How Much Does Neupulse Cost?
Published on | Prices Last Reviewed for Freshness: January 2026
Written by Alec Pow - Economic & Pricing Investigator | Medical Review by Sarah Nguyen, MD
Educational content; not medical advice. Prices are typical estimates and may exclude insurance benefits; confirm with a licensed clinician and your insurer.
Neupulse is marketed as a one-time device purchase plus a monthly plan, and the plan is not a small add-on. As of December 2025, Neupulse lists the device at £500 and states there is a £20/month subscription that starts once the device is delivered. The product page also notes tax included, shipping calculated at checkout, and a full refund available prior to delivery.
Availability changes the practical cost. Neupulse’s help page says the initial release is planned for Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) in 2026, with the US, Europe, and other regions to follow after regulatory approval in each territory. The same help page says the current pre-order estimate is June 2026 once the device gains “CA regulatory approval,” but the shipping policy also cautions that delivery dates for pre-order products are not yet finalised and will be confirmed later by email.
Article Highlights
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- Posted pricing as of December 2025 is £500 upfront, plus £20/month starting once the device is delivered.
- First-year budgeting at posted rates is £740, and year 2 is £240 if the plan continues.
- Three-year planning at posted rates totals £1,220, and the subscription portion (£720) becomes the dominant cost line.
- The product page notes tax included and shipping calculated at checkout, and it also states a full refund is available prior to delivery.
- Neupulse’s help page frames availability as Great Britain first in 2026, with other territories later after regulatory approval, and the shipping policy states delivery dates are not yet finalised.
- Eligibility matters: public guidance lists age and contraindication limits, which can turn “device cost” into “alternative care cost” if the intended user is not eligible.
How Much Does Neupulse Cost?
The published model is simple: one device purchase and one ongoing subscription. Neupulse lists the device at £500 and the subscription at £20 per month, starting once the device is delivered. Neupulse describes the subscription as covering device and app support/updates, a two-year warranty (only valid with a current subscription), 1-on-1 video consultations, a member community, and custom-made gel pads with delivery flexibility, as described on the product page.
USD budget view (approx.): Neupulse is listed in GBP, but for U.S. readers the posted prices roughly convert (using a late-December 2025 GBP/USD rate of about $1.35 per £1) to: device £500 ≈ $676, subscription £20/month ≈ $27/month, first-year total £740 ≈ $1,000, year-2 subscription £240/year ≈ $324/year, and a three-year total £1,220 ≈ $1,649. Your card/bank FX rate and any currency conversion fees can change the final charged amount.
The practical way to budget is to treat year one as a bundle, then treat each later year as an ongoing ownership charge. Using posted pricing, a first-year total is £740 (device £500 plus 12 months at £20). That first-year total works out to an “effective” ~£61.67/month averaged across the first 12 months from delivery. After the first year, the recurring cost remains £240 per year at the posted plan rate.
| Line item | Amount | What it means for budgeting | Notes and source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront device | £500 | One-time purchase (tax included) | Posted device price on the Neupulse product page; shipping is calculated at checkout. |
| Monthly subscription | £20/month | Recurring ownership cost that continues until cancelled | Product page states it starts once the device is delivered; terms describe auto-renewal until cancellation. |
| First-year total (12 months from delivery) | £740 | “All-in device + plan” view for the first 12 months | £500 + (12 × £20) based on posted pricing. |
| Year 2 ongoing cost (subscription only) | £240/year | What ownership costs after the device is paid for | 12 months of subscription at the posted monthly rate. |
| Three-year total (device + 36 months) | £1,220 | Long-horizon number families can actually plan around | £500 + (36 × £20) using posted pricing. |
| Three-year subscription share | £720 | Shows how the plan overtakes the hardware over time | 36 months × £20 = £720; over three years, subscription spend exceeds the £500 device line. |
For families comparing options, the headline is not just the checkout price, it is the subscription drag over time. Over three years at posted rates, you would pay £720 in plan fees on top of the £500 device. Also note the site shows a United States (USD $) region selector, but Neupulse’s own availability language still frames the initial release as Great Britain first, with other territories later after approvals, so non-UK shoppers should treat any currency display as informational rather than a guaranteed billed amount.
Real-life cost examples
Real-world budgeting often shows up in fundraising, because households plan for the device and also the monthly plan. A GoFundMe campaign from England referenced the Neupulse device priced at £500 and treated ongoing payments as part of the plan. The budgeting lesson is that “year one” is £740, not £500, if the subscription remains active for 12 months from delivery.
A second GoFundMe campaign in Great Britain cited the same £500 device price and highlighted that ongoing payments mattered in planning. For most households, the realistic view is device £500 plus £240 per year for the plan, with the timing anchored to delivery because Neupulse states the subscription starts once the device is delivered.
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A clean worked example helps because the monthly fee can hide in plain sight. A Great Britain household that pre-orders at the posted device price and keeps the plan active for three years is budgeting £1,220 total at posted rates. If that household stops after the first 12 months from delivery, the total is £740 plus any shipping charges that appear at checkout.
