Who regulates HRT in District of Columbia
HRT prescribing in District of Columbia sits under two regulatory bodies — one for the doctor, one for the pharmacy:
- District of Columbia Board of Medicine. The state body that licenses physicians, sets standards of care, and disciplines doctors who fall short. Every doctor who prescribes HRT to a District of Columbia resident must hold a current license issued by this board.
- District of Columbia Board of Pharmacy. The state body that licenses pharmacies (including compounding pharmacies that produce 503A compounded HRT) and inspects them for compliance with state and federal pharmacy law.
Federal agencies also play a supporting role: the FDA approves the brand-name and generic HRT products on the market; the DEA only matters for controlled substances (HRT is non-controlled, so DEA rules don't apply); and the federal Drug Quality and Security Act is the foundational law that lets 503A compounding pharmacies serve District of Columbia residents.
Can you get HRT online in District of Columbia?
Yes. District of Columbia permits telehealth prescribing of non-controlled medications like HRT, consistent with standard state telehealth practice rules. The canonical state-by-state breakdown lives in the Center for Connected Health Policy's State Telehealth Laws and Reimbursement Policies Report (Fall 2025 edition), which CCHP updates twice a year.
The practical version: a physician licensed by the District of Columbia Board of Medicine can establish a valid practitioner-patient relationship via telehealth — including async store-and-forward review of a written health questionnaire — and prescribe HRT without ever meeting the patient in person. That's how every legitimate online HRT service in District of Columbia operates, including ClearedRx.
Telehealth requirements for District of Columbia
Three core requirements apply to telehealth HRT prescribing in District of Columbia, all derived from the District of Columbia Board of Medicine's practice standards:
- The prescribing physician must hold an active District of Columbia medical license. Out-of-state-only doctors cannot legally prescribe to a District of Columbia-resident patient.
- A valid practitioner-patient relationship must be established before prescribing. In District of Columbia, this can be done via async store-and-forward review of a documented health history (no live video required for non-controlled meds), per standard telehealth practice rules.
- The standard of care for telehealth must match the standard of care for in-person care. If the case requires hands-on evaluation (suspicious bleeding, breast lump, suspected cancer), the telehealth physician must refer the patient to in-person care — same as a local OB-GYN would.
What about the federal DEA flexibility that expired Dec 31, 2025? That rule governed telehealth prescribing of controlled substances only — Schedule II-V drugs. HRT is non-controlled, so the DEA expiration has no effect on HRT prescribing in District of Columbia. State medical-board telehealth rules continue to govern, and async prescribing of non-controlled medications is permitted.
Compounded HRT in District of Columbia
503A compounding pharmacies — small-batch pharmacies that prepare patient-specific compounded medications — operate legally in every US state, including District of Columbia, under the federal Drug Quality and Security Act and District of Columbia's own pharmacy-board rules.
The District of Columbia Board of Pharmacy is the body that licenses, inspects, and disciplines compounding pharmacies serving District of Columbia residents. 503A pharmacies must:
- Compound only in response to an individual prescription (not pre-make stock)
- Use FDA-grade active pharmaceutical ingredients
- Operate under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist
- Submit to periodic state inspections
- Comply with USP <795> (non-sterile) or USP <797> (sterile) compounding standards
For HRT specifically, this means compounded products like a custom-strength Estrogen + Progesterone Vaginal Cream are legal in District of Columbia when prescribed by a licensed physician and dispensed by a licensed 503A pharmacy. ClearedRx's flagship compounded products are dispensed through pharmacy partners that are licensed in District of Columbia and the other states we serve.
Cash-pay vs insurance in District of Columbia
Cash-pay HRT is legal in all 50 states, including District of Columbia. There is no law that requires HRT to flow through insurance — and most District of Columbia Medicaid programs and many private insurance plans don't cover compounded HRT or HRT for menopause symptoms in healthy women anyway.
- District of Columbia Medicaid. Generally does not cover HRT for menopause symptoms in healthy women. Specific FDA-approved generic formulations may be covered for narrow clinical indications — check with the specific Medicaid plan.
- Medicare Part D in District of Columbia. Generally does not cover compounded HRT. May cover specific FDA-approved generic formulations like estradiol patches or oral tablets, depending on the plan formulary.
- Private insurance in District of Columbia. Coverage varies widely. Many plans require step therapy or prior authorization for HRT. Compounded products are usually not covered at all.
- Cash-pay through ClearedRx. $19-$89/month flat, with first order 50% off. Includes consult, medication, and shipping. No insurance involved on either side.
Cost considerations in District of Columbia
The District of Columbia exempts prescription medication from sales tax. DC permits async telehealth for non-controlled prescriptions under its telehealth practice rules.
For ClearedRx specifically, the math in District of Columbia:
- $19/mo floor — Progesterone Tablets (oral micronized progesterone, often taken at bedtime).
- $49-$89/mo for most plans — combination products (estrogen + progesterone), patches, gels, and the flagship vaginal cream.
- First order 50% off — your real first-month price is roughly $9.50-$44.50 depending on plan.
- Free shipping always — standard 3-5 business days; two-day expedited available.
- 30-day money-back guarantee on first order — if it's not the right fit, you get your money back.
