the absolute cheapest:

  • GoodRx Care if you just need a simple visit
  • Sesame Care if you want to compare prices across doctors

If you tell me your country and what you need help with (rash, UTI, refill, etc.), I can point you to the cheapest specific service.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want the cheapest mainstream online doctor service I found, it’s Sesame: virtual urgent care starts at $34, and some doctor visits are listed as low as $37 with Sesame Plus. (sesamecare.com)

For comparison, I found these higher prices on official sites:

If you want, I can also rank the cheapest options for your exact need (urgent care, prescription refill, mental health, or primary care).

Do telehealth providers accept insurance? transactional 320/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—many telehealth providers accept insurance, but it depends on the company, your plan, and the type of visit.

Common examples:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health
  • MDLIVE
  • Virtual Care through major insurers like Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, and Blue Cross Blue Shield plans

Things to check:

  • Whether the provider is in-network
  • Your copay/coinsurance
  • Whether it’s mental health, primary care, urgent care, or specialty care
  • If your plan covers video visits specifically

Best move: log into your insurance portal or call the number on your card and ask, “Which telehealth providers are in-network for my plan?”

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—many do, but it depends on the provider and your plan.

Common cases:

  • In-network telehealth: often covered like an office visit
  • Out-of-network: may be partly covered or not covered
  • Cash-pay only: some telehealth services don’t take insurance

Best way to check:

  1. Ask the telehealth provider if they accept your insurer
  2. Check whether they’re in-network
  3. Confirm your plan’s telehealth benefits and copay

If you want, I can help you figure out what to ask your insurer.

Which telehealth services have low copays? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Low copays usually come from insurance-covered telehealth, not the app itself. The best-known options that often end up $0–$25 with many plans are:

  • Teladoc Health
  • Amwell
  • MDLive
  • Included Health / Doctor on Demand
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

If you want cheap self-pay telehealth (no insurance needed), these are often low-cost:

  • Sesame Care — often $29–$99 visits
  • GoodRx Care — often $19+
  • K Health — subscription-style care, often lower than traditional urgent care
  • PlushCare — sometimes low if your insurance is accepted, otherwise higher

Best move: check your insurer’s app/website for “virtual care” or “telehealth,” since that’s where the lowest copays usually are.

If you want, I can also give you the cheapest options for specific needs like urgent care, mental health, or prescriptions.

retrieval Mentioned

The lowest copays are usually on telehealth services bundled with your health plan or employer benefits—often $0 to $10. Good places to check:

  • MDLIVE — participating plans may be as low as $0; one member plan shows $10 copay. (mdlive.com)
  • Teladoc Health — with insurance, general medical visits can be as low as $0. (teladoc.com)
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health — covered visits are often $0 depending on benefits. (doctorondemand.com)
  • LiveHealth Online — cost varies by plan; some plans include telehealth as an in-network covered benefit, and you see the price before booking. (livehealthonline.com)
  • Amwell — many insurers cover it as a benefit, and your copay depends on your plan. (patients.amwell.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest options for your insurance if you tell me your insurer or employer.

How much does online urgent care cost without insurance? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Without insurance, online urgent care usually costs about $40–$150 per visit.

Typical ranges:

  • $40–$75: basic video visit
  • $75–$125: urgent care platforms with faster access or more complex visits
  • $125–$200+: some services that include prescriptions, specialist review, or after-hours care

Common options and rough self-pay prices:

  • PlushCare: often around $129/visit
  • Sesame: can be $29–$79+
  • Teladoc: often $0–$89+ depending on plan/self-pay
  • Amwell: commonly $69–$99+
  • K Health: often $49–$59 for urgent care-style visits

Extra costs can include:

  • Prescription medication
  • Lab tests
  • Imaging/referrals
  • Follow-up visits

If you want, I can compare the cheapest online urgent care options right now.

retrieval Not mentioned

Online urgent care without insurance usually runs about $49–$99 per visit for a basic doctor consult, depending on the service. For example, Amwell has advertised visits at $49, Doctor On Demand lists $99 for uninsured patients, and Teladoc’s no-insurance urgent care is $89/visit. (business.amwell.com)

If you need prescriptions, tests, or follow-up care, the total can be higher. Some platforms also have separate pricing by visit type. (teladochealth.com)

If you want, I can compare a few cheap options right now.

What telehealth providers have subscription plans? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some telehealth providers that offer subscription/membership plans:

  • Amazon One Medical — annual membership for primary care
  • PlushCare — monthly membership for doctor visits and prescriptions
  • Sesame Care Plus — subscription for discounted visits and care
  • K Health — membership-based primary care/chat-based care
  • Hims & Hers — subscription plans for meds and ongoing care
  • Ro — membership/subscription programs for men’s/women’s health and weight loss
  • Nurx — subscription options for birth control, acne, migraine, etc.
  • Talkspace — monthly therapy subscriptions
  • BetterHelp — weekly billed therapy subscription
  • Forward — premium membership-based primary care
  • SteadyMD — subscription-based virtual primary care
  • Circle Medical — membership options in some markets

If you want, I can also narrow this down by lowest cost, therapy, primary care, or prescription meds.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—several telehealth providers use subscription or membership plans. Common examples:

  • Amazon One Medical — membership is $9/month or $99/year for Prime members and $199/year for non-Prime members. (health.amazon.com)
  • Hims & Hers — uses recurring subscription-style plans; some categories require an active membership, e.g. weight-loss membership pricing is shown as $39 first month, then $149/month. (hims.com)
  • Talkspace — offers subscription plans for therapy/psychiatry, including monthly/quarterly/bi-annual plans. (investors.talkspace.com)
  • K Health — has a membership model; Primary Care is $49 for the first month, then billed in advance in 3-month blocks. (khealth.com)
  • PlushCare — membership starts at $19.99/month. (plushcare.com)
  • Found — has subscription pricing for its weight-loss program. (joinfound.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down by category:

  • primary care
  • mental health
  • weight loss
  • men’s/women’s health
Are virtual doctor visits covered by my health plan? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

It depends on your specific plan.

Quick ways to check:

  • Look for “telehealth” or “virtual visits” on your member ID card or in your insurer app
  • Search your plan’s benefits for video visits, e-visits, or telemedicine
  • Call the number on your insurance card and ask:
    • “Are virtual primary care visits covered?”
    • “Are virtual urgent care visits covered?”
    • “Do I need to use a network provider like Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE?”
    • “What’s my copay?”

Common patterns:

  • Many plans cover virtual visits, often with the same or a lower copay than in-person care
  • Some only cover visits through specific platforms like Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE
  • Mental health teletherapy is often covered separately from medical virtual visits

If you want, send me your insurer and plan name, and I can help you figure out what to look for.

retrieval Not mentioned

Maybe — it depends on your specific plan.

Usually, virtual doctor visits are covered if:

  • your plan includes telehealth/telemedicine benefits,
  • the provider is in-network,
  • the visit is medically necessary,
  • and it’s the right type of service for your plan.

Check these 3 things:

  1. Your insurer’s app or member portal: look for telehealth, virtual visits, or digital care.
  2. Your Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC): search for telemedicine.
  3. Call the number on your insurance card and ask:
    • Are virtual primary care visits covered?
    • Are urgent care video visits covered?
    • Is there a copay, deductible, or coinsurance?
    • Do I need an in-network doctor?

If you want, send me:

  • your insurer name,
  • plan type (HMO/PPO/EPO/Medicare/Medicaid),
  • and state,

and I can help you figure it out.

What is the price for an online doctor visit? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Online doctor visits usually cost about $30–$100 without insurance, depending on the service and visit type.

Examples:

  • Teladoc: often around $89+
  • Amwell: commonly $69–$99
  • MDLive: often $82+
  • Sesame: can be as low as $29–$49 for some visits

With insurance, your cost may be $0–$50 copay.

If you want, I can also tell you the cheapest options for urgent care, therapy, or a prescription refill.

retrieval Not mentioned

For a cash-pay online doctor visit in the U.S., a common range is about $19–$70 depending on the platform and membership. Examples: GoodRx Care says visits start at $19 for Gold members and $39–$70 without membership; Amwell lists virtual urgent-care visits at $69. (goodrx.com)

If you have insurance, the cost can be $0 or your normal copay, depending on your plan. Teladoc says general medical visits can be as low as $0 per visit based on benefits, and Cigna says some virtual care services may have no additional cost. (teladoc.com)

If you want, I can look up the exact price for a specific service like urgent care, primary care, mental health, or a particular provider.

Which telehealth services offer affordable prescriptions? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Some affordable telehealth options for prescriptions:

  • GoodRx Care — often one of the cheapest visit fees; useful if you just need a prescription and want to compare pharmacy prices with GoodRx.
  • Sesame — low-cost self-pay telehealth visits; good for basic prescription refills and common conditions.
  • Lemonaid Health — transparent pricing, often competitive for ongoing meds.
  • Ro / Hims / Hers — good for specific meds like hair loss, ED, weight loss, and some chronic-care prescriptions.
  • Nurx — strong for birth control, acne, and sexual health; often low-cost with insurance or cash-pay.
  • Wisp — affordable for women’s health prescriptions, including birth control and UTI treatment.
  • PlushCare — more like primary care; usually pricier than Sesame/GoodRx Care, but sometimes covered by insurance.

If you want the cheapest route, start with Sesame or GoodRx Care, then compare the medication price at your pharmacy using GoodRx or SingleCare.

If you tell me the medication or condition, I can point you to the best low-cost service.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are some U.S. telehealth services that are usually budget-friendly for prescription-related visits:

  • GoodRx Care — visits start at $19 with Gold, or $39–$70 without; prescriptions are sent to your pharmacy, and medication cost is separate. (goodrx.com)
  • Lemonaid Health — most consultations are $25; they also offer fast prescription handling and pharmacy shipping. (support.lemonaidhealth.com)
  • Sesame — telehealth visits start at $37, with some prescription-refill visits advertised from $34. (sesamecare.com)
  • K Health — primary care starts at $49 for the first month for unlimited virtual care, including refills; they also offer one-time visits. (khealth.com)
  • PlushCare — more insurance-friendly than cash-cheap; $30 or less is common with insurance, or $129 self-pay, plus a prescription discount card. (plushcare.com)

If you want the cheapest simple prescription/refill option, I’d usually start with GoodRx Care, Lemonaid, or Sesame. If you want, I can also narrow this down by condition (birth control, UTI, ED, acne, weight loss, anxiety, etc.).

