Best TRT Clinics in Florida
Florida has 952 TRT clinics — more than any state except California and Texas. Whether you're in Miami, Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville, or smaller markets like Lakeland and Winter Haven, you'll find multiple local providers within a 20-minute drive. Metro areas have the highest clinic density, but suburban and secondary cities maintain solid coverage.
Telehealth adds another layer. Royal Medical Centers and Hims both serve Florida residents, shipping testosterone cypionate to your door after a virtual consultation. That's helpful if you're in a rural county or prefer not to drive to a clinic every week.
Most Florida clinics offer flexible dosing schedules. You can inject weekly at home or visit the clinic biweekly if you prefer supervised administration. Cash-pay pricing runs $150-$200 per month on average, with initial consultations typically under $150.
Florida's large retiree population means many clinics see older patients with age-related hypogonadism. If you're under 40, look for providers who work with younger men — some clinics specialize in athlete protocols or fertility-preserving TRT approaches.
Clinic Explorer — Florida
Showing 12 of 948 clinics

LifeXMD
Jupiter, FL

South Florida Men's Health
Sunrise, FL

Gameday Men's Health Palm Beach Gardens ED and TRT Clinic
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

Optimal Health Miami: Marc Gittelman, MD
Aventura, FL

LiveForeverHealth Wesley Chapel
Wesley Chapel, FL

4Ever Young Anti-Aging Solutions
Weston, FL

T Clinics USA
Tampa, FL

22 Health & Hormone
Altamonte Springs, FL

Aspire Rejuvenation Clinic
Orlando, FL

Forum Health Tampa Functional Medicine Doctor
Tampa, FL

BioCure Health
Fort Lauderdale, FL

Invigorate Wellness Medical
New Port Richey, FL
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166 cities with TRT clinics in Florida
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Florida follows federal controlled substance rules. Testosterone is Schedule III, so your provider needs a DEA license to prescribe it. The Florida Board of Medicine doesn't impose state-specific restrictions beyond standard medical practice requirements — you need documented low testosterone (usually two morning blood draws below 300 ng/dL) and a legitimate diagnosis.
Telehealth prescribing is allowed in Florida, but whether your provider requires an initial in-person visit depends on their practice policy, not state law. Some telehealth companies start patients remotely after a video consultation and blood work at a local lab. Others want to see you in person first. Ask upfront.
Florida doesn't restrict testosterone delivery methods. You can get injections (cypionate or enanthate), pellets, gels, or creams — whatever your provider thinks fits your situation. Most cash-pay clinics default to weekly injections because they're effective and cheap.
Commercial insurance in Florida covers TRT when it's medically necessary. That means documented hypogonadism with symptoms — fatigue, low libido, brain fog — not just wanting to optimize your levels. Plans vary, but most major insurers (Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare) will cover testosterone cypionate injections and basic lab monitoring if you meet diagnostic criteria.
Florida Medicaid coverage for TRT is limited. The program covers testosterone for documented hypogonadism caused by disease, injury, or congenital conditions, but prior authorization requirements are strict.1 If you're on Medicaid, expect more paperwork and possible denials for age-related low T.
Most Florida patients pay cash. Private clinics charge $150-$200 per month, including medication and follow-up labs. That's often cheaper than insurance copays and deductibles, especially if your plan requires high-cost brand-name products or frequent office visits. Telehealth pricing runs slightly lower — Hims charges around $99/month after the initial consultation.
Florida's large veteran population means VA clinics are another option. The Tampa VA, Miami VA, and Orlando VA all prescribe TRT for qualifying veterans. Wait times can be long, but the medication is free or low-cost if you have VA benefits.
If you're considering pellets, know that Florida clinics charge $600-$900 per insertion. Pellets last 3-4 months, so the annual cost is similar to monthly injections — but you avoid weekly or biweekly dosing. Some men prefer this. Others find pellet insertion uncomfortable or don't like the inability to adjust dosing mid-cycle.