Reviewed byAHF Editorial TeamUpdated July 2026
America's Most Trusted Men's Health Clinic. Over 400,000 patients served with FDA-approved treatments for testosterone, ED, weight loss, and hair loss.
Modern TRT clinic focused on ease of use and rapid onboarding. Known for their "cream" based topical testosterone.
Clinic Overview & Credentials
The Wellness Club occupies a converted space on West Azeele Street in Tampa's South Tampa corridor, a neighborhood better known for its independent restaurants and boutique fitness studios than for medical-grade wellness. That context matters, because the clinic's service list reads more like a functional medicine platform than a day spa: testosterone replacement therapy, peptide protocols, PRP hair restoration, hormone testing, thyroid treatment, ED therapy, and the P-Shot sit alongside red light therapy, skin aesthetics, lipotropic injections, and medical weight loss. The breadth is deliberate, and the patient base reflects it. Across 99 verified Google reviews, the clinic holds a 4.96 average, with 98 of those reviews carrying five stars. [source: https://thewellnessclubtampa.com/]
The review corpus for The Wellness Club is specific in ways that distinguish it from generic five-star piles. Of 99 Google reviews collected between October 2022 and April 2026, the dominant themes break down as follows:
Two practitioners are named repeatedly and by full name across multiple independent reviews: Dr. Emily Devol (also referenced as Dr. Devol Webster in at least one review) and Dr. Morgan Miller. A licensed massage therapist named Alejandra is cited specifically in post-surgical lymphatic massage contexts, and a provider named Paula is mentioned in a skincare context. The specificity of these name-drops, across unrelated reviewers over a multi-year period, is a signal worth noting.
Dr. Emily is amazing, but her staff is equally impressive, sweet, and experienced. Love the vibe here.\
The facility quality theme (37 reviews, 37.4%) consistently points to cleanliness, ambiance, and what multiple reviewers describe as a "zen" or "warm" environment. This is not a clinical waiting-room operation. Reviewers who arrive expecting a standard medspa aesthetic frequently note surprise at the level of care put into the physical space.
The prescriber quality theme is one of the more granular signals in this dataset. Forty reviews, or 40.4% of the total, mentioned the quality of the clinicians specifically, and every one of those mentions was positive. Dr. Emily Devol draws the largest share of named commentary, particularly around aesthetic injections and peptide therapy protocols.
The "not a one-size-fits-all approach" framing recurs across multiple independent reviews, suggesting a pattern in how the clinic structures consultations rather than a single reviewer's phrasing. Dr. Morgan Miller draws comparable commentary in the acupuncture and shockwave therapy context, with reviewers specifically citing her thoroughness and her ability to make procedures feel less clinical.
For peptide therapy specifically, one reviewer's account stands out for its clinical detail. The patient had experienced chronic pain rated 8-10 on a pain scale for over seven years, had undergone full-body imaging without a diagnosis, and describes a meaningful shift after Dr. Devol prescribed BPC-157 and TB-500.
This is a subjective patient account, not a clinical outcome measure. Individual results vary, and peptide therapy remains an area where patient experience can differ substantially from person to person.
A subset of reviews, six in total (6.1%), specifically address follow-up care and post-procedure support. The pattern here centers on lymphatic massage as a post-surgical recovery modality, with the therapist Alejandra named in multiple independent accounts. One reviewer describes being referred by her surgeon; another describes a more urgent situation following a "mommy makeover" that included a tummy tuck with mesh repair.
The responsiveness detail in that account, a reply at 3 a.m. followed by same-day scheduling before a vacation departure, is the kind of operational signal that does not appear in marketing copy but does appear in authentic patient accounts. The scheduling theme (4 reviews, 4.0%) similarly notes ease of booking and flexibility, though the sample is small.
Thirty-seven reviews (37.4%) mention the physical space in positive terms. The descriptors cluster around cleanliness, warmth, and a sense of intentional design. One reviewer, writing about bringing his wife in for a post-partum facial and then returning himself, offered a perspective that touches on the clinic's apparent demographic range.
