Lose weight with modern medicines
Average patients can lose up to 13–19.5% weight loss in one year, depending on treatment. [1][2]



Member stories



Breakthrough treatment
Targets the body’s metabolic patterns for an average of 13–19.5% weight loss in one year, depending on treatment.




30-day money-back guarantee
You can cancel your membership within the first 30 days at any time, and we’ll refund you the full amount even if medications have been prescribed and shipped.
What to expect
1-3 months
- Connect with your personal practitioner, set your goals
- Treatment begins to address your biology
- Cravings stop, eating habits improve
3-6 months
- See and feel noticeable changes to your physical health
- Treatment continues to target your metabolic system
- Feel improvements to sleep, energy and confidence
6-12 months
- Form lasting habits for long-term health
- Treatment keeps you on track and in control
- Improved biometric health shows lower blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol
*This reflects average results. Individual experiences may vary.
Created by the best minds in weight management
A team of health practitioners and dietitians will update and personalise your treatment as your weight loss journey evolves.



All you’ve got to lose is the weight.
From $13 a day for clinically proven medication, health coaching, and more.
Learn more about weight loss
Check out the featured articles, or visit our Health Hub blog and level up your knowledge on the benefits, strategies, costs, and range of options available for losing weight.
Visit Health HubFAQs
This varies person-to-person – some Pilot members have responded quickly, dropping several kilos in the first few weeks. Weight loss results can also be dependant on which treatment plan you are on.Clinical research from studies of these medications helps paint a picture of what you can expect:
After a year, the average patient lost 19.5%
In a 2022 study from the New England Journal of Medicine, patients lost 19.5% of their body weight in 52 weeks using one of Pilot’s treatments. [2]
Due to Australian therapeutic goods regulations, we are unable to list this class of treatments by name.
You will have to proceed to the health practitioners consult stage on Pilot (and be approved by a health practitioners) to learn deeper specifics.
What we can say, though, is that these medications can be effective for regulating your metabolism and hunger hormones.
Due to Australian therapeutic goods regulations, we are unable to list this class of treatments by name.
You will have to proceed to the practitioners consult stage on Pilot (and be approved by a practitioner) to learn deeper specifics.
What we can say, however, is that these medications can be effective for regulating your metabolism and hunger hormones.
The medications available in the program will be named and fully explained after your health practitioner's consult (due to advertising regulations). They have been widely used since 2017 and are generally very well tolerated, with minimal side effects (the main one being nausea for some patients).
For anyone with a personal or family history that might put them at a slightly higher risk for extremely rare side effects, your health practitioner will always err on the side of caution and recommend other options in those situations.
The cost of this program (including the medication, health practitioner support, and ongoing behavioural coaching) ranges from $375 to $599 a month.
No. We don't force you to follow an eating plan, but your health coach will be helping you make healthier food and lifestyle choices through targeted behavioural changes.
That's fine, you don't have to be best mates with them. Your health coach will still want to check in on your progress - get your weight, waist measurement, and motivation levels. If you aren't comfortable sharing this with the group, then this can be shared directly with your health coach - no problems.
The most common side effects observed by those on Pilot’s weight loss program are nausea, diarrhoea, and constipation. In many cases these side effects diminish over time when patients grow more accustomed with the treatment.
[1] The Lancet, Volume 392, Issue 10148, 2018, DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31773-2
[2] N Engl J Med 2022; 387:205-216, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2206038