Great questions. I'll try to answer with actual PK data:
1. Half-life: The reported half-life of subcutaneous semaglutide is approximately 165-168 hours (~1 week). This is unusually long for a peptide drug and is achieved through several modifications: an albumin-binding fatty acid side chain that allows reversible binding to serum albumin (extending circulation time), resistance to DPP-4 degradation, and reduced renal clearance.[1]
Yes, it varies between individuals. Reported range is roughly 150-190 hours depending on body weight, renal function, and individual metabolism. Larger patients tend to have slightly shorter half-lives.
2. Morning vs evening: At steady state (reached after ~4-5 weeks of consistent dosing), the difference between morning and evening injection is pharmacologically negligible. Serum levels fluctuate only about 20-30% between peak and trough at steady state because of the long half-life. Compare that to a short-acting drug where levels might fluctuate 10x between doses.
3. Being a day late: Here's the math. At steady state on weekly dosing, your trough level (just before your next injection) is about 50% of peak. If you delay by 24 hours, your levels drop by an additional ~10% (since the drug decays by about 50% over 168 hours, that's about 10% per day). So being one day late means your trough is roughly 40% of peak instead of 50% — unlikely to be clinically meaningful.
The prescribing information says you can take your injection up to 2 days early or late and still maintain your schedule. Beyond 2 days, take it as soon as possible and resume your regular schedule.
4. Peak vs flat: After subcutaneous injection, semaglutide reaches Tmax (peak plasma concentration) at approximately 24-72 hours post-injection. But because of the long half-life and weekly dosing, at steady state the fluctuation is minimal.
| Timepoint | Relative Plasma Level (Steady State) |
| 0h (injection) | ~50% (trough) |
| 24h post-injection | ~70% |
| 48h post-injection | ~90-100% (peak region) |
| 72h post-injection | ~95-100% |
| 96h post-injection | ~85% |
| 120h post-injection | ~70% |
| 144h post-injection | ~60% |
| 168h (trough, next dose) | ~50% |
As you can see, the difference between peak and trough is about 2:1, which is very flat for a weekly medication. This is why semaglutide provides consistent efficacy throughout the week.
[1] Lau J, et al. "Discovery of the Once-Weekly Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) Analogue Semaglutide." J Med Chem. 2015;58(18):7370-7380.