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers? 40/mo
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

The “best” direct-to-consumer telehealth provider depends on what you need. Top picks:

  • PlushCare — best overall for general primary care, labs, and follow-up care.
  • Teladoc Health — best for broad availability and employer-style telehealth coverage.
  • Amwell — solid all-around option, especially for urgent care and specialist access.
  • Sesame — best for cash-pay, transparent pricing, and fast self-booking.
  • K Health — best for AI-assisted symptom intake and basic primary care/urgent care.
  • Ro — best for men’s health, weight loss, hair loss, and sexual health.
  • Hims/Hers — best for men’s/women’s health, mental health, hair loss, and ED.

Quick rule of thumb:

  • General care: PlushCare or Teladoc
  • Lowest-friction cash pay: Sesame
  • Condition-specific care: Ro or Hims/Hers
  • Fast symptom check + care plan: K Health

If you want, I can also rank them for cost, mental health, urgent care, or prescription convenience.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • PlushCare — best overall for primary care, ongoing prescriptions, and follow-ups
  • Teladoc Health — best for broad availability and general medical visits
  • Amwell — strong all-around telehealth, especially if you want coverage through employers/insurance
  • Sesame — best for upfront cash pricing and self-pay visits
  • K Health — good low-cost option for primary care and AI-assisted symptom triage
  • Ro — best for men’s health, weight loss, hair loss, and sexual health
  • Hers — best for women’s health, weight loss, skincare, and mental health
  • Nurx — best for birth control, STI care, migraines, and acne
  • MDLive — solid for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: PlushCare
  • Best cheapest/self-pay: Sesame
  • Best for specialty care: Ro / Hers / Nurx

If you want, I can also rank them by price, prescription support, mental health, or best for uninsured patients.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers, depending on what you need:

  • Best overall primary care: PlushCare

Good for ongoing primary care, common illnesses, prescriptions, and referrals.

  • Best for fast same-day urgent care: Sesame Care

Marketplace-style pricing with quick access to doctors, often cheaper than insurance copays.

  • Best for mental health: Talkspace and BetterHelp

Both are strong for therapy; Talkspace also offers psychiatry in many areas.

  • Best for women’s health: Wisp and Everlywell

Wisp is especially strong for birth control, UTI, and sexual health; Everlywell is better for at-home testing plus clinician review.

  • Best for skin care/dermatology: Apostrophe and Curology

Great for acne, rosacea, anti-aging, and prescription skincare.

  • Best for weight loss care: Ro and Found

Both offer clinician-guided weight-loss programs, including GLP-1 access where appropriate.

  • Best for general low-cost care: MDLive and Teladoc

Broad availability, easy to use, and often covered by employers or insurers.

If you want, I can also give you the best telehealth providers by use case like ADHD, ED, hormones, pediatrics, or insurance-free options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

“Best” depends on what you want, but these are the strongest direct-to-consumer telehealth brands right now:

  • Best overall for convenience + breadth: Ro
    • Good for: weight loss, men’s health, ED, hair loss, smoking cessation, some primary care
    • Pros: polished app, clear pricing, strong brand
    • Best for: people who want a one-stop shop
  • Best for men’s health / hair loss / ED: Hims
    • Good for: ED, hair loss, anxiety, sleep, skin, weight loss
    • Pros: easy intake, fast prescriptions, well-known
    • Best for: straightforward treatment plans
  • Best for women’s health / birth control / STI care: Nurx
    • Good for: birth control, herpes, acne, UTI meds, STI testing, PrEP in some areas
    • Pros: strong women’s health focus, often insurance-friendly
    • Best for: ongoing reproductive health needs
  • Best low-cost cash-pay option: Sesame
    • Good for: primary care, urgent care, mental health, dermatology, specialty consults
    • Pros: transparent cash prices, often cheaper than insurance copays
    • Best for: people paying out of pocket
  • Best for general primary care: PlushCare
    • Good for: common illnesses, meds refills, chronic care, referrals, labs
    • Pros: more “real doctor visit” feel than many DTC brands
    • Best for: primary care replacement/backup
  • Best for reproductive/family health: Maven Clinic
    • Good for: fertility, pregnancy, postpartum, pediatrics, menopause
    • Pros: very strong women/family focus
    • Best for: employer-covered users, but available in some direct setups
  • Best for broad, established telehealth network: Teladoc
    • Good for: urgent care, primary care, mental health, chronic care
    • Pros: huge provider network, widely available
    • Best for: reliability and coverage breadth

Quick picks

  • Best overall: Ro
  • Best men’s health: Hims
  • Best women’s health: Nurx
  • Best cheapest cash-pay: Sesame
  • Best primary care: PlushCare

If you want, I can also rank these by price, prescription quality, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

“Best” depends on what you need, but these are some of the strongest direct-to-consumer telehealth options:

  • Teladoc — best all-around coverage for general urgent care, primary care, and mental health
  • Amwell — solid for broad medical visits and good insurer integration
  • Doctor on Demand — strong for convenient same-day physician visits and behavioral health
  • PlushCare — great for ongoing primary care, refills, and labs
  • Ro — best for men’s health, sexual health, hair loss, and weight loss
  • NURX — strong for birth control, STI testing/treatment, acne, and PrEP
  • Hims / Hers — best for straightforward consumer-friendly treatment in men’s/women’s health, hair loss, and mental health
  • Mint Health or Sesame — often cheaper cash-pay options for one-off visits

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best primary care: PlushCare
  • Best low-cost cash-pay: Sesame
  • Best specialty DTC care: Ro, NURX, Hims/Hers

If you tell me your use case—urgent care, therapy, weight loss, ED, hair loss, birth control, dermatology, or primary care—I can narrow it to the top 2–3.

What are the top telehealth companies for online doctor visits? 260/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top telehealth companies for online doctor visits:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest; broad primary care, mental health, and specialty services.
  • Amwell — strong video-visit platform; often used by employers and health plans.
  • MDLIVE — good for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Hims & Hers — best for convenient treatment in areas like sexual health, hair loss, skin, and mental health.
  • PlushCare — popular for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care.
  • Sesame — cash-pay marketplace with transparent pricing and fast access.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — solid for urgent care and therapy/psychiatry.
  • K Health — AI-assisted symptom checking plus online doctor visits.
  • Maven Clinic — excellent for women’s and family health, fertility, and pregnancy.
  • BetterHelp — best known for online therapy rather than general doctor visits.

If you want, I can also rank these by best overall, cheapest, or best for insurance coverage.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best-known telehealth companies for online doctor visits:

  1. Teladoc Health – one of the biggest telehealth platforms; good for general medical visits, mental health, and chronic care.
  2. Amwell – strong nationwide virtual urgent care and primary care options; often used through employer or health plan benefits.
  3. MDLIVE – popular for quick urgent care, dermatology, and therapy/psychiatry.
  4. PlushCare – good for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and common conditions; easy same-day appointments.
  5. Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) – solid for urgent care, therapy, and psychiatry.
  6. Amazon Clinic – convenient for chat-based care for common issues; available in many states.
  7. K Health – app-based, low-cost option for primary care and urgent issues; includes AI symptom intake.
  8. Talkspace – best known for online mental health therapy and psychiatry.

If you want, I can also narrow this down by best for primary care, mental health, low cost, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the top telehealth companies for online doctor visits:

  1. Teladoc Health — one of the biggest nationwide telehealth platforms; good for general medical visits, mental health, and some chronic care.
  2. Amwell — broad network of board-certified doctors; often available through employers and insurers.
  3. MDLive — strong for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  4. PlushCare — popular for primary care-style visits, prescriptions, and ongoing care.
  5. Doctor on Demand by Included Health — well-known for convenient video visits, especially primary care and mental health.
  6. K Health — app-based care with AI symptom checking plus doctor visits; often lower cost.
  7. Sesame — cash-pay marketplace with transparent pricing; good if you’re uninsured or want to compare prices.
  8. LiveHealth Online — solid option often tied to Anthem/Blue Cross plans.
  9. CVS Virtual Care / MinuteClinic Video Visits — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic services.
  10. Mayo Clinic Platform / eConsult options — more specialized, depending on access and condition.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  • cheapest
  • best for insurance
  • best for same-day visits
  • best for prescriptions
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best-known telehealth companies for online doctor visits:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the largest; good for general medical visits, mental health, and some chronic care.
  • Amwell — strong option for primary care, urgent care, and specialty visits.
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — popular for same-day doctor and therapy visits.
  • MDLIVE — solid for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • PlushCare — good for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing treatment.
  • 98point6 — convenient app-based virtual primary and urgent care.
  • K Health — AI-assisted triage plus doctor visits; often lower-cost.
  • LiveHealth Online — common with insurance plans; offers medical and mental health visits.
  • Sesame — cash-pay marketplace with transparent pricing, often good if you don’t want insurance.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for low cost, best for insurance, best for same-day visits, or best for mental health.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top telehealth companies for online doctor visits include:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and most widely covered for general medical, mental health, and chronic care visits.
  • Amwell — strong for urgent care, primary care, and specialty visits; often used through employer/insurance plans.
  • MDLive — popular for quick urgent care, dermatology, and therapy/psychiatry.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — good for same-day primary care and behavioral health.
  • K Health — app-first, AI-assisted symptom check and affordable doctor visits.
  • PlushCare — strong for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care.
  • LiveHealth Online — commonly tied to major insurers, good for PCP and mental health.
  • Talkspace — best known for therapy and psychiatry, not general urgent care.
  • BetterHelp — therapy-focused, not for medical doctor visits.
  • Bupa/third-party regional telehealth platforms — if you’re outside the U.S., top options vary by country.

If you want the best choice:

  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best for insurance-based access: Amwell or LiveHealth Online
  • Best for fast, affordable visits: K Health or MDLive
  • Best for primary care: PlushCare or Doctor On Demand
  • Best for therapy: Talkspace or BetterHelp

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance acceptance, or fastest appointment availability.

