Can I Get Birth Control Online Without a Physical Exam?

For decades, getting a birth control prescription meant booking a GP or gynecology appointment, waiting weeks, going in for a pelvic exam you may not have felt was necessary, and then—finally—getting the prescription you needed in the first place.

That has changed. In most US states, the majority of contraceptives that require a prescription can now be prescribed via a secure online consultation — no pelvic exam, no speculum, no waiting weeks for an appointment.

The short answer is yes: for most women, most of the time, you can get a birth control prescription online without a physical exam. Here is exactly how it works, what is available, and what the exceptions are.

Quick Answer


Yes, most hormonal contraceptives, including the combined pill, progestogen-only pill, patch, ring, and injectable, can be prescribed via telehealth without a physical exam in most US states.

A pelvic exam is NOT required to prescribe oral contraceptives. This is confirmed by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

IUDs, implants, and other procedures always require in-person fitting — they cannot be prescribed or fitted remotely.

State laws on online contraception prescribing vary—video-md.com operates within all applicable regulations.

 

Do You Actually Need a Physical Exam to Get Birth Control?

This is one of the most persistent myths in women’s healthcare. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) have both published guidance confirming that a pelvic examination is NOT a prerequisite for prescribing oral contraceptives.

The confusion stems from a historical practice of combining contraception consultations with routine gynecological care—smear tests, STI screening, and breast exams—which do require in-person examination. These are valuable, but they are separate from the prescription decision.

What ACOG Says


The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists states that routine pelvic examination is not required before initiating combined oral contraceptives. Blood pressure assessment is the primary clinical safety check before prescribing most hormonal contraception.
Source: ACOG Committee Opinion on Contraceptive Counselling (2020, reaffirmed 2024)

 

What a telehealth doctor does instead of a physical exam is a comprehensive medical history and risk assessment—which is clinically equivalent for most contraceptive decisions. This includes:

  • Blood pressure — you report this yourself using a home monitor or a recent pharmacy reading. This is the primary safety check for oestrogen-containing contraceptives
  • Medical and family history — clotting disorders, migraines with aura, liver disease, cardiovascular history
  • Current medications—for drug interactions (e.g., enzyme-inducing medications that reduce contraceptive efficacy)
  • Smoking status — relevant for combined pill safety in women over 35
  • Obstetric history — previous pregnancies, postpartum status, breastfeeding
  • Contraceptive goals — whether pregnancy prevention alone or additional benefits like managing periods, acne, or endometriosis

Which Contraceptives Can Be Prescribed Online?

Here is a complete breakdown of what is and is not available via telehealth:

Contraceptive Method

Available via Telehealth?

Exam Needed?

Notes

Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill

Yes

No exam needed

Most widely prescribed via telehealth. BP check and medical history sufficient.

Progestogen-Only Pill (Mini-Pill)

Yes

No exam needed

Suitable for women who cannot take oestrogen. No BP threshold restrictions.

Contraceptive Patch

Yes

No exam needed

Weekly patch applied to skin. Same medical history assessment as combined pill.

Vaginal Ring (e.g. NuvaRing)

Yes

No exam needed

Monthly ring inserted by patient. No fitting required — doctor prescribes, patient inserts.

Injectable Contraceptive (e.g. Depo-Provera)

Yes*

No exam needed*

*Prescription via telehealth, but injection administered at a clinic or pharmacy in most states.

Emergency Contraception (Plan B)

Yes

No exam needed

Available OTC in most US states — telehealth for prescription-strength options (ella).

Intrauterine Device (IUD)

No

In-person required

Fitting requires a clinical procedure. Cannot be prescribed or fitted remotely.

Contraceptive Implant (Nexplanon)

No

In-person required

Requires surgical insertion under local anaesthetic. In-person only.

Sterilisation (tubal ligation)

No

In-person required

Surgical procedure. Requires in-person consultation and operating theatre.

Diaphragm / Cervical Cap

No

Fitting required

Requires fitting in person to ensure correct size.

*State laws vary. video-md.com operates within applicable regulations in your state.

What Happens During an Online Birth Control Consultation?

A contraception consultation on video-md.com is straightforward, private, and typically takes 10–15 minutes. Here is a step-by-step walkthrough:

  1. Book an appointment—choose Women’s Health and select contraception as your reason for visit. On-demand or scheduled slots are available.
  2. Complete your intake form — you will be asked about your medical history, current medications, allergies, and contraceptive preferences before the call.
  3. Video consultation — your doctor reviews your history, discusses your options, and answers your questions. They will ask about your blood pressure, smoking status, migraines, and relevant family history.
  4. Prescription issued — if you are medically suitable, your prescription is sent electronically to your nominated pharmacy, usually within minutes of the consultation ending.
  5. Ongoing care — contraception consultations typically include a 3–6 month follow-up to review side effects, blood pressure, and whether your chosen method is working well for you.

Your Consultation Is Completely Private

All video-md.com consultations are HIPAA-compliant and end-to-end encrypted. Your reproductive health choices are never shared with employers, family members, or insurers without your explicit written consent.
You do not need a partner’s knowledge or permission to access contraceptive care.


Who Is Eligible for Online Birth Control Prescribing?

Most healthy women are eligible. There are specific medical conditions where combined hormonal contraceptives (containing estrogen) carry additional risks—your telehealth doctor will screen for these:

Medical Factor

Impact on Contraceptive Options

High blood pressure (uncontrolled)

Combined pill not recommended. Progestogen-only pill usually safe — doctor will advise.

Migraines with aura

Combined pill contraindicated due to stroke risk. Progestogen-only options appropriate.

History of blood clots (DVT/PE)

Combined pill contraindicated. Non-hormonal or progestogen-only options considered.

