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ForumsSemaglutide (Ozempic / Wegovy)Switching from Ozempic to Wegovy — same drug, different experience?

Switching from Ozempic to Wegovy — same drug, different experience?

chris_chi24 Wed, Feb 11, 2026 at 4:15 AM 30 replies 906 viewsPage 1 of 6
chris_chi24
Member
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Sep 2024
Chicago, IL
Feb 11, 2026 at 5:40 AM#1

Ok I know this topic has been beaten to death but I'm genuinely confused. I've been on brand Wegovy for 6 months with great results (down 34lbs). My insurance just denied continued coverage and the out-of-pocket is $1,350/month which is absolutely insane.

My friend has been on compounded semaglutide from a telehealth provider for $299/month and swears it works exactly the same. But I've also seen people on here say compounded stuff is sketchy and underdosed.

What's the actual deal? Is compounded semaglutide the same molecule? Same results? Or am I rolling the dice?

14 17nick_newbie, DadBodDave, AmyNC_wife and 11 others
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PurityPaulOR
Senior Member
1,890
7,890
Mar 2024
Oregon
Feb 11, 2026 at 5:57 AM#2

Ok here's the deal as objectively as I can put it:

What's the same:

  • The molecule. Semaglutide is semaglutide. A compounding pharmacy that's doing it right is using the same active pharmaceutical ingredient (API)
  • The mechanism of action — it's still a GLP-1 receptor agonist regardless of who mixed it

What's different:

  • Novo Nordisk's Wegovy is FDA-approved, manufactured under cGMP with strict quality control, and the exact formulation has been tested in large clinical trials
  • Compounded semaglutide is made by 503A or 503B pharmacies with varying levels of quality control. It has NOT been through FDA approval for the specific formulation
  • Compounded versions often use semaglutide sodium salt (not the base form), which some argue may have different bioavailability
  • The excipients (inactive ingredients) are different — Wegovy uses a specific phosphate buffer; compounders may use different stabilizers

My experience: I switched from Wegovy to compounded after 4 months. Honestly? Similar results. But I made sure to go with a reputable 503B outsourcing facility, not some random online pharmacy.

3 13MikeNYC_runner
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amsterdam_pete
Senior Member
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Feb 2024
Netherlands
Feb 11, 2026 at 6:14 AM#3

I've been on compounded for 8 months. Works great. Down 41lbs. My bloodwork improvements are identical to what people on brand report.

That said, I did my homework. My pharmacy sends certificates of analysis with every batch. I know exactly what I'm getting.

28 20CanadaChris, ZaraB_AL, JakeSmashed95 and 25 others
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Dr.ObesityLA
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Los Angeles, CA
Feb 11, 2026 at 6:31 AM#4

I want to add some important nuance here that often gets lost in the "it's the same molecule" argument.

Yes, the API is semaglutide in both cases. But pharmaceutical formulation matters enormously. The stability of the peptide in solution, the pH of the buffer, the preservatives used, the sterility assurance level — these all impact safety and efficacy.

The FDA has issued multiple warnings about compounded semaglutide products, including reports of adverse events linked to products from compounding pharmacies that were not properly formulated.[1]

That doesn't mean all compounded sema is bad. It means the variance is much higher. With Wegovy, you know exactly what you're getting every single time. With compounded, you're trusting the compounding pharmacy's quality systems.

Key questions to ask your compounder:

  1. Are you a 503A or 503B facility? (503B has more FDA oversight)
  2. Do you provide certificates of analysis for each batch?
  3. What is the source of your semaglutide API?
  4. What are the beyond-use dates on your product?
  5. Has your facility had any FDA warning letters? (These are public record)
[1] U.S. Food and Drug Administration. "Compounded Semaglutide Products." Safety Communication, 2023.
23 14chris_chi24, tampaLisa73, KarenAZ_mom and 20 others
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emily_PDX
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Nov 2024
Portland, OR
Feb 11, 2026 at 6:48 AM#5

lol the real difference is $1,050/month

I'm sorry but until insurance actually covers these meds consistently, compounded is the only option for most people. Not everyone has $16k/year to spend on a weight loss medication.

40 16PeptideSynthNJ, Dr.KarenChen, Dr.NateNeph and 37 others
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