Which online telehealth services are most popular right now?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular online telehealth services right now are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest overall telehealth platforms
  • Amwell — widely used for doctor/video visits
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, mental health, and dermatology
  • Zocdoc — very popular for booking telehealth and in-person appointments
  • GoodRx Care — commonly used for affordable virtual visits and prescriptions
  • PlushCare — known for primary care-style telehealth
  • K Health — popular app-based care with AI symptom intake
  • Hims / Hers — especially popular for men’s/women’s health, hair loss, ED, and mental health
  • Included Health — often used through employers and health plans
  • Amazon Clinic — growing fast for convenient low-acuity care

If you want, I can also rank these by best for urgent care, mental health, primary care, or lowest cost.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

I can’t verify real-time rankings, but these are among the most popular online telehealth services right now in the U.S.:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest general telehealth brands
  • Amwell — widely used for urgent care and specialist visits
  • MDLive — popular for primary care, urgent care, and behavioral health
  • PlushCare — well-known for primary care and prescriptions
  • Talkspace — very popular for online therapy
  • BetterHelp — one of the largest online counseling platforms
  • Hims / Hers — popular for sexual health, hair loss, mental health, and more
  • Nurx — strong for birth control, STI care, and sexual health
  • K Health — AI-assisted telehealth + doctor visits
  • Doctor on Demand — a major brand, now part of Included Health

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  1. best for urgent care,
  2. best for therapy, or
  3. best for affordable pricing.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

A few of the most popular online telehealth services right now are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest names in virtual primary care, urgent care, and mental health.
  • Amwell — widely used by insurers and health systems.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — popular for urgent care and therapy/psychiatry.
  • PlushCare — known for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care.
  • MDLIVE — common for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • K Health — popular app-based care with AI-assisted symptom checking.
  • One Medical (Amazon) — not pure telehealth, but very popular for hybrid virtual/in-person primary care.

If you want, I can also break these down by best for urgent care, mental health, or primary care.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

A few of the most popular online telehealth services right now are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest names overall; broad urgent care, primary care, mental health, and chronic care.
  • Amwell — widely used by health plans and employers; good general medical and behavioral health visits.
  • MDLIVE — popular for quick urgent care, dermatology, and mental health.
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health — strong for virtual primary care and therapy/psychiatry.
  • Sesame — popular for self-pay, upfront pricing, and finding lower-cost visits.
  • PlushCare — well-known for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for common conditions; integrates with Amazon’s ecosystem.
  • K Health — app-based care with AI-assisted intake and virtual visits.

If you want, I can also rank them by: 1) cheapest, 2) best for mental health, or 3) best for urgent care.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular online telehealth services right now are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and best-known nationwide.
  • Amwell — widely used, especially through employer/insurance plans.
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, therapy, and psychiatry.
  • PlushCare — well-liked for primary care, prescriptions, and weight-loss care.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — strong brand recognition for medical and behavioral health.
  • Sesame — often chosen for lower out-of-pocket prices.
  • K Health — popular for app-based primary care and symptom checking.
  • Virtuwell — good for simple urgent-care style visits.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  1. best for insurance,
  2. cheapest cash-pay options, or
  3. best for mental health.
What are the best virtual care platforms for patients?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best virtual care platforms for patients, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 urgent care, primary care, mental health, and chronic care; widely available.
  • Amwell — strong general telehealth and specialist access; good for health systems and employer plans.
  • Included Health — excellent for navigation, care coordination, and helping patients find the right doctor or specialist.
  • MDLIVE — easy-to-use urgent care, therapy, psychiatry, and dermatology visits.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — solid for video visits with physicians and behavioral health.
  • PlushCare — good for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing management of common conditions.
  • Mercy Virtual / hospital-branded patient portals — best if you want care integrated with your existing health system.
  • K Health — convenient AI-assisted symptom intake plus clinician visits; good for fast access.
  • Talkspace — best for therapy and psychiatry, not general medical care.
  • BetterHelp — popular for therapy, though not a full medical platform.

Best overall for most patients: Teladoc Health or Included Health. Best for mental health: Talkspace or BetterHelp. Best for primary care + prescriptions: PlushCare or MDLIVE.

If you want, I can also rank them by cost, ease of use, insurance acceptance, or mental health care.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best virtual care platforms for patients, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the most established options for general urgent care, primary care, mental health, and some chronic care.
  • Amwell — strong for on-demand doctor visits and often used through employer/insurance plans.
  • MDLive — good for quick visits for common issues, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — easy-to-use app, especially solid for mental health and primary care.
  • K Health — good for affordable first-stop care, symptom checking, and prescription support.
  • PlushCare — strong for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and lab follow-up.
  • Bend Health — focused on pediatric and family behavioral health.
  • Talkspace — best known for therapy and psychiatry.
  • BetterHelp — popular for therapy, though not ideal if you need psychiatry or insurance billing.
  • Nurx — best for women’s health, birth control, STI testing, and some sexual health needs.

If you want the “best” overall:

  • Best all-around: Teladoc Health
  • Best for therapy: Talkspace
  • Best for primary care: PlushCare
  • Best budget-friendly: K Health
  • Best for convenience: Doctor On Demand

If you tell me your main need—primary care, therapy, urgent care, pediatrics, or women’s health—I can narrow it to the top 3.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best virtual care platforms for patients, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the broadest all-around options for primary care, urgent care, mental health, and chronic condition support.
  • Amwell — strong for video visits with doctors, therapy, and specialty care; often used through health plans.
  • MDLive — good for quick access to urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Zocdoc — best for finding and booking telehealth appointments with in-network doctors.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — solid for primary care, urgent care, and therapy with a straightforward app experience.
  • PlushCare — popular for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care from the same clinician.
  • K Health — useful for AI-guided symptom checking plus affordable virtual primary/urgent care.
  • Ahead — especially good for mental health and therapy-focused care.

Best picks by need:

  • Overall best: Teladoc Health
  • Best for booking doctors: Zocdoc
  • Best for mental health: Doctor on Demand / Amwell / Ahead
  • Best for low-cost primary care: K Health / PlushCare

If you want, I can narrow this down by insurance acceptance, price, mental health, or chronic care.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best virtual care platforms for patients, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — Best all-around for general medical visits, mental health, and some chronic care support.
  • Amwell — Good for doctor-on-demand visits and employer/insurance-based access.
  • MDLive — Strong for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Included Health — Great for care navigation, second opinions, and finding the right specialist.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — Easy app-based primary care, urgent care, and therapy.
  • Amazon Clinic — Convenient for simple, common conditions and message-based care in supported states.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — Good if you already use CVS and want straightforward primary/urgent care.
  • K Health — Best for affordable primary care and symptom-based chat visits.
  • PlushCare — Popular for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing follow-up.
  • Lyra Health / BetterHelp / Talkspace — Best for mental health and therapy-focused care.
Best by use case
  • Urgent care: Teladoc, MDLive, Amwell
  • Primary care: PlushCare, K Health, Doctor on Demand
  • Mental health: Lyra Health, Talkspace, BetterHelp
  • Care navigation/specialists: Included Health

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best low-cost options,
  2. the best platforms covered by insurance, or
  3. a top 5 ranked list.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best virtual care platforms for patients, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — Best overall for broad access; primary care, urgent care, mental health, and chronic care support.
  • Amwell — Strong all-around telehealth platform, especially good if your health plan already includes it.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — Great for quick doctor visits and behavioral health; easy-to-use app.
  • PlushCare — Best for ongoing primary care and prescription management.
  • MDLIVE — Good for urgent care, therapy, and psychiatry, often covered by insurers.
  • Sesame — Best for self-pay patients who want transparent pricing and same-day appointments.
  • K Health — Good for symptom checking plus low-cost virtual primary care.
  • LiveHealth Online — Solid option if you have Anthem/Blue Cross coverage.

Best picks by need

  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best for affordable self-pay: Sesame
  • Best for primary care: PlushCare
  • Best for mental health: Doctor On Demand / MDLIVE
  • Best if insurance-covered: Amwell / LiveHealth Online / MDLIVE

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or quality of care.

What telehealth providers do people recommend most?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People usually recommend these telehealth providers most often:

  • Teladoc Health — broad primary care, urgent care, mental health
  • Amwell — solid general telehealth, often used through health plans
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, dermatology, therapy/psychiatry
  • PlushCare — strong for primary care and prescriptions
  • K Health — good app experience, quick symptom-based care
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — well-liked for video visits and mental health
  • Hims / Hers — convenient for men’s/women’s health, skincare, mental health, ED, hair loss
  • Talkspace / BetterHelp — most commonly recommended for online therapy

Best pick depends on what you need:

  • Urgent care: Teladoc, MDLIVE
  • Primary care: PlushCare, Teladoc
  • Therapy: Talkspace, BetterHelp
  • Specialty/ongoing care: Hims/Hers, K Health

If you want, I can narrow it down to the best telehealth providers for your insurance, state, and condition.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People most often recommend these telehealth providers:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest general-purpose option; good for urgent care, primary care, mental health.
  • Amwell — solid all-around telehealth, often covered by insurance.
  • MDLive — popular for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — well-liked for easy video visits and mental health.
  • PlushCare — great if you want ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and chronic care.
  • Sesame — often cheapest if you’re paying cash/self-pay.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for quick treatment of common conditions.
  • K Health — good app-based care with symptom checking and ongoing support.
  • Circle Medical — strong primary care option in many major cities.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS.

If you want, I can narrow it down to the best one for insurance, mental health, prescriptions, or lowest cost.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

People most often recommend these telehealth providers:

  • PlushCare — strong for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and chronic care.
  • Teladoc — widely available, good all-around option, often covered by insurance.
  • Amwell — solid insurance-based telehealth, good for general medical visits.
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, dermatology, and mental health.
  • Sesame — best-known cash-pay marketplace; good if you want transparent pricing.
  • K Health — good for quick symptom-based care and lower-cost visits.
  • Amazon One Medical — highly rated for primary care if available in your area, but membership may be worth it only for frequent use.

If you tell me your goal—cheap urgent care, primary care, therapy/psychiatry, or prescription refills—I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

The most commonly recommended telehealth providers are:

  • Teladoc Health — big network, broad primary care/urgent care coverage
  • Amwell — solid all-around telehealth, often tied to insurance plans
  • Doctor on Demand / Included Health — popular for primary care and urgent care
  • PlushCare — often praised for easier ongoing primary care and prescriptions
  • Sesame — good if you want transparent cash-pay pricing
  • K Health — useful for quick online visits and symptom-based care
  • Talkspace — one of the biggest names for therapy/psychiatry
  • BetterHelp — widely used for therapy, though reviews are mixed

Best pick depends on what you need:

  • Urgent care: Teladoc, Amwell
  • Primary care + prescriptions: PlushCare, Doctor on Demand
  • Low-cost self-pay: Sesame
  • Mental health: Talkspace, BetterHelp

If you want, I can narrow it down to the best telehealth providers for your insurance, budget, or condition.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People often recommend these telehealth providers most:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest all-around option; good for urgent care, general medical, mental health, and some chronic care
  • Amwell — solid for primary care and behavioral health; often used through insurance
  • MDLIVE — popular for quick visits, especially urgent care, dermatology, and therapy/psychiatry
  • K Health — liked for lower-cost doctor chats and AI-guided symptom checks
  • Doctor on Demand (by Included Health) — well-regarded for primary care and mental health
  • Hims & Hers — best known for men’s/women’s health, hair loss, sexual health, and dermatology
  • Sesame — often recommended for transparent cash pricing and specialist visits
  • PlushCare — strong for primary care and ongoing medication management

Best pick depends on what you need:

  • Fast urgent visit: Teladoc, MDLIVE
  • Primary care: PlushCare, Amwell, Doctor on Demand
  • Mental health: Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE
  • Low-cost self-pay: Sesame, K Health
  • Specialty care / lifestyle meds: Hims & Hers

If you want, I can narrow it down to the best telehealth for insurance, mental health, or cheap same-day visits.

