GLP-1 Cost and Insurance Coverage: How to Actually Get These Drugs Covered
List prices for GLP-1 medications run $900–1,400/month. Insurance often requires prior authorization (BMI documentation, comorbidities, prior weight-loss attempts). Manufacturer direct-pay programs (LillyDirect, NovoCare) offer cash prices around $500–650/month. Check savings cards. Switching to a covered alternative is sometimes the answer.
If you've tried to fill a Wegovy or Zepbound prescription and seen a $1,400 sticker, you're not alone. The list prices are extraordinary. The actual costs you pay depend on insurance, savings programs, manufacturer cash-pay options, and a fair amount of administrative effort.
List prices (April 2026)
Approximate U.S. list prices per month:
- Wegovy (semaglutide for weight): ~$1,350
- Ozempic (semaglutide for diabetes): ~$1,000
- Zepbound (tirzepatide for weight): ~$1,060
- Mounjaro (tirzepatide for diabetes): ~$1,070
- Saxenda (liraglutide for weight): ~$1,400
- Victoza (liraglutide for diabetes): ~$815
These are list prices. Almost no one pays them in full.
Insurance coverage — diabetes vs weight loss
Coverage usually splits along the FDA-approved indication:
Diabetes (Ozempic, Mounjaro, Victoza):
- Often covered by most insurance for type 2 diabetes
- Step therapy may apply (try metformin first)
- Some plans require prior auth even for diabetes
Weight management (Wegovy, Zepbound, Saxenda):
- Covered by some insurance, not most
- Usually requires BMI ≥30 (or ≥27 with comorbidity)
- Prior authorization is the rule
- Documentation of prior weight loss attempts often required
- Periodic re-authorization (12-month renewals)
Medicare:
- Does NOT currently cover GLP-1 specifically for weight loss (this may change)
- Covers Ozempic and Mounjaro for diabetes
- Covers Wegovy specifically for cardiovascular event reduction in patients with established CVD (a 2024 expansion)
Medicaid:
- Coverage varies wildly by state
- Many state Medicaid programs do not cover weight-loss indications
- Better coverage for diabetes indications
Manufacturer direct-pay programs
If your insurance won't cover, the manufacturer cash-pay programs are usually your best bet:
LillyDirect (Zepbound, Mounjaro):
- Self-pay program with significant discounts
- Zepbound vials (single-dose): ~$400–500/month at lower doses
- Direct shipping
- Eligible without insurance approval
NovoCare (Wegovy):
- Similar self-pay program
- Various dose-strength savings
- Roughly $500–650/month for self-pay
Savings cards (for insured patients):
- Manufacturer cards can reduce copays significantly
- Wegovy savings card can bring copays to as low as $0–25/month for eligible patients with commercial insurance
- Mounjaro/Zepbound savings card similar
- Eligibility usually excludes Medicare/Medicaid patients
Strategies to get coverage
If your insurance denies:
1. Appeal. Many denials are reversed on appeal with proper documentation. Your prescriber's office should help.
2. Document comorbidities. Type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver — these support medical necessity.
3. Document prior attempts. Weight Watchers, Noom, prior medications, behavioral programs. Show that lifestyle alone hasn't worked.
4. Switch indication products. If you have type 2 diabetes alongside obesity, Ozempic or Mounjaro may be covered while Wegovy or Zepbound isn't.
5. Try a less-restricted alternative. Saxenda is sometimes covered when Wegovy isn't.
6. Ask about pharmacy benefit alternatives. Some plans have specialty pharmacies with different formularies.
7. Use a patient assistance program. Both Lilly and Novo Nordisk have programs for low-income patients.
What about compounded?
Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide were widely available and inexpensive ($150–400/month) during the FDA shortage period (2023–2024). As supplies have stabilized, the FDA has restricted compounding.
Risks (covered in detail in our compounded GLP-1 guide):
- Variable purity
- Counterfeits in the gray market
- No standardized FDA review
If brand-name is unaffordable and compounded is your only option, vet the pharmacy carefully.
What about international/online?
Some patients import medication from Canada, Mexico, or other countries. Legal status varies. Personal-use importation has historically been tolerated but exists in a gray area. Quality varies. Caution warranted.
Telehealth pharmacy services proliferated in 2023–2024. Some are legitimate; some prescribe with minimal oversight. Look for ones with real medical evaluation, not "fill out a form, get a script."
Cost comparison summary
For a typical patient targeting effective weight loss:
- Best case: Insurance covers, copay $25–100/month
- Mid case: Manufacturer cash pay, $400–650/month
- High case: Out-of-pocket retail, $1,000–1,400/month
- Compounded (with caveats): $200–500/month
- No medication (lifestyle only): $0 + likely much smaller weight loss
When to push, when to accept
Push hard for coverage if:
- You have a labeled indication and insurance is being inflexible
- You have multiple comorbidities
- Your prescriber strongly supports the medication
Accept and pivot if:
- Multiple appeals have failed
- Cash-pay through manufacturer is workable for your budget
- A different drug is covered that may also work for you
- You're a candidate for less-aggressive intervention (lifestyle + a non-GLP-1 weight medication)
What's coming
Several things may change the cost landscape:
- Generic semaglutide could enter the market starting around 2026 (varies by jurisdiction)
- Generic liraglutide is expected to be more widely available
- Negotiated Medicare prices under the Inflation Reduction Act may include some GLP-1s
- More commercial competition as new triple agonists arrive
The cost picture in 2027 may look meaningfully different from today.
Bottom line
GLP-1 medications are expensive but increasingly accessible. Insurance coverage is the first option (BMI documentation, prior auth, appeals if denied). Manufacturer direct-pay programs are the second option (LillyDirect, NovoCare). Savings cards help insured patients with high copays. Compounded is a last-resort option with real safety caveats. Don't assume the sticker price is what you'll pay — work the system.