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Forumsβ€ΊInsurance & Accessβ€ΊHas anyone dealt with mounjaro savings card?

Has anyone dealt with mounjaro savings card?

lucas_SP_BR Fri, Jan 16, 2026 at 12:26 PM 8 replies 596 viewsPage 1 of 2
lucas_SP_BR
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Jun 2024
SΓ£o Paulo, BR
Jan 16, 2026 at 1:51 PM#1

Okay I've been seeing conflicting info about the Mounjaro/Zepbound savings cards so here's the current breakdown as of early 2026 for anyone confused:

Zepbound Savings Card (for weight loss):

  • If you have commercial insurance that covers Zepbound: $25/month copay
  • If your insurance DOESN'T cover it: $550/month (still a big savings from the $1,069 retail)
  • NOT available for Medicare, Medicaid, or government insurance

Mounjaro Savings Card (for type 2 diabetes):

  • Commercial insurance with coverage: $25/month
  • Max benefit $150/fill for up to 24 months

The "hack" that worked for me: I got my PCP to prescribe Mounjaro for insulin resistance (I have documented IR with fasting insulin of 19). The Mounjaro savings card brought my copay from $75 down to $25. My insurance (Anthem) covers Mounjaro for T2D/IR but does NOT cover Zepbound for weight loss.

Has anyone else navigated this? I know the landscape keeps changing.

7 3NurseKim_ATL, paul_denver, TinaHashiRN and 4 others
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ingrid_STO
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1,456
Jul 2024
Stockholm, SE
Jan 16, 2026 at 2:08 PM#2

Pharmacy tech here. A few important clarifications:

The savings cards are processed as a secondary claim at the pharmacy. Your primary insurance runs first, then the savings card covers most or all of the remaining copay. This is why it only works with commercial insurance β€” the savings card needs a primary claim to attach to.

What I see go wrong most often:

  • Patient brings in a Zepbound savings card but the script is written as Mounjaro (or vice versa) β€” these are different cards for different drugs
  • Patient has a high-deductible plan and hasn't met deductible β€” the savings card caps at a certain dollar amount, so you might still owe several hundred
  • Savings card expired or hit the annual max β€” they DO run out
I got my PCP to prescribe Mounjaro for insulin resistance

This works as long as the diagnosis code on the claim matches what the savings card requires. Just be aware that Lilly's savings card program does verify the diagnosis code.

Last edited: Jan 16, 2026 at 5:08 PM
25 4COA_Karl, MikeFit_NJ, InsuranceTom and 22 others
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DoseLogDan
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567
Feb 2025
Montana
Jan 16, 2026 at 2:25 PM#3

Wait, I'm confused. My doctor prescribed Wegovy for weight loss. My BCBS plan doesn't cover any weight loss medications. Can I still use a savings card?

Also what's the difference between the Novo Nordisk savings card and the pharmacy discount cards I keep seeing advertised on TikTok? I feel like I'm drowning in options and none of them seem to actually work for me.

25 7mel_PDX, Dr.AddMedPHL, newstart_MO and 22 others
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InsuranceTom
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Mar 2024
Connecticut
Jan 16, 2026 at 2:42 PM#4

Janet β€” for Wegovy specifically, Novo Nordisk has their own savings program. If your BCBS doesn't cover Wegovy at all, the Novo savings card can get it down to about $500/month β€” better than the $1,349 retail but still pricey.

The TikTok "discount cards" are usually GoodRx or similar β€” those are negotiated cash prices and generally DON'T stack with insurance or manufacturer cards. For Wegovy cash price through GoodRx you're looking at $1,200-1,400 depending on dose and pharmacy.

Honestly, if your insurance won't cover brand Wegovy, a compounded semaglutide might be more realistic budget-wise. I know people paying $100-200/month for compounded. Different conversation though.

45 20matt_MKE, Dr.ReproEndo, lucas_SP_BR and 42 others
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SandraNC_45
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Sep 2024
Charlotte, NC
Jan 16, 2026 at 2:59 PM#5

One thing nobody mentions: the savings cards reset annually. My Zepbound card reset in January and I had to re-enroll. Took me 20 minutes on the phone because the website wasn't processing it correctly.

Also, pro tip: always ask your pharmacy to run the savings card BEFORE you leave the counter. I had one fill where the tech forgot to apply it and I paid $250 out of pocket. Getting a retroactive adjustment took 3 weeks of phone calls between the pharmacy, Lilly, and my insurance.

My 12-month cost breakdown with Zepbound + savings card + Anthem PPO:

  • Months 1-3 (before meeting deductible): $150/month average
  • Months 4-12 (after deductible): $25/month
  • Total first year: $675 vs. $12,828 retail. Savings card saved me over $12K.
31 13Dr.PainCLE, mike_mealprep, NicoleRaleigh and 28 others
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