Back to Starter KitPart 5β€’15 min read

GLP-1 Medication Comparison: Ozempic vs Mounjaro vs Wegovy vs Zepbound

Complete evidence-based comparison of all major GLP-1 medications including clinical trial data, side effects, costs, and how to choose the right medication for your situation.

Medical Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. The information provided should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health condition. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication or treatment plan. Individual results may vary.

Last reviewed: January 17, 2025

GLP-1 Medication Comparison: Making the Right Choice

Part 5 of the GLP-1 Starter Kit | 15 min read

ℹ️

Medical Disclaimer

This comparison is for educational purposes only. Medication decisions should always be made in consultation with your healthcare provider based on your specific medical history and needs.

You're standing in your doctor's office, prescription pad in hand, and facing a choice: Ozempic, Mounjaro, Wegovy, or Zepbound? Or maybe you're already on one medication and wondering if you should switch.

The GLP-1 medication landscape has exploded in recent years, creating both exciting options and confusing decisions. Each medication has different FDA approvals, dosing schedules, efficacy data, side effect profiles, and costs.

πŸ’‘Key Takeaways

  • Tirzepatide (Mounjaro/Zepbound) shows 18-22% average weight loss vs semaglutide's (Ozempic/Wegovy) 15-17%
  • Ozempic and Wegovy are the same drug (semaglutide) at different doses - same with Mounjaro and Zepbound (tirzepatide)
  • Insurance coverage depends on diagnosis: 70-80% cover diabetes meds, only 30-40% cover weight loss meds
  • Brand-name costs $900-$1,400/month without insurance; compounded versions cost $200-$500/month with quality risks

Quick Reference: At-a-Glance Comparison

Ozempic

Semaglutide for Diabetes | 10-15% weight loss | $900-$1,000/mo

Wegovy

Semaglutide for Weight Loss | 15-17% weight loss | $1,300-$1,400/mo

Mounjaro

Tirzepatide for Diabetes | 15-22% weight loss | $1,000-$1,100/mo

Zepbound

Tirzepatide for Weight Loss | 18-22% weight loss | $1,000-$1,100/mo

Rybelsus

Oral Semaglutide | 8-12% weight loss | $900-$1,000/mo

Compounded

Generic Versions | Unknown efficacy | $200-$400/mo


Understanding the Two Drug Classes

Before comparing specific medications, you need to understand the fundamental difference between the two main types of GLP-1 drugs.

πŸ’Š

Class 1: GLP-1 Agonists (Semaglutide)

Medications: Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus

Mechanism: Activates GLP-1 receptors only

Half-life: ~7 days (weekly injection)

Manufacturer: Novo Nordisk

πŸ’‰

Class 2: Dual GIP/GLP-1 Agonists (Tirzepatide)

Medications: Mounjaro, Zepbound

Mechanism: Activates both GLP-1 and GIP receptors

Half-life: ~5 days (weekly injection)

Manufacturer: Eli Lilly

Why Dual Action Matters

Tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound) activates both GLP-1 and GIP receptors, creating a synergistic effect.

18-22%

Tirzepatide average weight loss

15-17%

Semaglutide average weight loss

50% vs 33%

More people achieve >20% weight loss

πŸ’‘

Individual Responses Vary

Some people respond better to semaglutide, others to tirzepatide. There's no way to predict which will work better for you without trying. Both are highly effective medications.


FDA Approvals: Why They Matter for Insurance

The FDA approves medications for specific indications. This matters enormously for insurance coverage.

πŸ₯

Type 2 Diabetes Approvals

  • Ozempic (semaglutide)
  • Mounjaro (tirzepatide)
  • Rybelsus (oral semaglutide)

Insurance: 70-80% of plans cover

βš–οΈ

Weight Management Approvals

  • Wegovy (semaglutide)
  • Zepbound (tirzepatide)

Insurance: Only 30-40% of plans cover

The Insurance Loophole

Same drug, different approval

Ozempic and Wegovy are identical medications (semaglutide) at different doses. Mounjaro and Zepbound are also identical (tirzepatide). Doctors frequently prescribe the diabetes version "off-label" for weight loss because it's more likely to be covered by insurance.