What are the best app-based telehealth services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best app-based telehealth services are:

  • Teladoc Health — very broad coverage, 24/7 urgent care, mental health, dermatology, and chronic care.
  • Amwell — strong all-around telehealth app; good for urgent care and behavioral health.
  • MDLive — solid for general medical visits, therapy, psychiatry, and dermatology.
  • One Medical — best if you want a premium primary-care experience plus virtual visits (membership-based).
  • Sesame — good for pay-as-you-go visits with transparent pricing, often cheaper than insurance-based options.
  • Doctor On Demand — easy-to-use app with good availability for urgent care and mental health.
  • Hims / Hers — best for specific needs like men’s/women’s health, hair loss, sexual health, acne, anxiety, etc.
  • K Health — good for quick symptom checking and low-cost medical visits.

Best overall:

  • Teladoc for widest coverage
  • One Medical for best primary care
  • Sesame for low-cost self-pay visits
  • MDLive for balanced app experience

If you want, I can also rank them by cost, insurance acceptance, or mental health care.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the top app-based telehealth services worth looking at:

  • Teladoc Health — Best overall for broad coverage and 24/7 urgent care, mental health, and chronic care support.
  • Amwell — Best for straightforward video visits with strong insurance acceptance.
  • MDLive — Good all-around option for urgent care, dermatology, therapy, and psychiatry.
  • PlushCare — Great if you want a more primary-care-like experience, with easy follow-ups and prescriptions.
  • Sesame — Best for cash-pay pricing and comparing providers upfront.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — Strong for urgent care and behavioral health.
  • Amazon Clinic — Convenient for common conditions if you already use Amazon.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for cash pay: Sesame
  • Best for primary care feel: PlushCare
  • Best for mental health: MDLive or Doctor on Demand

If you want, I can also give you the best telehealth apps by use case (therapy, dermatology, prescriptions, pediatrics, low-cost).

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best app-based telehealth services right now, depending on what you need:

Best overall
  • Teladoc Health — strong all-around option for urgent care, mental health, and some chronic care.
  • Amwell — good general telehealth with a straightforward app and broad insurance support.
Best for primary care / ongoing care
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent app experience, easy scheduling, and solid virtual + in-person care.
  • K Health — good if you want a fast app-based doctor visit, especially for common conditions.
Best for mental health
  • Talkspace — messaging and video therapy/psychiatry.
  • BetterHelp — popular for therapy, easy to use, large provider network.
Best for women’s health / sexual health
  • Nurx — great for birth control, STI treatment/testing, PrEP, and acne care.
  • Planned Parenthood Direct — good for contraception and sexual health services in supported states.
Best for low-cost urgent care
  • MDLIVE — convenient for minor illnesses, allergies, skin issues, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — reliable for quick video visits.
Best if you want care through your insurer
  • Blue Shield/UnitedHealthcare/Cigna/Aetna apps — often cheapest if you use the built-in telehealth benefit.
Quick picks
  • Best overall app: One Medical
  • Best for mental health: Talkspace
  • Best for same-day general care: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best for women’s health: Nurx

If you want, I can also rank them for price, insurance coverage, or best for kids.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best app-based telehealth services, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — best overall for broad coverage: urgent care, primary care, dermatology, mental health.
  • Amwell — strong all-around option, often tied to major health plans and hospitals.
  • MDLive — good for quick urgent care and mental health visits, easy app experience.
  • PlushCare — great for ongoing primary care and prescription refills.
  • Included Health — best if you want care navigation plus telehealth support through an employer/plan.
  • Talkspace — best for therapy and psychiatry by app.
  • BetterHelp — popular for therapy, though not ideal if you need medication management.
  • Sesame — often one of the cheapest cash-pay options for one-off visits.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — solid urgent care and primary care in one app.

Best picks by use:

  • Urgent care: Teladoc, MDLive, Amwell
  • Primary care: PlushCare, Teladoc
  • Mental health: Talkspace, BetterHelp
  • Cheapest self-pay: Sesame

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for kids.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best app-based telehealth services:

  • Teladoc Health — best all-around for broad coverage and 24/7 urgent care, mental health, and some chronic care.
  • Amwell — strong for general medical visits and behavioral health, often easy to use through employer/insurance plans.
  • MDLive — good for quick urgent care, dermatology, and therapy/psychiatry.
  • PlushCare — great for primary care-style visits, prescriptions, and ongoing care; usually more “doctor you can follow up with.”
  • Sesame — best if you want transparent cash pricing and don’t want insurance involved.
  • Talkspace — best for therapy and psychiatry specifically.
  • BetterHelp — popular for therapy, though not ideal if you need medication management.

Best picks by need

  • General telehealth: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Primary care + prescriptions: PlushCare
  • Lowest upfront pricing: Sesame
  • Mental health: Talkspace or BetterHelp
  • Fast urgent care: MDLive

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance coverage, or best iPhone/Android app experience.

Which telehealth provider is best for getting prescriptions online?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: PlushCare — strong for getting legitimate online prescriptions from board-certified doctors, plus easy follow-up care and refills.

Good alternatives:

  • Sesame — usually the cheapest for one-off visits and prescriptions
  • Doctor On Demand (now Included Health) — solid for fast same-day appointments
  • Teladoc — best if you want broad insurance coverage and easy access
  • Amwell — good mainstream option through many health plans

Important: telehealth can’t prescribe everything (especially many controlled substances), and the “best” provider depends on what medication you need.

If you tell me what prescription you’re trying to get and whether you have insurance, I can point you to the best fit.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

It depends on what you need, but these are strong options for getting prescriptions online:

  • GoodRx Care — best for simple, low-cost visits and common meds.
  • Teladoc — best for broad availability and general doctor access.
  • PlushCare — best for primary-care-style ongoing care and refills.
  • Zocdoc — best if you want to book a real doctor fast (then ask for a prescription).
  • Nurx — best for birth control, PrEP, acne, and sexual health.
  • Hims / Hers — best for men’s/women’s wellness, hair loss, ED, anxiety, etc.
  • Roman — best for men’s health and ED treatment.

Best overall for most people: PlushCare or GoodRx Care. Best for cheapest straightforward prescriptions: GoodRx Care. Best for specialized meds: Nurx or Hims/Hers.

If you want, I can narrow it down by the specific prescription you’re trying to get.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

If you want the best overall telehealth provider for online prescriptions, I’d usually point to PlushCare.

Why PlushCare:

  • Real U.S.-licensed doctors
  • Good for common meds (antibiotics, blood pressure, diabetes, anxiety/depression, etc.)
  • Can send prescriptions directly to your pharmacy
  • Often better continuity than “one-off” urgent care apps

Good alternatives by need:

  • Lemonaid Health — best for straightforward, common prescriptions and quick visits
  • GoodRx Care — usually cheapest for simple self-pay prescriptions
  • Teladoc — broad availability, solid for general primary care
  • Amazon One Medical — best if you want ongoing care and already use Amazon/One Medical

Important: No legit telehealth provider will prescribe all medications online, especially many controlled substances (like Adderall, Xanax, opioids).

If you tell me what medication or condition you need help with, I can suggest the best provider for that specific case.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: PlushCare

  • Good for common prescriptions, fast virtual visits, and ongoing primary-care style follow-up.
  • Usually best if you want a real doctor to prescribe things like blood pressure meds, antibiotics, asthma meds, etc.

Best cheap option: Sesame

  • Often lower-cost cash pay.
  • Good if you mainly want a one-time online visit and prescription.

Best for specific needs:

  • Nurx — birth control, STI care, acne, migraine, HSV
  • Hims / Hers — ED, hair loss, some mental health and skin care
  • Lemonaid Health — straightforward treatment for common conditions

Important: If you need controlled substances or a narcotic, most telehealth providers won’t prescribe them online.

If you tell me what medication you need and what state/country you’re in, I can point you to the best option.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: PlushCare — good for common prescriptions, ongoing care, and often accepts insurance.

Best cheap self-pay option: Sesame — usually lower cash prices for a one-off visit.

Best by condition:

  • Nurx — birth control, STI treatment, PrEP, acne, migraine
  • Hims / Hers — ED, hair loss, sexual health, anxiety/weight-loss programs
  • Wisp — women’s health, BV/yeast, birth control
  • Amazon One Medical — solid primary care + prescriptions if you want a more traditional clinic feel

Quick rule: If you want a regular doctor-like visit and a prescription, pick PlushCare. If you want the cheapest easy visit, pick Sesame.

If you tell me what medication or condition you need, I can point you to the best provider for that specifically.

What are the best online doctor services for adults? 50/mo
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best online doctor services for adults, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — best all-around for primary care, urgent care, and mental health
  • Amwell — strong for same-day video visits and specialty care
  • MDLIVE — good for urgent care, dermatology, and therapy/psychiatry
  • PlushCare — great for ongoing primary care and prescriptions
  • Amazon One Medical — best if you want a polished primary care experience and in-person + virtual care
  • K Health — good low-cost option for quick medical advice and common issues
  • Hims & Hers — best for men’s/women’s health, hair loss, ED, acne, and mental health
  • Doctor On Demand — solid for urgent care and behavioral health

Best picks by use case

  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best for primary care: PlushCare or Amazon One Medical
  • Best for urgent care: MDLIVE or Amwell
  • Best for mental health: Teladoc Health or MDLIVE
  • Best budget option: K Health

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or fastest appointments.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best online doctor services for adults, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — Best all-around for general medical visits, urgent care, and chronic-condition support.
  • Amwell — Strong option for video visits with board-certified doctors and specialists.
  • MDLive — Good for urgent care, primary care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Sesame — Best for affordable self-pay visits with transparent pricing.
  • K Health — Good if you want AI-guided symptom checking plus quick doctor access.
  • PlushCare — Best for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and follow-ups.
  • Doctor on Demand — Solid for same-day urgent care and mental health visits.
  • Included Health — Good for employer/insurance-based navigation and care coordination.