ClearedRx in District of Columbia
ClearedRx is licensed and operating in District of Columbia. Here's how the rules from above translate to what you actually get:
- Licensed in District of Columbia. Board-certified MDs holding active licenses with the District of Columbia Board of Medicine review your case.
- 24-hour MD review. Submit a 3-minute health questionnaire, get a physician's review the same or next day. No live video required (consistent with District of Columbia async telehealth practice rules for non-controlled meds).
- $19-$89/mo flat pricing. First order 50% off. No insurance hassle, no surprise bills.
- Free shipping to any District of Columbia address. 3-5 business days standard, 2-day expedited available. Plain packaging.
- Compounded options dispensed by licensed 503A pharmacies. Our pharmacy partners are licensed by the District of Columbia Board of Pharmacy (and the relevant boards for every state we ship to).
- 30-day money-back guarantee. If the first order isn't the right fit, you get your money back.
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District of Columbia HRT regulation at a glance
| State | District of Columbia (DC) |
|---|---|
| Approximate population | 700,000 |
| Physician licensing body | District of Columbia Board of Medicine |
| Pharmacy licensing body | District of Columbia Board of Pharmacy |
| Telehealth HRT prescribing | Permitted under standard state telehealth practice rules |
| Async (store-and-forward) prescribing for HRT | Permitted (HRT is non-controlled) |
| In-person visit required first? | No — not for non-controlled meds |
| Compounded HRT (503A pharmacy) | Legal |
| District of Columbia Medicaid covers HRT for menopause? | Generally no |
| Cash-pay HRT legal? | Yes |
| Federal DEA telehealth rule (expired Dec 31 2025) impact? | None — that rule was for controlled substances only; HRT is non-controlled |
| Canonical reference | CCHP State Telehealth Laws & Reimbursement Policies Report |
District of Columbia HRT laws — FAQ
Is it legal to get HRT online in District of Columbia?
Yes. District of Columbia permits telehealth prescribing of non-controlled medications like HRT under standard state telehealth practice rules. Hormone replacement therapy (estrogen, progesterone, and combinations) is non-controlled, so it falls under the same telehealth rules as most other prescription medications. The District of Columbia Board of Medicine sets the practice standards for physicians prescribing in District of Columbia.
Does District of Columbia require an in-person visit before getting HRT?
No. District of Columbia does not require a prior in-person visit for non-controlled prescriptions like HRT. A physician licensed in District of Columbia can establish a valid practitioner-patient relationship through telehealth (including async store-and-forward review of a health questionnaire) and prescribe HRT without ever meeting the patient in person, consistent with standard state telehealth practice rules. See the CCHP State Telehealth Laws and Reimbursement Policies Report for the canonical state-by-state breakdown.
Is compounded HRT legal in District of Columbia?
Yes. 503A compounding pharmacies operate legally in every US state, including District of Columbia, under federal Drug Quality and Security Act rules and the state's pharmacy-board oversight. The District of Columbia Board of Pharmacy licenses and inspects compounding pharmacies serving District of Columbia residents. ClearedRx's flagship Estrogen + Progesterone Vaginal Cream and combination Body Cream are compounded products dispensed by licensed 503A pharmacies.
Can I use District of Columbia Medicaid for HRT?
Most state Medicaid programs, including in District of Columbia, do not cover HRT for menopause symptoms in healthy women. Some FDA-approved generic formulations may be covered for specific clinical indications — check with your specific Medicaid plan. ClearedRx is cash-pay only ($19-$89/month flat, with first order half off) and does not bill any insurance, so the cost picture often comes out comparable to a Medicaid copay path once visit fees and time off work are factored in.
Are ClearedRx physicians licensed in District of Columbia?
Yes. ClearedRx works with a network of board-certified MDs holding licenses with the District of Columbia Board of Medicine (and the appropriate medical board for every state we serve). When you complete your intake, your case is routed to a physician licensed in District of Columbia.
Does District of Columbia sales tax apply to HRT prescriptions?
The District of Columbia exempts prescription medication from sales tax. DC permits async telehealth for non-controlled prescriptions under its telehealth practice rules. For ClearedRx specifically, the price you see on the pricing page is the price you pay — no separate tax line on prescription medication.
What happens to District of Columbia HRT prescribing now that the federal DEA telehealth flexibility expired (Dec 31 2025)?
The DEA flexibility that expired on December 31, 2025 specifically governed telehealth prescribing of controlled substances (Schedule II-V drugs like ADHD medications, anxiety medications, and opioids). HRT is non-controlled, so the expiration of the DEA rule has no effect on telehealth HRT prescribing in District of Columbia. State medical board telehealth rules continue to apply, and async prescribing for non-controlled meds remains permitted.
How does ClearedRx stay compliant with District of Columbia regulations?
Three ways. First, every patient case is reviewed by a physician licensed in District of Columbia — not a different state. Second, our 503A compounding pharmacy partners are licensed by the District of Columbia Board of Pharmacy (and the relevant boards in every state we ship to). Third, our intake follows the same medical-history standards a District of Columbia OB-GYN would use at a new-patient visit, satisfying the practitioner-patient relationship requirement under District of Columbia telehealth practice rules.