Off-label use is:

  • Legal and common in medical practice
  • Medically appropriate if your doctor prescribes it
  • May affect insurance coverage
  • Still the same medication with identical effects

Semaglutide Medications: Detailed Analysis

Ozempic (Semaglutide for Type 2 Diabetes)

πŸ’Š

Quick Facts

FDA Approval: December 2017 for type 2 diabetes

Delivery: Weekly subcutaneous injection

Dosing: 0.25mg β†’ 0.5mg β†’ 1mg β†’ 2mg (max)

Average Weight Loss: 10-15% over 68 weeks

Who it's for:

  • Adults with type 2 diabetes
  • Often prescribed off-label for weight loss (better insurance coverage)
  • People who want proven efficacy with extensive safety data

Dosing Schedule

β†’
Month 1: 0.25mg once weekly (starter dose)
β†’
Month 2: 0.5mg once weekly
β†’
Month 3: 1mg once weekly (many people stay here)
β†’
Month 4+: Can increase to 2mg once weekly if needed

Clinical Trial Results (SUSTAIN trials):

10-15%

Average weight loss over 68 weeks

1.5-2.0%

A1C reduction in diabetics

26%

Reduction in cardiovascular events

Example: 200 lb person loses ~20-30 lbs over 16 months

Pros:

  • βœ… Excellent insurance coverage for diabetics
  • βœ… Lower maximum dose may mean fewer side effects
  • βœ… Extensive safety data (approved since 2017)
  • βœ… Proven cardiovascular benefits
  • βœ… Multi-dose pen (one pen lasts 4 weeks)

Cons:

  • ❌ Lower average weight loss than Wegovy or Mounjaro
  • ❌ Off-label use for weight loss only (insurance may deny)
  • ❌ Maximum dose lower than Wegovy (2mg vs 2.4mg)

Monthly Cost

$900-$1,000 without insurance

With insurance (diabetes): Often $25-$50 copay

Manufacturer savings card: Up to $150 off/month


Wegovy (Semaglutide for Weight Loss)

βš–οΈ

Quick Facts

FDA Approval: June 2021 for chronic weight management

Delivery: Weekly subcutaneous injection

Dosing: 0.25mg β†’ 0.5mg β†’ 1mg β†’ 1.7mg β†’ 2.4mg (max)

Average Weight Loss: 15-17% over 68 weeks

Who it's for:

  • Adults with BMI β‰₯30 (obesity)
  • Adults with BMI β‰₯27 with weight-related conditions
  • People without diabetes who want maximum semaglutide dose

Dosing Schedule

β†’
Month 1: 0.25mg once weekly
β†’
Month 2: 0.5mg once weekly
β†’
Month 3: 1mg once weekly
β†’
Month 4: 1.7mg once weekly
β†’
Month 5+: 2.4mg once weekly (maintenance)

Clinical Trial Results (STEP trials):

15-17%

Average weight loss over 68 weeks

48-52%

Achieve >15% weight loss

32-35%

Achieve >20% weight loss

Example: 200 lb person loses ~30-34 lbs over 16 months

Pros:

  • βœ… Highest semaglutide dose available (2.4mg)
  • βœ… FDA-approved specifically for weight loss
  • βœ… Highest average weight loss in semaglutide class
  • βœ… Single-dose pens (easier to use)
  • βœ… Proven long-term weight maintenance

Cons:

  • ❌ Very expensive without insurance ($1,300-$1,400/month)
  • ❌ Poor insurance coverage (weight loss often excluded)
  • ❌ Higher side effect rates than lower-dose Ozempic
  • ❌ Frequent shortages (2021-2024)

Monthly Cost

$1,300-$1,400 without insurance

With insurance: Highly variable; many insurers exclude weight loss

Manufacturer savings card: Up to $500 off/month for 13 months


Rybelsus (Oral Semaglutide)

πŸ’Š

Quick Facts

FDA Approval: September 2019 for type 2 diabetes

Delivery: Daily oral tablet (no injections!)

Dosing: 3mg β†’ 7mg β†’ 14mg (max) daily

Average Weight Loss: 8-12% (lower than injections)

Who it's for:

  • Adults with type 2 diabetes who want to avoid injections
  • People with needle phobia
  • Those who prefer daily dosing over weekly injections
⚠️

Strict Dosing Requirements

Must take on empty stomach first thing in the morning

  • Swallow whole with ≀4 oz water (not coffee, juice, etc.)
  • Wait 30 minutes before eating, drinking, or taking other medications
  • This 30-minute window is critical for absorption

Pros:

  • βœ… No injections (oral tablet)
  • βœ… Good for needle-phobic individuals
  • βœ… Lower side effect rates than injections
  • βœ… No refrigeration required
  • βœ… Insurance coverage similar to Ozempic

Cons:

  • ❌ Significantly lower weight loss than injections
  • ❌ Strict dosing requirements (30-minute fasting window)
  • ❌ Daily dosing (less convenient than weekly)
  • ❌ Drug interactions possible

Monthly Cost

$900-$1,000 without insurance

With insurance: Often similar copay to Ozempic ($25-$50)


Tirzepatide Medications: Detailed Analysis

Mounjaro (Tirzepatide for Type 2 Diabetes)

