GLP-1 / Weight Loss · Cost Guide
If you've looked into semaglutide or tirzepatide for weight loss, you've probably run into wildly different price tags - anywhere from $150 to over $1,600 a month for what looks like the same treatment. The gap isn't a pricing mistake. It comes down to three things: brand-name vs. compounded medication, whether you have insurance coverage, and which savings programs you're able to use. Here's how it actually breaks down in 2026.
Brand-name prices at full retail
Without insurance, brand-name GLP-1 medications carry the highest list prices on the market. Semaglutide products (Ozempic, Wegovy) and tirzepatide products (Mounjaro, Zepbound) generally list between roughly $1,000 and $1,600 per month at full retail price, depending on the specific medication and dose. Almost nobody pays this full sticker price in practice - but it's the starting point insurers and manufacturers set discounts against.
Manufacturer cash-pay and savings programs
Both major manufacturers now offer direct-to-patient cash-pay options that meaningfully undercut retail pricing. Novo Nordisk's NovoCare Pharmacy and Eli Lilly's LillyDirect program have both introduced tiered pricing in 2026, with many patients paying somewhere in the $199–$499 per month range depending on the medication, dose, and how long they've been on treatment. Manufacturer copay cards can push this even lower for patients who qualify, sometimes down to $25–$150 per month, though these cards typically require commercial insurance to be eligible.
Compounded GLP-1 medications
Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide, prepared by licensed pharmacies rather than sold as branded finished drug products, tend to be the most affordable route - commonly priced between $150 and $400 per month. This is usually the biggest single cost gap in the category. It's worth being selective here: pricing that undercuts this range by a wide margin is a signal to check whether the pharmacy is properly licensed rather than just taking the lowest number on the page.
Does insurance cover it?
Coverage for GLP-1 medications is inconsistent and depends heavily on your plan and the reason for the prescription. Most insurance plans do not cover these medications when prescribed specifically for weight loss, though coverage is more common when the same medication is prescribed for type 2 diabetes. Even when a plan does cover it, prior authorization is typically required, which can add weeks to the process. Regardless of coverage, GLP-1 prescriptions are generally eligible for HSA or FSA funds, which is an easy way to reduce the effective cost even without insurance.
What actually drives your monthly cost
- Medication type - compounded options are consistently cheaper than brand-name.
- Dose and titration stage - costs often rise as your dose increases over the first few months.
- Bundled vs. unbundled care - some telehealth programs include provider visits and monitoring in a flat monthly rate; others bill medication and care separately, which adds up quickly.
- Insurance and savings program eligibility - the single biggest swing factor in what you'll actually pay.
Get your own numbers
Because pricing depends so much on your specific situation, the ranges above are a starting point, not a quote. Use the tools below to see where you land and what providers are available to you.