Best picks by use case

  • Cheapest self-pay: Sesame
  • Best primary care: PlushCare
  • Best urgent care: Teladoc or MDLive
  • Best mental health: Doctor on Demand or Amwell
  • Best for insurance/employer plans: Included Health

If you want, I can also give you the best options for your budget, insurance, or country.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best online doctor services for adults in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc Health — best all-around for general medical visits, urgent care, and chronic condition support.
  • Amwell — strong for primary care and specialty visits, good video visit quality.
  • Doctor on Demand — great for quick same-day visits, especially for common issues like colds, rashes, UTIs, and mental health.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for simple, common conditions and prescription refills in supported states.
  • Hims & Hers — best for men’s/women’s health needs like hair loss, ED, acne, anxiety, and skincare.
  • PlushCare — good for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and follow-up care.
  • MDLIVE — solid option for urgent care, behavioral health, and dermatology.
  • LiveHealth Online — reliable for primary care, therapy, and psychiatry.

Best picks by use case

  • Overall best: Teladoc Health
  • Best for fast simple visits: Doctor on Demand
  • Best for ongoing primary care: PlushCare
  • Best for mental health: Doctor on Demand, Teladoc, or MDLIVE
  • Best for cheap/easy online treatment: Amazon Clinic or Hims & Hers

If you want, I can also give you the cheapest options, best for mental health, or best with insurance.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best online doctor services for adults, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc — best all-around for general medical visits, minor illnesses, and 24/7 access.
  • Amwell — strong for urgent care and also good for therapy/psychiatry.
  • MDLive — solid, widely used, good for skin issues, urgent care, and behavioral health.
  • Sesame — best if you want transparent cash pricing and the option to shop around.
  • Circle Medical — great for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and full-service virtual care.
  • PlushCare — good for primary care, follow-ups, and prescription management.
  • Talkspace — best for online therapy and psychiatry.
  • BetterHelp — popular for therapy, though not psychiatry in the same way as medical telehealth platforms.
  • K Health — good for affordable primary care-style visits and symptom checking.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for common conditions like UTIs, allergies, and acne.

Best picks by use:

  • General doctor visit: Teladoc or MDLive
  • Primary care: Circle Medical or PlushCare
  • Mental health: Talkspace or Amwell
  • Lowest-cost/self-pay: Sesame
  • Fast, simple visits: Amazon Clinic or K Health

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for prescription refills.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For most adults, the best online doctor services are:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best for: general primary care, common illnesses, mental health, dermatology
    • Strong app, broad availability, good for ongoing care
  2. Amwell
    • Best for: urgent care visits, primary care, therapy/psychiatry
    • Works well if you want a traditional video-visit experience
  3. MDLIVE
    • Best for: urgent care, mental health, skin issues
    • Usually easy to get a quick appointment
  4. PlushCare
    • Best for: primary care, prescriptions, ongoing follow-up
    • Good if you want a more “regular doctor” feel
  5. Sesame
    • Best for: low-cost self-pay visits
    • Great if you don’t want insurance and want transparent pricing
  6. Zocdoc
    • Best for: finding and booking doctors online
    • Not a doctor service itself, but very useful for comparing options
Best overall picks
  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for affordable self-pay: Sesame
  • Best for primary care: PlushCare
  • Best for quick urgent care: MDLIVE
When to use online care

Good for: colds, rashes, UTIs, allergies, minor infections, refills, anxiety/depression follow-ups. Not good for: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe symptoms, stroke signs, major injuries.

If you want, I can also give you the best online doctor services by insurance, price, or specialty.

What are the most trusted telehealth options for consumers?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For U.S. consumers, the most trusted telehealth brands are usually:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest name overall; broad urgent care, mental health, and chronic care support
  • Amwell — strong general medical telehealth, often used by employers and health plans
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — very popular for primary care, urgent care, and therapy/psychiatry
  • MDLIVE — solid option for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health
  • PlushCare — good for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care with the same doctor
  • CVS Health Virtual Care / MinuteClinic Video Visits — convenient if you already use CVS
  • Kaiser Permanente Telehealth — among the most trusted if you’re a Kaiser member

If you want the safest pick, I’d start with Teladoc, Doctor On Demand, or PlushCare.

Quick trust checklist:

  • Board-certified clinicians
  • HIPAA-compliant platform
  • Works with your insurance
  • Clear pricing
  • Easy prescription/referral process

If you tell me your country and whether you need urgent care, therapy, primary care, or weight-loss/men’s/women’s health, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most trusted consumer telehealth options in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and most established virtual-care brands
  • Amwell — widely used by health systems and insurers
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — strong reputation for primary care, urgent care, and behavioral health
  • MDLive by Evernorth/Cigna — well-known, especially if your insurance includes it
  • Sesame — good for transparent self-pay pricing
  • Amazon One Medical — strong if you want membership-based primary care plus virtual visits
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient for common issues and prescription needs
  • Kaiser Permanente Virtual Care — very trusted if you’re already a Kaiser member

Best picks by use case:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best with insurance: MDLive or Doctor on Demand
  • Best self-pay transparency: Sesame
  • Best primary-care membership: Amazon One Medical

If you want, I can narrow this down by price, insurance, mental health, or prescription refills.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the most trusted consumer telehealth options in the U.S.:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and most established telehealth brands; broad availability and strong employer/insurance integration.
  • Amwell — widely used by major health systems and insurers; good for general urgent care and behavioral health.
  • MDLive — well-known for 24/7 urgent care, mental health, and dermatology; often covered by insurance.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — popular for primary care, urgent care, and therapy/psychiatry.
  • PlushCare — strong reputation for primary care and ongoing doctor relationships; subscription-style model.
  • Sesame — good if you want transparent cash prices and easy self-pay visits.
  • Amazon One Medical — best if you want a premium primary care + virtual care experience; membership-based.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient and familiar, especially if you already use CVS.

If you want the “most trusted” by category:

  • Best overall network/coverage: Teladoc, Amwell
  • Best for primary care: PlushCare, Amazon One Medical
  • Best for self-pay simplicity: Sesame
  • Best for mental health: Doctor On Demand, Amwell, MDLive

If you tell me your country, insurance, and whether you need urgent care, primary care, or therapy, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most widely trusted consumer telehealth brands in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad virtual urgent care and primary care; very common through employers and insurers.
  • Amwell — strong hospital/health-plan partnerships; good for general care and specialty visits.
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — well-regarded for easy-access urgent care and mental health.
  • PlushCare — strong option for primary care, prescriptions, and follow-ups.
  • Sesame — often best for transparent self-pay pricing and cash-pay visits.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic.
  • K Health — good app-based option for primary care-style visits and symptom checking.

If you want the safest pick, choose the one:

  1. Covered by your insurance
  2. Available in your state
  3. Staffed by board-certified clinicians
  4. Able to share records with your regular doctor

For mental health specifically, also look at:

  • Talkspace
  • BetterHelp
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health

If you tell me your country, insurance, and what you need it for (urgent care, therapy, prescriptions, primary care), I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most widely trusted consumer telehealth options are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and most established; broad urgent care, mental health, dermatology, and chronic care.
  • Amwell — strong reputation, often used through health plans; good for general medical visits and therapy.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — popular for primary care, urgent care, and behavioral health; easy app experience.
  • PlushCare — good for primary care, prescriptions, and ongoing care; often liked for continuity with the same doctor.
  • MDLive — solid, long-running telehealth provider; common through employer and insurance plans.
  • K Health — app-first, affordable, useful for quick symptom checks and primary care-style visits.
  • One Medical (Amazon) — best if you want premium primary care plus virtual visits, but availability depends on your area.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/Walgreens-style retail health services.

If you want the “most trusted” pick by use case:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best for primary care continuity: PlushCare or One Medical
  • Best for mental health: Doctor On Demand or Teladoc
  • Best for insurance-based access: Amwell or MDLive

If you tell me your country, insurance, and what you need it for, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

What are the best virtual urgent care providers? 40/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best-known virtual urgent care providers in the U.S.:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, good for common urgent issues (fever, rash, sinus infection, UTI, etc.)
  • Amwell — strong nationwide telehealth network; often available through employer/insurance plans
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, mental health, and dermatology; usually quick access
  • Doctor on Demand (Included Health) — solid quality, easy app experience, widely used by employers/insurers
  • K Health — good app-based triage plus video visits; often cheaper self-pay options
  • PlushCare — good for same-day primary/urgent care style visits and prescriptions
  • Sesame — good if you want transparent cash pricing and can shop by clinician
  • Virtuwell — nurse-practitioner-led, fixed-price, very simple for common conditions

Best overall: Teladoc, Doctor on Demand, or MDLIVE Best for cash price: Sesame or Virtuwell Best for employer/insurance access: Amwell, Teladoc, MDLIVE

If you want, I can also give you the best virtual urgent care options by insurance, state, or condition.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

A few of the best virtual urgent care providers in the U.S. are:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best overall for broad availability and 24/7 access
    • Good for common issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies, and sinus infections
  2. Amwell
    • Best for strong insurance coverage and easy specialist access
    • Often integrated with health plans and employer benefits
  3. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • Best for fast access and polished app experience
    • Good for urgent care plus primary care and mental health
  4. Mercy Virtual / Virtual Care by major health systems
    • Best if you want care tied to a specific hospital system
    • Useful for records continuity and follow-up
  5. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Best for convenience and walk-in style urgent care
    • Good option if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic
  6. K Health
    • Best budget-friendly option for symptom-based care
    • Often lower-cost and quick for straightforward urgent issues

My short pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best with insurance: Amwell
  • Best app experience: Doctor On Demand
  • Best low-cost option: K Health

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance coverage, or best for kids.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best virtual urgent care options are:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest network, good for broad availability and quick visits
  • Amwell — solid all-around option, often covered by insurance plans
  • Doctor on Demand — strong reputation for quality video visits and fast access
  • PlushCare — good if you want ongoing primary care plus urgent care
  • MDLIVE — widely used, usually easy to access through employers/insurers
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient for common urgent issues and follow-up
  • K Health — good app experience and quick symptom-based triage

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor on Demand Best if you want continuity with a PCP: PlushCare Best if your insurance already includes it: whichever is in-network, often Amwell, MDLIVE, or Teladoc

If you want, I can also rank them for:

  • lowest cost
  • best for kids
  • best without insurance
  • best for specific states/countries
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best virtual urgent care options in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, good for common urgent issues, 24/7 in many plans.
  • Amwell — strong telehealth network, often easy to use through employer/insurance plans.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — well-regarded for fast video visits and clear pricing.
  • K Health — good app experience, quick symptom-guided visits, often cheaper cash-pay options.
  • MDLIVE — widely covered by insurers, solid for after-hours urgent care.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic.
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if you’re already a member; good same-day care in many areas.