A separate reviewer, describing a first visit that included IV therapy and a facial, noted the ambiance as "most relaxing" and converted to membership status after a single session. [source: Google review, R. W., January 2026] The IV therapy offering appears in this context as part of a broader wellness visit rather than a standalone clinical procedure.
The star distribution for The Wellness Club is nearly vertical: 98 five-star reviews and one single one-star review across 99 total. The review corpus does not contain enough lower-star reviews (the threshold for a dedicated friction analysis is five or more) to support a structured critical section. What follows is a consolidated look at where the clinic may not be the right fit, drawn from the data's gaps and the single negative signal.
Service breadth and clarity. The clinic's menu spans hormone therapy, aesthetics, peptide protocols, post-surgical recovery, acupuncture, and skin health. For patients seeking a narrowly focused TRT clinic or a standalone medspa, the integrated model may require more intake time than a single-service provider. The data does not surface complaints about this, but the breadth implies a consultation-forward model that may not suit patients looking for a transactional, in-and-out experience.
Thursday closure. The clinic lists Thursday as closed. [source: clinic data] For patients with limited scheduling flexibility, this is a practical constraint worth confirming before booking.
Review volume relative to competitors. At 99 reviews, the clinic's dataset is meaningful but smaller than some Tampa-area competitors (TRT Nation, for instance, carries 1,698 Google reviews at a 4.9 average). The Wellness Club's 4.96 average is numerically strong, but the sample size is worth acknowledging for patients who weight review volume heavily in their decision-making.
The single one-star review. The star distribution shows one one-star rating. The review data does not include the verbatim text of that review in the source data provided, so no specific claim can be attributed to it. Its existence is noted in the interest of transparency.
| Clinic | Google Rating | Review Count | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Wellness Club | 4.96 | 99 | Broad wellness: hormones, aesthetics, peptides, recovery |
| TRT Nation | 4.9 | 1,698 | TRT-focused, telehealth-heavy |
| Gameday Men's Health Tampa South | 5.0 | 54 | Men's health: TRT, ED, weight loss |
| Ageless Men's Health | 4.9 | 45 | Men's hormone optimization |
| Reset TRT & Weight Loss | 5.0 | 35 | TRT and medical weight loss |
| Advanced TRT Clinic | 4.6 | 9 | TRT |
The Wellness Club is the only clinic in this comparison set that spans both men's and women's health across aesthetic, hormonal, and recovery modalities within a single location. Clinics like TRT Nation and Gameday Men's Health serve a narrower demographic with higher review volume, which reflects both their longer operating histories and their more focused service lines. Patients seeking a men's-only TRT environment may find those options better suited to their preference. Patients who want hormone testing, aesthetic procedures, peptide therapy, and post-surgical recovery support under one roof will not find that combination at the other clinics in this table.
What is the general patient experience like at The Wellness Club in Tampa?
The experience described across 99 reviews centers on personalized attention and a non-clinical atmosphere. Reviewers consistently note that staff take time to explain procedures and answer questions without rushing. The facility is described as clean, warm, and intentionally designed. One reviewer who drove over an hour and a half to reach the clinic wrote: "The ease of scheduling appointments, to the follow up, shows how much they care and Dr. Devol's commitment to her clients. She listens and helps you achieve the natural results you are looking for. She is the best of the best. Don't cut yourself short. It's worth it!!!" reviewerInitials="V. J." date="June 2024" stars={5} platform="Google" />. For patients accustomed to transactional medspa visits, the consultation-forward model may feel different from what they expect.
Who are the main providers at The Wellness Club?
Two practitioners are named repeatedly across independent reviews: Dr. Emily Devol, who appears in aesthetic injection, peptide therapy, and stem cell injection contexts, and Dr. Morgan Miller, who appears in acupuncture and shockwave therapy contexts. A lymphatic massage therapist named Alejandra is cited specifically in post-surgical recovery reviews. A skincare provider named Paula is mentioned in at least one review. The review data does not provide formal credential listings, so prospective patients should verify licensure and specialization directly with the clinic.
Does The Wellness Club offer peptide therapy, and what do patients report?
