Which GLP-1 Clinics Have the Most Customer Reviews?
A review-volume guide for shoppers comparing GLP-1 clinics by captured Trustpilot sample size and score confidence.
Last updated June 26, 2026
Key Takeaways
- Mochi has the largest captured recent sample in the HarborMeds dataset, followed by GobyMeds.
- More reviews do not automatically mean better care, but they can make patterns easier to trust.
- A small review sample can still be useful if the page clearly labels it as lower confidence.
Captured Trustpilot review volume
Mochi Health
500 recent Trustpilot reviews
Largest recent sample captured for this shortlist.
Strong volume makes repeated billing, support, and appointment patterns easier to spot.
GobyMeds
411 recent Trustpilot reviews
Large enough sample to compare confidently with bigger names.
High score plus strong volume makes it one of the clearest current comparison points.
Henry Meds
273 recent Trustpilot reviews
Useful sample for a familiar national brand.
The volume is decent, but the score is more mixed than the brand recognition might suggest.
OrderlyMeds
207 recent Trustpilot reviews
Enough recent volume to take concern patterns seriously.
The sample is big enough that billing, refund, and shipping concerns should not be brushed off.
Good Life Meds
163 recent Trustpilot reviews
Smaller than the biggest samples, but still useful.
Good support and value signals are worth comparing against the larger brands.
Thrive
16 historical Trustpilot reviews
Too thin for a confident score-led ranking.
Treat it as a watchlist provider until more recent reviews are captured.
Why review volume matters
Review volume is not the same thing as quality. A provider can have a lot of reviews and still have serious operational problems.
But volume helps separate one-off complaints from repeated patterns. If the same billing, refund, support, or shipping issue keeps appearing across a larger sample, readers should pay attention.
How to read smaller samples
A smaller sample is not useless. It just needs a lighter touch. With a thin sample, the safer move is to label the provider as lower confidence and verify more details before signing up.
That is how HarborMeds treats watchlist providers. They can be worth researching, but they should not outrank providers with larger recent samples unless the evidence catches up.