Best overall picks:

  • Best for insurance coverage: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best for self-pay simplicity: Doctor On Demand or K Health
  • Best for integrated primary/urgent care: Amazon One Medical
  • Best for pharmacy/store convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

Good for: colds, flu, UTIs, rashes, pink eye, minor infections, medication refills, and simple skin issues.

Not for: chest pain, severe shortness of breath, stroke symptoms, major injuries, or anything life-threatening.

If you want, I can also narrow this down to the best cheap option, best with insurance, or best for a specific condition.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best-known virtual urgent care options in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, strong for common urgent issues
  • Amwell — good telehealth coverage, often integrated with insurance plans
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — easy to use, good for primary/urgent care mix
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS
  • K Health — solid app experience, good for quick symptom-based visits
  • Optum Virtual Care — good if you’re in the UnitedHealthcare/Optum ecosystem
  • UnitedHealthcare Virtual Visits — best if you have UHC insurance
  • Mayo Clinic Platform / Mayo Clinic Express Care Online — strong reputation, but availability is more limited
  • Amazon Clinic — simple for common, low-acuity conditions in participating states

Best overall for many people:

  • Doctor On Demand or Teladoc for easy access and broad urgent-care coverage
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care if you want pharmacy convenience
  • K Health if you want a fast, app-first experience

Choose based on:

  • your insurance
  • your state availability
  • whether you need prescriptions
  • whether you want 24/7 access

If you tell me your state and insurance, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options for you.

What are the top-rated telehealth apps?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top-rated telehealth apps in the US include:

  • Teladoc Health — broad access, 24/7 urgent care, mental health, dermatology, and more
  • Amwell — strong for general medical visits and behavioral health
  • MDLIVE — good for urgent care, therapy, psychiatry, and dermatology
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — polished app, solid for primary care and mental health
  • PlushCare — popular for ongoing primary care and prescriptions
  • Sesame — often lower-cost, good if you want cash-pay visits
  • GoodRx Care — convenient, usually affordable for common conditions

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance acceptance, or best for mental health.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the top-rated telehealth apps people commonly use:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and most established; good for general medical visits, mental health, and chronic care.
  • Amwell — solid all-around option with on-demand doctor visits and behavioral health.
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, dermatology, and therapy/psychiatry.
  • PlushCare — highly rated for primary care-style visits, prescriptions, and ongoing care.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — strong for urgent care and mental health.
  • GoodRx Care — often cheaper cash-pay visits; good if you want straightforward pricing.
  • Zocdoc — more for finding and booking telehealth appointments with specific doctors than a standalone telehealth provider.
  • Sesame Care — good for low-cost self-pay telehealth visits.

If you want, I can also give you the best telehealth apps for mental health, prescriptions, or low-cost visits.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best-known, top-rated telehealth apps:

  • Teladoc Health — strong all-around option for general medical visits, dermatology, mental health, and chronic care.
  • Amwell — good for urgent care and specialist visits; widely used by insurers and employers.
  • MDLIVE — solid for on-demand urgent care, primary care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • PlushCare — popular for primary care, prescription refills, and ongoing doctor relationships.
  • Doctor On Demand — well-rated for quick video visits and mental health support.
  • Talkspace — best known for therapy and psychiatry, not general medical care.
  • BetterHelp — one of the biggest online therapy platforms; good for counseling, not medical treatment.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for urgent care, mental health, cheapest, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the most consistently top-rated telehealth apps:

  • Teladoc Health — broad urgent care, primary care, dermatology, and mental health
  • Amwell — strong general medical visits, therapy, and specialty care
  • MDLIVE — good for urgent care, therapy, psychiatry, and dermatology
  • PlushCare — popular for primary care and prescription management
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — well-reviewed for general medical and behavioral health
  • Lemonaid Health — straightforward for common conditions and medication refills
  • GoodRx Care — budget-friendly virtual visits for many common issues
  • BetterHelp — one of the best-known apps for online therapy, not general medical care

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best telehealth apps by category (primary care, therapy, pediatrics, etc.), or
  2. the best options covered by insurance.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the top-rated telehealth apps are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad virtual urgent care, primary care, mental health, and chronic care
  • Amwell — strong nationwide doctor access and insurance support
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — well-liked for quality video visits and mental health
  • K Health — good AI symptom checker + affordable doctor visits
  • Zocdoc — great for finding and booking virtual visits with in-network doctors
  • LiveHealth Online — solid option for quick video visits, especially if your insurer supports it
  • BetterHelp — best known for therapy/counseling rather than general medical care

If you want, I can also rank them by best for insurance coverage, mental health, urgent care, or lowest cost.

What are the best telehealth services for primary care?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best telehealth services for primary care:

  • One Medical (Amazon One Medical) — Best overall if you want a polished primary care experience, easy messaging, and in-person + virtual care. Great for ongoing care.
  • PlushCare — Strong for virtual primary care, same-day appointments, prescription refills, and chronic condition management.
  • Circle Medical — Good option for full primary care via telehealth, especially for labs, referrals, and ongoing follow-up.
  • Sesame — Best for lower-cost self-pay visits; good if you want transparent pricing and don’t need insurance.
  • Teladoc Primary360 — Good for insurance-based virtual primary care and broad availability.
  • K Health — Good for quick, app-based care and straightforward primary care needs.

Best picks by use case

  • Best overall: One Medical
  • Best for virtual primary care: PlushCare
  • Best budget/self-pay: Sesame
  • Best for insurance users: Teladoc Primary360

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or availability in your state.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best telehealth primary care options are:

  • K Health — strong for ongoing primary care, fast visits, prescriptions, and chronic condition support.
  • Carbon Health — good all-around primary care with telehealth + in-person clinics in many areas.
  • Teladoc Health — widely available, good for general primary care and broad insurer access.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — solid video visits, especially if you want easy access through employers/insurance.
  • Sesame Care — often best for self-pay, transparent pricing, and quick access.
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if you want a premium primary care experience and live in a supported area.

Best picks by need:

  • Best overall: Carbon Health
  • Best for self-pay: Sesame Care
  • Best for insurance coverage: Teladoc Health or Doctor On Demand
  • Best for ongoing care: K Health or One Medical

If you want, I can also rank them for price, insurance, or chronic care.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the best telehealth primary care options:

  • Amazon One Medical — best overall for accessible primary care, same-day video visits, messaging, labs, prescriptions. Great if available in your area.
  • Teladoc Primary360 — strong nationwide primary care option, good for ongoing virtual primary care and chronic condition management.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — very good for quick primary care visits, refills, and referrals; easy to use.
  • K Health — affordable, app-based primary care with AI triage plus clinician visits; good for routine issues and convenience.
  • PlushCare — good for longer-term virtual primary care, especially if you want one main doctor and help with medications/referrals.
  • Sesame Care — best if you want low-cost self-pay visits and transparent pricing.

If you want the best overall experience, I’d start with Amazon One Medical or PlushCare. If you want lowest cost, look at Sesame Care or K Health. If you want insurance-based telehealth, Doctor on Demand or Teladoc are solid.

If you tell me your state, insurance, and whether you want self-pay or covered care, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best telehealth primary care services:

  • PlushCare — Best overall for ongoing primary care. Easy to get same-week appointments, good for prescriptions, labs, and chronic care.
  • Amazon One Medical — Best for a polished user experience. Strong app, quick access, and good in-person/virtual hybrid care.
  • Teladoc — Best if you want broad insurance coverage and 24/7 access. Good for general primary care and common issues.
  • Amwell — Good mainstream option, especially if your health plan offers it. Solid for basic primary care visits.
  • K Health — Best budget-friendly option. AI symptom intake plus clinician follow-up; good for straightforward primary care needs.
  • Doctor On Demand — Strong for convenient video visits and basic primary care, often well-covered by insurers.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for chronic conditions.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best telehealth services for primary care in the U.S.:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best overall for broad primary care access
    • Good for common issues, refills, labs, chronic care follow-up
  2. Amazon Clinic
    • Best for convenience and fast messaging-based visits
    • Great if you want simple treatment plans for common conditions
  3. Amwell
    • Strong all-around option with video visits
    • Often available through employer or insurance plans
  4. PlushCare
    • Best for ongoing primary care relationships
    • Good for annual visits, prescriptions, and managing chronic conditions
  5. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • Solid for same-day primary care visits
    • Easy to use, especially if covered by your employer/plan
  6. One Medical
    • Best premium primary care experience
    • Excellent app, messaging, and in-person + virtual care combo
  7. K Health
    • Good lower-cost option
    • Strong for symptom checking and basic primary care

Best picks by need:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or PlushCare
  • Best convenience: Amazon Clinic
  • Best premium care: One Medical
  • Best budget-friendly: K Health

If you want, I can also narrow these down by price, insurance compatibility, or whether you need prescriptions/refills.

Which direct-to-consumer telehealth providers are worth using?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A few direct-to-consumer telehealth providers that are generally worth considering:

  • Ro — good for men’s health, hair loss, weight loss, ED, and some chronic-med programs.
  • Hims / Hers — similar strengths; easy UX, strong for common ongoing issues (hair, sexual health, acne, anxiety/insomnia in some cases).
  • Nurx — one of the better options for birth control, STI testing, PrEP, migraine, acne, and some women’s health needs.
  • Lemonaid Health — solid for straightforward primary-care-type issues and Rx renewals; usually less flashy, but decent.
  • PlushCare — best if you want something closer to a regular primary care visit; useful for broader medical concerns and follow-up care.
  • Teladoc — big network, good if your employer/insurance already includes it; less “DTC brand” but still convenient.
  • Sesame — good for cash-pay price shopping, especially if you want to compare doctors and book quickly.