Peptide therapy is listed as a service, and the review data includes one of the more detailed patient accounts in the dataset. A reviewer who had experienced chronic pain for over seven years, without a diagnosed cause, describes a meaningful shift after Dr. Devol prescribed BPC-157 and TB-500:
I can truly say I feel better than I have in years. [...] Even more surprising, my brain fog has lifted, and I feel clearer, more present, and more like myself again
. This is a subjective account. Peptide therapy outcomes vary by individual, and no clinical outcome describes the goal of can be drawn from patient reviews.
What do patients say about aesthetic injections and filler at this location?
Aesthetic injections draw some of the most specific commentary in the dataset. One reviewer with prior filler experience at multiple providers wrote:
I am not new to fillers and have been injected by some of the absolute best, Dr. Devol has an amazing technique, and does it in a way that I was completely comfortable the whole time, zero pain, and the results are absolutely gorgeous. I would highly recommend The Wellness Club and Dr. Devol
. The personalized consultation approach is cited frequently, with patients noting that Dr. Devol tailors treatment to individual facial goals rather than applying a standardized protocol.
Is The Wellness Club appropriate for men, or is it primarily a women's wellness clinic?
The service list includes testosterone replacement therapy, ED treatment, the P-Shot, and medical weight loss, which are services with a predominantly male patient base. The review data also includes first-person accounts from male patients, including one who described himself as someone who would not typically visit a spa but found the environment welcoming. The clinic does not market itself as gender-specific in either direction. Patients seeking a men's-only clinical environment may prefer a dedicated men's health clinic, but the review data does not suggest that male patients feel out of place at this location.
Does the clinic offer post-surgical lymphatic massage, and how is it coordinated?
Post-surgical lymphatic massage is reflected in the follow-up care theme (6 reviews, 6.1%), with multiple reviewers noting that they were referred by their surgeons. The therapist Alejandra is named in independent accounts as the primary provider for this service. One reviewer described being seen on short notice before a scheduled vacation departure following a tummy tuck with mesh repair. The clinic appears to accommodate urgent post-surgical scheduling when possible, though availability cannot be guaranteed and prospective patients should contact the clinic directly.
What is the facility like, and does it feel clinical or spa-like?
Reviewers consistently describe the space as warm, clean, and aesthetically considered. The words
zen,\
. Another reviewer who came for IV therapy and a facial described the ambiance as
most relaxing\
.
What services are available for skin health and aesthetics?
The clinic lists aesthetics and skin health as services, and the review data references facials, filler injections, and skincare consultations with a provider named Paula. One reviewer who visits the clinic for multiple services wrote:
Paula is fabulous with skincare, dr devol is first class and the peptides are making me feel like my best self. I genuinely believe in the team, def make an appointment, you will be hooked!
. The aesthetics offering appears integrated with the broader wellness model rather than positioned as a standalone medspa service.
Is The Wellness Club in Tampa welcoming to first-time visitors who are unfamiliar with wellness clinics?
The scheduling theme and several staff-quality reviews suggest the clinic actively orients new patients to its service range. One first-time visitor wrote:
Sarah was very knowledgable and informed me of other services wellness club has to offer. Because of this, I booked a consultation for a different service. Can't wait to go back!
. The review data does not surface accounts of patients feeling pressured or upsold, though the pattern of patients booking additional services after initial visits is consistent across multiple accounts.
What is the Thursday closure policy, and how does it affect scheduling?
The clinic lists Thursday as closed. [source: clinic data] No reviews specifically cite this as a friction point, but for patients with limited weekday availability, it is a practical consideration. The scheduling theme in the review data (4 reviews, 4.0%) is uniformly positive, suggesting that the remaining open days accommodate patient demand without significant friction.
Alpha Health Finder compiles this profile from publicly available business data and verified patient reviews. No clinical outcomes are guaranteed. Prospective patients should consult directly with The Wellness Club to confirm service availability, provider credentials, and current scheduling. [source: https://thewellnessclubtampa.com/]
This is not a treatment recommendation. It is a directory entry. Any treatment decision belongs with a licensed physician who can examine the patient and evaluate their specific case.
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