Active breast cancer

Hormonal contraception generally not recommended. Doctor will discuss alternatives.

Smoker over age 35

Combined pill not recommended due to cardiovascular risk. Progestogen-only pill suitable.

Diabetes with vascular complications

Careful assessment needed. Many options still available with monitoring.

Breastfeeding (under 6 weeks postpartum)

Combined pill not recommended. Progestogen-only pill is safe.

No significant contraindications

All telehealth-prescribable options available based on patient preference.

What If You Have a Complex Medical History?
If you have one of the above conditions, it does not mean you cannot get contraception via telehealth. It means your doctor will be more specific about which method is safest for you. The consultation exists precisely to navigate these decisions properly.
 

State-by-State: Online Birth Control Prescribing Rules

Telehealth contraception laws vary by state. Here is a quick overview of the current landscape across key states—always confirm current regulations at the time of your consultation, as laws continue to evolve:

State

Online Birth Control Status

California

✓  Fully available — telehealth contraception prescribing permitted with no restrictions

New York

✓  Fully available — telehealth prescribing permitted

Texas

✓  Available — telehealth prescribing permitted with in-state licensed physician

Florida

✓  Available — telehealth prescribing permitted

Illinois

✓  Fully available — strong telehealth parity laws

Washington

✓  Fully available — progressive telehealth prescribing framework

Colorado

✓  Fully available

Virginia

✓  Fully available — telehealth prescribing broadly permitted

Georgia

⚠  Available with restrictions — confirm with video-md.com at time of booking

North Carolina

⚠  Available with some restrictions — in-state physician required

All other states

⚠  Generally available — specific rules vary. video-md.com confirms eligibility at booking.

Note: State telehealth laws are evolving rapidly. video-md.com confirms prescribing eligibility based on your state of residence at the time of booking.

What to Have Ready Before Your Consultation

The more information you bring to your consultation, the faster and more accurate your prescription will be. Here is what to prepare:

  • Your blood pressure — take a reading within 24 hours of your appointment if possible. Many pharmacies offer free BP checks. Most home BP monitors cost under $30.
  • Current medications — including any supplements, herbal remedies, or over-the-counter medications. Some medications (e.g. rifampicin, some epilepsy drugs) interact with hormonal contraception.
  • Previous contraception history — what you have used before, how long, and why you stopped or want to change
  • Contraceptive goals — do you want lighter periods? Acne management? Endometriosis support? This affects which option is best for you.
  • Last menstrual period date — helps the doctor assess whether you need a pregnancy test before starting
  • Any current or recent health concerns — particularly headaches, mood changes, weight changes, or cardiovascular symptoms
  • Preferred pharmacy — name and postcode/zip code so the prescription can be sent immediately

Choosing the Right Method — A Brief Guide

Not sure which contraceptive is right for you? Here is a plain-language overview to help you go into your consultation with an idea of what you want to discuss:

If You Want…

Consider Asking About…

A simple daily pill with well-understood effects

Combined oral contraceptive pill (e.g. Yasmin, Microgynon, Lo Loestrin)

A pill safe to take if you have migraines or can’t take oestrogen

Progestogen-only pill (mini-pill) — e.g. Cerazette, Noriday

Something you only think about once a week

Contraceptive patch — changed weekly

Something monthly with no daily routine

Vaginal ring — inserted once a month

Lighter periods as well as contraception

Combined pill — many formulations reduce period heaviness significantly

Help with acne alongside contraception

Combined pill — certain formulations (e.g. co-cyprindiol) have a licensed acne indication

Emergency contraception after unprotected sex

ella (ulipristal acetate) — more effective than Plan B and requires a prescription

Long-term contraception with no daily management

IUD or implant — requires in-person fitting but then provides 3–10 years of protection

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I get birth control online without a physical exam?
A: Yes. For most hormonal contraceptives — including the combined pill, progestogen-only pill, patch, and ring — a physical exam is not required. A telehealth doctor at video-md.com can assess your suitability based on your medical history and blood pressure, and send your prescription directly to your pharmacy.
Q: Do I need a pelvic exam to get the birth control pill?
A: No. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) confirms that a pelvic exam is not required before prescribing oral contraceptives. Your doctor will ask about your blood pressure, medical history, and any relevant risk factors — all of which can be assessed remotely.
Q: Can a telehealth doctor prescribe the morning-after pill?
A: Plan B (levonorgestrel) is available over the counter without a prescription in most US states. Ella (ulipristal acetate), which is more effective and works up to 5 days after unprotected sex, requires a prescription—this can be issued via a telehealth consultation on video-md.com.
Q: Is online birth control prescribing available in all US states?
A: Telehealth contraception prescribing is available in the majority of US states. Laws vary slightly — video-md.com confirms eligibility based on your state of residence at the time of booking. Our doctors are licensed in multiple states and operate within all applicable regulations.
Q: Will my birth control prescription be confidential?
A: Yes. All video-md.com consultations are HIPAA-compliant and end-to-end encrypted. Your reproductive health choices are never shared with employers, partners, family members, or insurers without your explicit written consent.
Q: Can I switch birth control methods through a telehealth appointment?
A: Yes. Whether you want to change from one pill formulation to another, switch from the pill to the patch, or discuss a different method entirely, a telehealth consultation is appropriate. Your doctor will review your history with your current method and recommend alternatives based on your preferences and medical profile.

Get Your Birth Control Prescription Online — Private, Fast, and Convenient

You should not have to schedule a weeks-long wait, take time off work, or undergo an examination you do not need just to access contraception. video-md.com connects you with licensed women’s health physicians who can assess your needs and send your prescription to your pharmacy—in under 10 minutes.

Book Your Women’s Health Consultation on video-md.com

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