About This Comparison
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This erectile dysfunction provider comparison is independently researched by our editorial team. We compare telehealth services based on publicly available information including pricing, available treatments, service areas, and verified customer reviews.
Not Medical Advice: This comparison is for informational purposes only. We are not healthcare providers. Always consult with a licensed physician before starting any treatment. Read our full medical disclaimer and editorial policy.
Best Erectile Dysfunction Treatment in New Jersey (2026): 8 Providers Compared
8 ED telehealth providers serve New Jersey in 2026. Compare pricing, ratings, and NJ insurance parity rules to find the best option for you.
What's Actually Available for ED Treatment in New Jersey Right Now
How New Jersey's Telehealth Rules Affect Your ED Prescription
The Cheapest Way to Get ED Meds in New Jersey
The Highest-Rated ED Providers Available in New Jersey
Using Insurance for ED Treatment in New Jersey
Compounded and Custom ED Formulas in New Jersey
When Low Testosterone Is Part of the ED Picture in New Jersey
Getting ED Treatment in New Jersey Without a Subscription
Matching the Right ED Platform to Your Situation in New Jersey
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it legal to get an ED prescription online in New Jersey?
Yes, it is completely legal to receive an ED prescription through a licensed telehealth provider in New Jersey. All eight platforms on this list operate within New Jersey's telehealth framework and prescribe through licensed clinicians. New Jersey does not require a mandatory live video visit before prescribing ED medications, which means asynchronous consultations through platforms like Hims, Strut, and Taurus Meds are valid prescribing pathways. The medication itself must still come from a licensed pharmacy. What is not legal is any website selling sildenafil or tadalafil to New Jersey residents without a prescription. If a site doesn't ask for a medical intake or provider review, walk away.
Does New Jersey insurance cover ED telehealth consultations?
New Jersey requires full telehealth insurance parity, meaning your insurer must reimburse telehealth consultations at the same rate as in-person visits for covered services. For ED, this means the consultation itself may fall under your regular copay if your plan covers that type of visit. PlushCare is the platform on this list most set up to bill insurance directly. The medication is a separate question. New Jersey Medicaid does not cover ED medications, and commercial plans vary on formulary coverage for sildenafil and tadalafil. Before signing up for any platform, call your insurer and ask two things: does my plan cover a telehealth consultation for men's health, and is generic sildenafil or tadalafil on my formulary?
What's the cheapest way to get generic Viagra or Cialis in New Jersey?
Taurus Meds and Hims are the most price-competitive platforms for generic ED medications currently serving New Jersey. Taurus Meds is structured around low monthly pricing for ED, PE, and hair loss, and Hims regularly prices generic sildenafil at rates that compete with or beat retail pharmacy prices even with discount cards. Generic sildenafil and tadalafil are also available through Strut, Ro, and Eden, so it's worth comparing per-dose costs across platforms before committing. If you have commercial insurance with a good formulary, filling through your local pharmacy using your coverage may actually be cheaper than any telehealth subscription. Don't assume one route is cheapest without checking both.
Which ED telehealth platforms do NOT work in New Jersey?
Three platforms that appear frequently in general telehealth roundups do not currently operate in New Jersey: Hello Cake, Peter MD, and Keeps. If you attempt to sign up for any of these using a New Jersey address, you will hit a state restriction. This is not a minor workaround issue; these platforms are simply not licensed to serve New Jersey residents for ED prescriptions. All eight platforms that do operate in New Jersey, Ro, Strut, Eden, Taurus Meds, Maximus, Hims, PlushCare, and Sesame Care, ship discreetly to New Jersey addresses including apartments and homes across both North Jersey and South Jersey.
Can I get a compounded ED formula like a troche or chewable tablet delivered to New Jersey?
Yes. Compounded ED formulas including troches, chewables, and combination products are available to New Jersey residents through telehealth. Strut is the platform on this list best positioned for this, given its compounding pharmacy backbone and its 9.0/10 rating from 38,500 reviews. Compounded formulas are legal and regulated in New Jersey through the State Board of Pharmacy, which oversees compounding facilities. These are not FDA-approved in the conventional sense, but they are manufactured to clinical standards and are widely used when standard pill formats aren't the right fit. All orders from Strut and similar platforms ship to New Jersey addresses with discreet, unmarked packaging.
How quickly can I get ED medication delivered in New Jersey after an online consultation?