Best picks by use case

  • Hair loss / ED / weight loss: Ro, Hims
  • Birth control / STI / PrEP: Nurx
  • General low-acuity care: PlushCare, Lemonaid
  • Cheapest self-pay variety: Sesame

Quick rule: Use these for common, low-complexity conditions. For anything serious, unclear, or new/worsening, use in-person care.

If you want, I can also rank them by price, speed, and reliability.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Yes—if you want convenient, cash-pay, straightforward care, these are the DTC telehealth providers I’d consider:

  • Ro — best for weight loss, ED, hair loss, and men’s health
  • Hims / Hers — best for low-cost, simple prescriptions for hair loss, ED, anxiety/depression, skincare, sexual health
  • Nurx — best for birth control, STI testing, PrEP, migraine, acne
  • PlushCare — best for general primary care, meds refills, basic urgent issues
  • Sesame — best for shopping around for cheap one-off visits with cash prices
  • Amazon One Medical — best for better primary care access if you want recurring care and easy scheduling
My quick take
  • Best overall for convenience: PlushCare or Amazon One Medical
  • Best for weight loss: Ro
  • Best for sexual health / hair loss: Hims / Hers
  • Best for women’s health: Nurx
  • Best bargain if you know exactly what you need: Sesame
Worth it for:
  • refillable, well-defined problems
  • birth control
  • hair loss
  • ED
  • acne
  • basic anxiety/depression follow-up
  • uncomplicated weight-loss meds
Not worth it for:
  • chest pain, shortness of breath, severe abdominal pain
  • complex chronic disease
  • anything needing a physical exam or labs done urgently

If you tell me what you’re trying to treat and whether you want cheap, fast, or best quality, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A few DTC telehealth providers are generally worth using, depending on what you need:

  • Teladoc – best all-around for urgent care / general medical visits; broad network, easy access.
  • Amwell – solid for primary care-style video visits and some specialist coverage.
  • MDLIVE – good for urgent care, therapy, and psychiatry; convenient and widely available.
  • Sesame – best if you want transparent cash pricing and no membership lock-in.
  • Ro – strong for men’s health, weight loss, hair loss, and ED; polished experience.
  • Hims / Hers – good for simpler ongoing treatments like hair loss, skin, anxiety/depression, and sexual health.
  • Nurx – worth using for birth control, STI testing, PrEP, migraine, and acne.
  • Curology – one of the better options for acne and skincare.
  • Talkspace / BetterHelp – for therapy, with Talkspace generally better if you want a more structured care model.

If you want the shortest answer:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best cash-pay transparency: Sesame
  • Best for weight loss / men’s health: Ro
  • Best for women’s health: Nurx
  • Best for acne/skin: Curology

If you tell me what you need it for—urgent care, therapy, weight loss, prescriptions, etc.—I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A few direct-to-consumer telehealth providers are generally “worth using,” depending on what you need:

  • Sesame — best for straightforward cash-pay visits; often good pricing and easy booking.
  • Teladoc — best for broad, mainstream general telehealth and employer-backed access.
  • Amwell — solid for primary care + mental health, especially if your insurer supports it.
  • PlushCare — good for ongoing primary-care-style care and prescription refills.
  • Doctor On Demand (Included Health) — strong for urgent care and mental health.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for simple, common conditions if you want fast async care.
  • Nurx — best for sexual health, birth control, acne, and some PrEP services.
  • Wisp — good for sexual health and women’s health basics.

If you want the shortest answer:

  • Best overall cash-pay: Sesame
  • Best general telehealth: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best ongoing primary care: PlushCare
  • Best niche women’s/sexual health: Nurx or Wisp

Worth skipping unless they fit a very specific need: services with opaque pricing, hard-to-cancel subscriptions, or weak follow-up care.

If you tell me what you need it for—urgent care, primary care, meds, mental health, sexual health, etc.—I can rank the best options for that use case.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Yes—some are genuinely useful, but the “worth it” ones depend on what you need.

Best direct-to-consumer telehealth brands
  • Ro — good for men’s health, weight loss, hair loss, ED, and some primary care.
  • Hims / Hers — solid for hair loss, ED, mental health, skin care, and women’s health.
  • Nurx — one of the better choices for birth control, STI testing, PrEP, migraine, and acne.
  • Lemonaid Health — straightforward, usually affordable for common issues like acne, anxiety, UTIs, and ED.
  • Amazon One Medical — best if you want a more “real primary care” feel, especially for routine care and follow-up.
  • PlushCare — good for general primary care and ongoing prescriptions.
  • Teladoc — decent for quick urgent-care style visits, though less personal.
My short take
  • Best overall for primary care: Amazon One Medical
  • Best for women’s health: Nurx
  • Best for men’s health: Ro or Hims
  • Best for simple, cheap visits: Lemonaid Health
  • Best if you want broad access and follow-up: PlushCare
Worth avoiding if you need…
  • Anything urgent/emergency: use in-person care or ER
  • Complex diagnoses: telehealth can miss important details
  • Controlled substances: many platforms are limited or inconsistent

If you want, I can narrow this down by category—primary care, mental health, birth control, weight loss, skin, or men’s health.

What are the best online care providers for same-day visits?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Best options for same-day online visits:

  1. Teladoc Health – broadest availability, quick urgent-care style visits, good for common issues.
  2. Amwell – strong general medicine and behavioral health, often fast same-day scheduling.
  3. PlushCare – good if you want a more “primary care” feel and possible follow-up care.
  4. Sesame Care – often the cheapest out-of-pocket option; easy same-day booking.
  5. Amazon Clinic – convenient for common conditions like UTIs, allergies, acne, etc.; not everywhere.
  6. Doctor on Demand (now included under Included Health in some plans) – solid for medical and mental health visits.
  7. LiveHealth Online – reliable for urgent care and therapy, depending on state.

Best overall picks:

  • Fastest/easiest: Teladoc or Amazon Clinic
  • Best value: Sesame Care
  • Best for ongoing care: PlushCare
  • Best for insurance-based visits: Amwell or LiveHealth Online

If you want, I can also give you the best same-day providers by price, insurance, or condition.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best online care providers for same-day visits are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, general medicine, mental health, and chronic care.
  • Amwell — strong for urgent care and good specialist access.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — very good for quick primary care, urgent care, and behavioral health.
  • PlushCare — great if you want more primary-care-style follow-up and prescriptions.
  • CVS Health Virtual Care / MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS.
  • K Health — fast, app-based, often cheaper for straightforward issues.
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent same-day video care if you’re a member; best in supported markets.
  • Mayo Clinic Platform/telehealth options — good for more complex cases, though not always true same-day access.

Best overall for quick same-day care:

  • Doctor on Demand or Teladoc

Best for ongoing primary care:

  • PlushCare or Amazon One Medical

Best low-cost option:

  • K Health

If you want, I can also give you the best same-day provider for your state, insurance, and issue (e.g., cold, UTI, rash, anxiety, medication refill).

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Top options for same-day online care (urgent care / primary care / prescriptions) are:

  1. Teladoc Health – broad coverage, fast urgent-care style visits, good for common issues.
  2. Amwell – strong for same-day doctor visits and mental health; works with many insurers.
  3. Doctor on Demand by Included Health – very good for quick video visits with MDs/DOs.
  4. CVS Health Virtual Care – convenient if you already use CVS; good for minor illnesses and prescriptions.
  5. K Health – often fast and affordable; good for AI-guided triage plus clinician visit.
  6. Amazon One Medical – excellent same-day access if available in your area, especially for members.
  7. Walmart Health Virtual Care – practical low-cost option in many states.

Best overall for speed: Doctor on Demand or Teladoc Best if you want a lower-cost option: K Health Best if you already use a health system/pharmacy: CVS Health Virtual Care or One Medical

If you want, I can also give you the best same-day provider for your insurance, state, and condition.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best online care providers for same-day visits:

  1. PlushCare
    • Best for: primary care + quick appointments
    • Pros: often same-day, good for common issues, prescriptions, ongoing care
    • Good if you want a real doctor and follow-up care
  2. Teladoc Health
    • Best for: broad coverage and fast urgent care
    • Pros: usually quick access, widely available through employers/insurance
    • Good for: colds, UTIs, allergies, rashes, minor infections
  3. Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health)
    • Best for: same-day medical and mental health visits
    • Pros: strong reputation, easy scheduling, well-known doctors
    • Good if you want a simple, reliable telehealth option
  4. Amwell
    • Best for: urgent care and insurance-based telehealth
    • Pros: many health plans cover it, same-day often available
    • Good for: quick medical consults without leaving home
  5. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Best for: convenient retail-health visits
    • Pros: good for common conditions, easy if you already use CVS
    • Good for: minor illnesses, skin issues, sinus infections
  6. Sesame Care
    • Best for: lower-cost self-pay visits
    • Pros: transparent pricing, often same-day
    • Good if you don’t have insurance or want to pay cash
  7. K Health
    • Best for: AI-assisted symptom intake + fast doctor visits
    • Pros: often quick, easy app-based care
    • Good for: basic urgent care and prescription needs

Best overall picks:

  • PlushCare for primary care feel
  • Doctor On Demand for reliability
  • Sesame Care for price

If you want, I can also give you the best same-day provider by insurance, cost, or condition.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best options for same-day online care:

  • Teladoc Health — very broad availability, fast access for general medical issues, often same-day.
  • Amwell — good for urgent care, primary care, and therapy; easy same-day video visits.
  • MDLive — strong for urgent care, dermatology, and mental health; usually quick appointment times.
  • PlushCare — good if you want more “primary care” style visits, prescriptions, and follow-up.
  • Doctor on Demand — reliable same-day video care, especially for common urgent issues and mental health.
  • K Health — quick chat-first visits and often fast clinician follow-up; good for simple conditions.
  • Hims / Hers — best for specific care areas like hair loss, ED, skincare, birth control, and anxiety.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for common issues like UTIs, allergies, and acne, with async care options.

Best overall for same-day:

  • Teladoc or Amwell for general use
  • PlushCare if you want stronger primary care continuity
  • MDLive if you want a good all-around urgent care option

If you want, I can narrow this down by insurance, price, or condition (UTI, rash, cold/flu, anxiety, etc.).