Cost breakdown
The easiest way to understand the bill is to separate what you pay once from what you keep paying. The one-time line is the device itself, listed at £500 on the Neupulse product page. The ongoing line is the subscription at £20/month, which the product page describes as including support/updates, video consultations, gel pads, and a two-year warranty that is only valid with a current subscription.
Two “hidden in plain sight” details matter for checkout realism. First, the product page states tax included but also says shipping is calculated at checkout, so your total can be higher than £500 even before the subscription begins. Second, Neupulse’s terms say pre-orders are paid at the time you place the order, and subscriptions can auto-renew until cancelled, which is why long-horizon budgeting is the safer frame than “device price only.”
Refund and timing rules can also change the financial risk. The product page states a full refund is available prior to delivery, and the terms describe cancellation/refund handling before shipment confirmation. Meanwhile, the shipping policy says delivery timelines for pre-orders have not yet been finalised, so households planning around school terms or clinical schedules should treat June 2026 as an estimate rather than a guaranteed ship date.
Factors influencing the cost
Territory and regulatory timing: Neupulse frames the initial release as Great Britain first, with other regions later after territory-by-territory approvals. That affects whether you are comparing “buy now” versus “wait,” not just the sticker price. The help page says the current estimate is June 2026 once “CA regulatory approval” is in place, while the shipping policy says delivery dates are not finalised yet, which is a real planning variable for families.
Subscription structure: The monthly plan is not a minor add-on. Over three years at posted rates, the subscription spend (£720) is larger than the device line (£500). The terms also describe auto-renewal until cancelled, which makes “will we keep paying this?” a core budgeting question, not a footnote.
Eligibility and contraindications: A practical cost driver is whether the intended user can use the device at all. Neupulse’s public guidance states it is not recommended for those under 12 and lists contraindications such as implanted electrical medical devices and seizure disorders on its help page and terms. If a user is ineligible, the “real cost” becomes the alternatives you pursue instead, not the £500 headline.
Evidence and future reimbursement: Coverage decisions can change who pays, but they are not a published consumer tariff today. Independent reporting from the University of Nottingham describes clinical trial outcomes for wrist-worn median nerve stimulation in Tourette’s, and NICE has discussed digital therapies in tic-disorder care pathways, but that does not automatically translate into retail buyers paying £0 in 2026.
Alternative products or services
Neupulse is positioned for Tourette syndrome and chronic tic disorders, so alternatives tend to fall into clinical care pathways rather than simple “buy another gadget” shopping. Many people compare retail device pricing against behavioural therapy and medication management they can access today through clinicians. Public health guidance (for example, the CDC) describes behavioural treatments and medication as management options when tics interfere with daily life.
Another “alternative” is access path rather than product: some households track research and public-system evaluation developments. Neupulse’s consumer price is clearly posted as a device + monthly plan, but reimbursement or trial access depends on criteria and timelines that are not sold as a guaranteed consumer discount at checkout.
Ways to spend less
The largest savings lever is avoiding subscription surprises. Budget on a multi-year horizon before you buy, because the posted plan becomes £240/year after the first 12 months from delivery, and over three years the subscription is the larger cost line. If the plan does not fit your monthly budget, the “cheap” path is often waiting, not buying.
Also use official checkpoints, not assumptions. Neupulse’s help page and shipping policy are the cleanest trackers for delivery timing, and the terms are where subscription renewal and cancellation mechanics are spelled out. If you are trying to reduce out-of-pocket spend through trials or public-system routes, treat those as “possible,” not guaranteed, until an official pathway is published.
Answers to Common Questions
How much does Neupulse cost in the first year?
Using posted pricing as of December 2025, the device is £500 and the subscription is £20/month starting once the device is delivered, which totals £740 for the first 12 months from delivery. The product page notes tax is included and shipping is calculated at checkout, so your checkout total can be higher than £500 before the subscription begins.
Does the subscription start when you order?
No. Neupulse states the subscription starts once the device is delivered, not at checkout, which matters if delivery is later than the order date.
Is Neupulse available in the United States?
As of December 2025, Neupulse’s public availability language frames the initial release as Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) first in 2026, with the US to follow after regulatory approval. The site shows a US region selector, but that is not the same as US fulfilment.
What does the monthly plan include?
Neupulse describes the subscription as including device and app support/updates, 1-on-1 video consultations, a member community, custom-made gel pads, and a two-year warranty that is only valid with a current subscription, as listed on the product page.
Can I cancel my pre-order?
The product page states a full refund is available prior to delivery, and Neupulse’s terms describe cancellation and refund handling prior to shipment confirmation. If delivery timing is a concern, check the shipping policy updates and any email confirmations.
Can Neupulse be free through the NHS?
There is public evaluation and research activity around wrist-worn median nerve stimulation in tic disorders, but no published source in this article provides a guaranteed consumer patient price of £0 for 2026 retail purchasers. Families planning around NHS access need to follow official NHS and research updates rather than assuming automatic coverage.

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