Delivery speed depends on the platform and your location in New Jersey. Most asynchronous platforms, including Hims, Taurus Meds, and Strut, complete provider review within a few hours during business hours, and expedited shipping is typically available. Standard delivery across New Jersey is usually two to five business days from approval. New Jersey's dense postal infrastructure, especially in the northern part of the state and the Philadelphia-area counties in South Jersey, means standard shipping timelines are generally on the faster end. If you need medication quickly, check whether your chosen platform offers overnight or two-day shipping to New Jersey ZIP codes before completing your intake.
Is Maximus available in New Jersey, and is it the right choice for ED?
Yes, Maximus is available in New Jersey. It holds a 9.0/10 from 24,600 verified reviews and focuses on testosterone optimization and men's performance health rather than ED in isolation. It is the right choice if your ED may be connected to low testosterone, or if you want a protocol that addresses overall hormonal health rather than just prescribing sildenafil. Lab work through Maximus is ordered separately and can be completed at draw sites throughout New Jersey. If your only goal is an ED prescription without any testosterone component, Strut, Hims, or Taurus Meds will be a faster and more direct route. Maximus is built for a more specific clinical picture.
Can I use Sesame Care for a one-time ED consultation in New Jersey without subscribing?
Yes. Sesame Care operates on a pay-per-visit model with no subscription required, and it is currently available in New Jersey with an 8.7/10 rating from 25,400 reviews. You book a specific visit type, pay for that visit at the transparent listed price, and receive care without any recurring billing commitment. This makes it a strong option if you want a New Jersey-licensed clinician to evaluate your situation, issue a prescription you can fill locally, and move on without being enrolled in an ongoing platform. It also works well as a starting point before deciding whether a subscription platform like Hims or Strut is worth it for ongoing treatment.
What ED medications can New Jersey residents get through telehealth?
New Jersey residents can access all major prescription ED medications through the platforms on this list. That includes sildenafil (generic Viagra), tadalafil (generic Cialis), vardenafil, and avanafil. Compounded combination formulas, such as sildenafil plus tadalafil in a single dose, are also available through Strut. Daily low-dose tadalafil, which some men prefer for spontaneity rather than on-demand dosing, is available through multiple platforms including Hims, Ro, and Eden. The right medication depends on how your body responds, your activity schedule, and whether you want an on-demand or daily dosing approach. Most New Jersey telehealth platforms will discuss these options during the intake process.
Is there any reason a New Jersey resident should see an in-person urologist instead of using telehealth for ED?
Telehealth is appropriate for the majority of ED cases, particularly those that are situational, stress-related, or clearly connected to known health factors like hypertension or diabetes. However, if you have ED with additional symptoms like blood in urine, pelvic pain, a curved or painful erection, or if you've had recent pelvic surgery, an in-person urological evaluation is the right first step. New Jersey has strong access to academic medical centers and urology practices, including at systems like RWJBarnabas, Hackensack Meridian, and Jefferson Health in the southern part of the state. Telehealth is also not a substitute if prior ED medications haven't worked and you want a full workup, including vascular assessment. For straightforward cases, telehealth in New Jersey is a legitimate and well-regulated option.
Sources & References
Our comparisons are informed by official sources and regulatory guidelines. We encourage readers to verify information with authoritative sources.
- PMC - DTC Telehealth ED MedicationsPeer-reviewed study on direct-to-consumer telehealth ED platforms — cost comparison, convenience, and clinical limitations including cardiovascular screening gaps.
- NIDDK - Erectile DysfunctionNational Institute of Diabetes overview of erectile dysfunction: causes, prevalence, diagnosis, and treatment options.
- NIH - Sildenafil (StatPearls)NIH clinical reference on sildenafil: mechanism of action as a PDE5 inhibitor, dosing, drug interactions, and safety.
- AUA - Clinical GuidelinesMedical research and clinical information
- CCHP Telehealth Policy - New JerseyNew Jersey state telehealth laws, online prescribing rules, and insurance reimbursement policies maintained by the Center for Connected Health Policy.
- America's Health Rankings - Obesity in New JerseyNew Jersey adult obesity prevalence data from the CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
- NIMH - Mental Illness StatisticsNIMH data: 1 in 5 U.S. adults experience mental illness annually. National prevalence by condition, age, and demographic.
Editorial Note: Researched and edited by our editorial team. AI tools assist with initial research and drafting; all content is fact-checked and edited by humans before publication. Learn more about our editorial standards



