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ForumsInternationalUK NHS GLP-1 prescribing — NICE TA875 and access guide

UK NHS GLP-1 prescribing — NICE TA875 and access guide

LondonLisa Fri, Mar 13, 2026 at 12:39 AM 7 replies 149 viewsPage 1 of 2
LondonLisa
Member
912
3,456
Mar 2024
London, UK
Mar 13, 2026 at 2:04 AM#1

Hi all, first post here. I'm in West Yorkshire and my GP referred me to the NHS Tier 3 weight management service back in September 2025. I've just been told the wait time is 14-18 months to even get an initial assessment, let alone start Wegovy.

NICE TA875 says semaglutide should be available for BMI 35+ with comorbidities (or 30+ for certain ethnic groups), but my GP flat out said they "don't prescribe it at practice level" and it has to go through the specialist service.

Has anyone in England actually managed to get Wegovy through the NHS without going private? What was your timeline? I'm BMI 38 with T2D and hypertension — surely I tick every box?

18 5SaraMom3, Dr.MetabolicMD, RetaRick_CA and 15 others
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BenResearch_OR
Senior Member
2,456
11,234
Dec 2023
Oregon
Mar 13, 2026 at 2:21 AM#2

The postcode lottery is real, unfortunately. I'm in Greater Manchester and got my referral accepted in June 2025. Had my first Tier 3 appointment in November (5 months wait), started Wegovy in January 2026. So roughly 7 months from referral to first injection.

Key things that helped:

  • My GP coded it as an urgent obesity referral due to HbA1c being 58 mmol/mol
  • Manchester ICB had specific funding ring-fenced for semaglutide after the NICE guidance update
  • I'd already completed a 12-week Tier 2 programme (structured diet/exercise through the council) which is a prerequisite in most areas

Have you done a Tier 2 programme? Most ICBs won't even look at a Tier 3 referral without it.

39 15PharmD_Rodriguez, julia.endo, JessicaM_2024 and 36 others
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InsuranceTom
Senior Member
1,345
7,890
Mar 2024
Connecticut
Mar 13, 2026 at 2:38 AM#3

GP here (lurking on my day off, don't judge me). The situation is genuinely frustrating from our side too. NICE says we should prescribe it, but our ICB formulary hasn't approved it for primary care prescribing. We literally cannot add it to the prescription without a shared-care agreement from the Tier 3 service.

Some ICBs — notably parts of the North East and Birmingham — have set up enhanced service contracts where GPs can prescribe after completing a training module. Worth checking if your ICB has one.

Also worth knowing: the NICE guidance specifies a maximum 2-year treatment course on NHS, then reassessment. It's not an indefinite prescription.

11 23Dr.ReproEndo, lucas_SP_BR, lisa_labSD and 8 others
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TomTeleRx
Member
189
678
Feb 2025
Delaware
Mar 13, 2026 at 2:55 AM#4

Thanks both. I did the Tier 2 "Better Living" programme through Leeds City Council last year — 12 weeks, lost 4kg, regained it all within 3 months. So that box is ticked.

I rang the West Yorkshire ICB patient liaison team today. They confirmed the wait is currently 16 months for Leeds Teaching Hospitals Tier 3 service. They suggested I could ask my GP to refer to a different trust with shorter waits, but apparently Bradford's wait is similar.

I'm seriously considering going private with Boots or LloydsPharmacy Online Doctor in the meantime, but the cost is eye-watering — Boots quoted me £199/month for the 0.25mg starter dose.

5 17HPLC_Greg, LibrarianMeg, bri_stats and 2 others
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COA_Karl
Senior Member
2,123
8,901
Jan 2024
Pennsylvania
Mar 13, 2026 at 3:12 AM#5

I went through exactly this in 2025. Bristol, BMI 41, sleep apnoea. NHS wait was "at least 12 months." Ended up going private through a consultant endocrinologist — cost me £350 for the initial appointment plus £180/month for Wegovy through a private pharmacy.

BUT — and this is the key bit — after 3 months on private Wegovy with documented 8% weight loss, my consultant wrote to my GP requesting shared care. GP agreed to take over the prescribing on NHS. So I'm now getting it on the NHS without ever having gone through Tier 3.

It's a back door but it's legitimate. The NICE guidance doesn't say it HAS to come through Tier 3 — just that the prescriber needs to be "experienced in obesity management."

Not all GPs will agree to this, but it's worth trying if you can afford a few months private.

12 13LindaRN_retired, tommy_boulder, hyun_seoul and 9 others
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