What are the best telehealth providers for diagnosing common conditions?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For common, non-emergency conditions (UTI, sinus infection, pink eye, rash, cold/flu, birth control, ED, skin issues), these are strong telehealth options:

  • Teladoc Health — best overall coverage; broad range of common primary-care visits
  • Amwell — solid all-around option; good access to doctors and behavioral health
  • MDLIVE — good for urgent-care style visits and common acute issues
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — strong for primary care + mental health
  • PlushCare — best if you want ongoing primary care and follow-up
  • HeyDoctor / GoodRx Care — good low-cost option for simple conditions and prescriptions
  • CVS Health Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/Walgreens-style retail care
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if available in your area; very good for primary care continuity
Best picks by need
  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best for primary care continuity: PlushCare or Amazon One Medical
  • Best budget/simple visits: GoodRx Care
  • Best for quick urgent-care needs: MDLIVE
Quick note

Telehealth is great for straightforward diagnoses, but you may need in-person care for:

  • severe pain, chest pain, trouble breathing
  • high fever that won’t break
  • abdominal pain, dehydration
  • injuries needing imaging
  • symptoms that are worsening or unclear

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or speed to appointment.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For common, low-acuity conditions (UTIs, rashes, allergies, colds/flu, sinus infections, mild anxiety/depression), these are among the best-known telehealth providers:

Best overall
  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, quick visits, good for general urgent care and primary care.
  • Amwell — strong nationwide network; good if you want access to board-certified doctors and some specialists.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — solid for urgent care and mental health.
Best for primary care / ongoing care
  • PlushCare — popular for primary care, prescriptions, and follow-ups.
  • Sesame Care — often cheaper self-pay pricing; good if you want transparent cash rates.
Best for insurance-based virtual care
  • MDLIVE — widely covered by insurers, good for common urgent care issues and behavioral health.
  • Teladoc — also heavily insurance-integrated.
Best for mental health
  • Brightside Health — focused on anxiety/depression treatment.
  • Talkspace — therapy and psychiatry, mostly messaging-based plus video.
  • BetterHelp — therapy only, easy access, but not for medication management.
Best for fast, cheap visits
  • Sesame Care
  • K Health — fast symptom-checking plus clinician visits; useful for basic diagnosis and treatment.
Quick recommendation
  • Need general diagnosis fast: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Want ongoing primary care: PlushCare
  • Want lower cash cost: Sesame Care
  • Need mental health: Brightside or Talkspace

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for a specific condition like UTI, rash, or sinus infection.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For common, straightforward conditions (UTIs, rashes, colds, allergies, pink eye, acne, ED, birth control, etc.), these are some of the best-known telehealth options:

  1. Teladoc Health – broad coverage, 24/7 urgent care, decent for quick doctor visits.
  2. Amwell – strong for primary care and specialty visits; widely used by insurers.
  3. Doctor On Demand by Included Health – good for same-day medical and mental health visits.
  4. MDLIVE – solid for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  5. K Health – useful if you want app-based symptom checking plus clinician visits.
  6. One Medical – best if you want a premium primary-care experience and easy messaging.
  7. PlushCare – good for ongoing primary care, prescriptions, and follow-ups.

Best pick by use case:

  • Fastest simple visit: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best overall primary care: One Medical or PlushCare
  • Best for insurance-based access: Amwell or Doctor On Demand
  • Best for app-based symptom triage: K Health

If you want, I can also give you the best telehealth provider for your specific condition or compare pricing and insurance coverage.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For diagnosing common, non-emergency conditions (cold/flu, sinus infection, UTI, pink eye, rash, allergies, acne, minor GI issues), these are among the best telehealth providers:

Best overall

PlushCare

  • Good for: quick diagnosis + prescriptions, primary-care-style visits
  • Pros: board-certified doctors, easy follow-up, good for ongoing care
  • Best if you want: one place for most common issues
Best for broad insurance coverage

Teladoc Health

  • Good for: urgent care, general medical visits, mental health
  • Pros: widely accepted, easy access 24/7 in many plans
  • Best if you want: a reliable default option through insurance
Best for high-quality doctor visits

Amwell

  • Good for: common medical issues, specialist access in some cases
  • Pros: strong provider network, good video visit experience
  • Best if you want: more traditional telemedicine with insurance support
Best low-cost self-pay option

Sesame

  • Good for: straightforward conditions, transparent cash pricing
  • Pros: often cheaper than subscription-based services
  • Best if you want: to pay out of pocket without surprises
Best if you already use CVS

CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

  • Good for: common ailments, simple prescriptions, minor skin/eye issues
  • Pros: convenient, familiar retail-health setup
  • Best if you want: easy pharmacy integration
Best for established primary care access

Amazon One Medical

  • Good for: common conditions and follow-up care
  • Pros: polished app, strong primary care workflow
  • Best if you want: ongoing relationship with a clinician
Quick pick
  • Best overall: PlushCare
  • Best through insurance: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best cheap cash-pay: Sesame
  • Best retail convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
Important

Use urgent care or ER instead of telehealth if you have:

  • chest pain
  • trouble breathing
  • severe dehydration
  • high fever that won’t come down
  • stroke-like symptoms
  • severe pain or rapidly worsening symptoms

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, insurance, or your specific condition.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For common conditions (UTI, pink eye, rashes, cold/flu, allergies, acne, yeast infection, refills, simple mental health), these are strong telehealth options:

Best overall
  • Teladoc Health — broad coverage, easy access to doctors, good for general urgent care and some chronic-care follow-up.
  • Amwell — solid all-around virtual visits, often available through employers/health plans.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — very good for quick primary care, urgent care, and mental health.
Best for fast, app-based care
  • Sesame — cash-pay marketplace with transparent pricing; good if you want low-cost visits without insurance hassle.
  • K Health — good symptom-based evaluation and quick clinician follow-up; useful for common issues.
Best if you want insurance-linked care
  • CVS Health Virtual Care / MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS and want common-condition treatment.
  • Walmart Health Virtual Care — simple access and often competitively priced.
Best for skin, hair, and sexual health
  • Apostrophe — especially good for acne, rosacea, and hair-loss care.
  • Hims / Hers — good for certain common conditions like hair loss, ED, anxiety, and some skin care.
  • Nurx — strong for birth control, STI testing support, acne, and migraine care.
Best for mental health
  • Talkspace — therapy and psychiatry.
  • BetterHelp — therapy-focused, easy to start.
  • Brightside Health — stronger option for anxiety/depression medication management.
Quick picks
  • Best overall: Doctor on Demand
  • Best low-cost self-pay: Sesame
  • Best for skin: Apostrophe
  • Best for women’s health: Nurx
  • Best for mental health: Talkspace or Brightside

Tip: If you have chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, stroke symptoms, or a high fever with confusion, use urgent care/ER, not telehealth.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for a specific condition.

All 72 prompts run for Teladoc Health

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Teladoc Health known for?
  • 2 What are Teladoc Health's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Teladoc Health? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Teladoc Health compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Teladoc Health?
  • 6 What is a typical direct-to-consumer telehealth provider known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best telehealth providers for urgent care visits? discovery
  • 2 What are the best telehealth services for cold and flu treatment? discovery
  • 3 Which virtual care providers are best for skin problems? discovery
  • 4 What are the best online doctor services for UTIs? discovery
  • 5 What telehealth providers are good for birth control prescriptions? discovery
  • 6 What are the best telehealth options for mental health care? discovery
  • 7 What are the best telehealth services for men’s health? discovery
  • 8 What are the best telehealth providers for women’s health? discovery
  • 9 Which online care services are best for chronic condition check-ins? discovery
  • 10 What are the best virtual doctor options for minor infections? discovery
  • 11 What telehealth providers are best for kids? discovery
  • 12 What are the best telehealth services for busy professionals? discovery
  • 13 What are the best online medical services for rural areas? discovery
  • 14 Which telehealth apps are best for follow-up care? discovery
  • 15 What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers for refills? discovery
  • 16 What are the best telehealth providers for acne treatment? discovery
  • 17 What are the best online doctors for allergies? discovery
  • 18 What are the best virtual care services for sinus infections? discovery
  • 19 What are the best telehealth options for getting care fast? discovery
  • 20 What are the best telehealth providers with 24/7 access? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to full-service telehealth platforms? comparison
  • 22 How do direct-to-consumer telehealth providers compare on price? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to app-based online doctor services? comparison
  • 24 Which virtual care providers are better for prescriptions than urgent care clinics? comparison
  • 25 What is better for minor illnesses: telehealth or walk-in clinics? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to traditional primary care for simple visits? comparison
  • 27 How do online telehealth services compare for same-day availability? comparison
  • 28 What are the best alternatives to in-person urgent care for a rash? comparison
  • 29 Which consumer telehealth services are better for messaging a doctor than video visits? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to emergency room visits for non-emergencies? comparison
  • 31 How do I get a prescription online for a common condition? problem
  • 32 How do I see a doctor online without going to a clinic? problem
  • 33 How do I treat a minor illness quickly at home? problem
  • 34 How do I get medical advice after hours? problem
  • 35 How do I find a virtual doctor for a UTI? problem
  • 36 How do I get help for a skin rash online? problem
  • 37 How do I refill a prescription without an in-person visit? problem
  • 38 How do I get care when I can’t get a same-day appointment? problem
  • 39 How do I talk to a doctor about birth control online? problem
  • 40 How do I get treatment for a sinus infection without visiting urgent care? problem
  • 41 How much does a telehealth visit usually cost? transactional
  • 42 Are there any free telehealth services? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest online doctor service? transactional
  • 44 Do telehealth providers accept insurance? transactional
  • 45 Which telehealth services have low copays? transactional
  • 46 How much does online urgent care cost without insurance? transactional
  • 47 What telehealth providers have subscription plans? transactional
  • 48 Are virtual doctor visits covered by my health plan? transactional
  • 49 What is the price for an online doctor visit? transactional
  • 50 Which telehealth services offer affordable prescriptions? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best direct-to-consumer telehealth providers? 40/mo
  • 2 What are the top telehealth companies for online doctor visits? 260/mo
  • 3 Which online telehealth services are most popular right now?
  • 4 What are the best virtual care platforms for patients?
  • 5 What telehealth providers do people recommend most?
  • 6 What are the best app-based telehealth services?
  • 7 Which telehealth provider is best for getting prescriptions online?
  • 8 What are the best online doctor services for adults? 50/mo
  • 9 What are the most trusted telehealth options for consumers?
  • 10 What are the best virtual urgent care providers? 40/mo
  • 11 What are the top-rated telehealth apps?
  • 12 What are the best telehealth services for primary care?
  • 13 Which direct-to-consumer telehealth providers are worth using?
  • 14 What are the best online care providers for same-day visits?
  • 15 What are the best telehealth providers for diagnosing common conditions?