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ForumsInsurance & AccessCash-pay GLP-1 pricing comparison — brand vs compounded 2026

Cash-pay GLP-1 pricing comparison — brand vs compounded 2026

DataDave Wed, Feb 25, 2026 at 5:00 PM 6 replies 350 viewsPage 1 of 2
DataDave
Senior Member
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Apr 2024
Washington
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Feb 25, 2026 at 6:25 PM#1

After 4 months of fighting with Cigna over Wegovy coverage and getting nowhere, I made the switch to compounded semaglutide. I'm 3 months in and wanted to share my detailed cost breakdown and experience for anyone considering this route.

My previous brand Wegovy costs (self-pay after denials):

  • Wegovy 1mg monthly: $1,349.02 (retail)
  • With savings card (no insurance): $506.25/month
  • Doctor visits (endo, every 3 months): $185 copay
  • Lab work (quarterly): $45 copay
  • Effective monthly cost: ~$583/month

My current compounded semaglutide costs:

  • Compounded semaglutide 5mg/2ml vial: $149/month
  • Telehealth subscription (includes provider visits): $49/month
  • Syringes (100-pack from pharmacy): $12 (lasts ~3 months = $4/month)
  • Alcohol prep pads: $3/month
  • Lab work (I get this through my PCP, covered by insurance): $0
  • Effective monthly cost: $205/month

Monthly savings: $378 | Annual savings: $4,536

Results comparison: Lost 18 lbs on brand Wegovy in 4 months (still titrating up). Lost 23 lbs on compounded sema in 3 months (was already at therapeutic dose). Appetite suppression feels identical. No difference in side effects.

45 1VendorMark, COA_Karl, MikeFit_NJ and 42 others
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GenomicsKate
Member
345
1,890
Oct 2024
Cambridge, MA
Feb 25, 2026 at 6:42 PM#2

Pharmacist here. I want to make sure people considering this switch understand the differences clearly:

What's the same:

  • Active ingredient: semaglutide (same molecule)
  • Route of administration: subcutaneous injection
  • Mechanism of action: identical

What's different:

  • Formulation: Brand Wegovy uses a specific proprietary formulation with excipients optimized for stability and absorption. Compounded versions may use different excipients.
  • Delivery: Brand uses an autoinjector pen (pre-measured). Compounded requires drawing from a vial with a syringe (user measures).
  • Quality control: Brand undergoes FDA cGMP manufacturing. Compounded undergoes state pharmacy board oversight (503A) or FDA oversight (503B).
  • Dosing verification: Brand is exact. Compounded has normal compounding variability (USP standards allow ±10% potency).

I'm not anti-compounding — it provides vital access. Just want people to make informed decisions.

40 17KristenIndy, MarkLI_maint, Dr.PeteFamMed and 37 others
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MaxMetOK
Member
312
1,123
Dec 2024
Oklahoma
Feb 25, 2026 at 6:59 PM#3

Fair points, and I appreciate the balanced perspective. The syringe drawing was definitely an adjustment. First time I tried, I drew up way too much because I was nervous. Watched about 5 YouTube videos and now it's second nature — takes me about 90 seconds from vial to injection.

For the dosing precision concern: my telehealth provider includes detailed dosing instructions with markings on the syringe. At 0.5mg per week (0.1ml from my 5mg/ml solution), I use insulin syringes with 1-unit markings. Each unit = 0.01ml = 0.05mg semaglutide. So 10 units = 0.5mg. The precision is actually quite good with insulin syringes.

Last edited: Feb 25, 2026 at 11:59 PM
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Dr.EM_Chicago
Member
567
2,567
May 2024
Chicago, IL
Feb 25, 2026 at 7:16 PM#4

I tried compounded and went back to brand. My experience was different though:

  • First compounding pharmacy: medication arrived warm (shipping issue in summer). Had to get a replacement.
  • Second batch: seemed to work but I felt like the appetite suppression was weaker at the same dose. Could be placebo, could be potency variation. I'll never know.
  • Third month: provider switched compounding pharmacies without telling me. New vial looked different, different concentration, required recalculating my dose.

The inconsistency stressed me out. I ended up going back to brand Wegovy and paying the $506/month with the savings card. For me, the peace of mind is worth the extra $300/month.

Not discouraging anyone from compounded — just sharing that the experience isn't universally smooth.

Last edited: Feb 25, 2026 at 11:16 PM
50 16lucas_SP_BR, lisa_labSD, adam_van and 47 others
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nick_newbie
New Member
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Mar 2026
Virginia
Online
Feb 25, 2026 at 7:33 PM#5

RN here. For anyone switching to compounded and using vial + syringe for the first time, here are my tips:

  • Use insulin syringes (not regular syringes) — they have finer needles and more precise markings
  • 29-gauge or 31-gauge, 1/2 inch needle is ideal for subQ injection
  • Always inject air into the vial equal to your withdrawal volume — this prevents vacuum and makes drawing easier
  • Check for air bubbles BEFORE injecting — tap the syringe to move bubbles up, push them out
  • Rotate injection sites: abdomen (2 inches from belly button), thigh, upper arm
  • Store vial in the refrigerator, NOT the freezer. Current vial can be at room temperature for up to 28 days.

The learning curve is about 2-3 weeks. After that, most patients say it's no big deal. But if you have needle anxiety, consider that the brand pen hides the needle and is push-button. That matters for some people.

30 2wanda_boise, NurseAsh_DET, BenResearch_OR and 27 others
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