πŸ’‰

Quick Facts

FDA Approval: May 2022 for type 2 diabetes

Delivery: Weekly subcutaneous injection

Dosing: 2.5mg β†’ 5mg β†’ 7.5mg β†’ 10mg β†’ 12.5mg β†’ 15mg (max)

Average Weight Loss: 15-22% over 72 weeks (dose-dependent)

Who it's for:

  • Adults with type 2 diabetes
  • Often prescribed off-label for weight loss
  • People seeking maximum efficacy in diabetes and weight management

Dosing Schedule (6-month titration)

β†’
Month 1: 2.5mg once weekly (starter dose)
β†’
Month 2: 5mg once weekly
β†’
Month 3: 7.5mg once weekly
β†’
Month 4: 10mg once weekly
β†’
Month 5: 12.5mg once weekly (optional)
β†’
Month 6+: 15mg once weekly (maximum)

Clinical Trial Results (SURPASS trials):

15-22%

Average weight loss over 72 weeks

2.0-2.4%

A1C reduction (superior to all)

40-50%

Achieve >20% weight loss

Dose-Dependent Results:

  • 5mg dose: ~15-17% weight loss
  • 10mg dose: ~20-22% weight loss
  • 15mg dose: ~21-23% weight loss

Example: 200 lb person loses ~30-44 lbs over 18 months

Pros:

  • βœ… Highest average weight loss of any GLP-1 medication
  • βœ… Superior A1C reduction for diabetics
  • βœ… Excellent insurance coverage (diabetes indication)
  • βœ… Dual mechanism (GLP-1 + GIP)
  • βœ… More people achieve >20% weight loss

Cons:

  • ❌ More dose increases required (6 titrations vs 4 for semaglutide)
  • ❌ Longer titration period (6 months to max dose)
  • ❌ Shorter room temperature storage (21 days vs 56 for Ozempic)
  • ❌ Less long-term safety data than semaglutide (newer medication)

Monthly Cost

$1,000-$1,100 without insurance

With insurance (diabetes): Often $25-$50 copay

Manufacturer savings card: Up to $150 off/month


Zepbound (Tirzepatide for Weight Loss)

βš–οΈ

Quick Facts

FDA Approval: November 2023 for chronic weight management

Delivery: Weekly subcutaneous injection

Dosing: Identical to Mounjaro (2.5mg β†’ 15mg)

Average Weight Loss: 18-22% over 72 weeks

Who it's for:

  • Adults with BMI β‰₯30 (obesity)
  • Adults with BMI β‰₯27 with weight-related conditions
  • People without diabetes who want maximum weight loss potential

Clinical Trial Results (SURMOUNT trials):

18-22%

Average weight loss over 72 weeks

55-60%

Achieve >15% weight loss

45-52%

Achieve >20% weight loss

27-32%

Achieve >25% weight loss (unprecedented!)

Example: 200 lb person loses ~36-44 lbs over 18 months

Pros:

  • βœ… Highest average weight loss of any FDA-approved obesity medication
  • βœ… FDA-approved specifically for weight loss
  • βœ… Nearly 50% achieve >20% weight loss
  • βœ… Dual mechanism provides superior efficacy
  • βœ… Same drug as Mounjaro (extensive clinical data)
  • βœ… Generous manufacturer savings program

Cons:

  • ❌ Most expensive out-of-pocket ($1,000-$1,100/month)
  • ❌ Poor insurance coverage (weight loss exclusions common)
  • ❌ Long titration period (6 months to max dose)
  • ❌ Higher nausea rates than semaglutide
  • ❌ Very new (approved Nov 2023β€”limited real-world data)

Monthly Cost

$1,000-$1,100 without insurance

With insurance: Highly variable; often excluded

Manufacturer savings card: Up to $550 off/month for 13 months (most generous!)


Compounded GLP-1 Medications: The Budget Option

🚨

FDA Warning - December 2023

The FDA issued warnings about compounded GLP-1 medications citing quality control issues, contamination risks, incorrect ingredients, and dosing errors. Compounding pharmacies aren't FDA-inspected like manufacturers.

What Are Compounded GLP-1s?

Compounded medications are custom-made by specialized pharmacies using raw pharmaceutical ingredients. During FDA-approved drug shortages, compounding pharmacies can legally produce versions of the medication.

Available compounded versions:

  • Compounded semaglutide (mimics Ozempic/Wegovy)
  • Compounded tirzepatide (mimics Mounjaro/Zepbound)

The Appeal: Dramatic Cost Savings

$200-$400/mo

Compounded semaglutide vs $1,300 brand-name

$300-$500/mo

Compounded tirzepatide vs $1,000 brand-name

$6,000-$13,000

Annual savings potential

The Risks: What You're Trading for Savings

⚠️

Dosing Inconsistency

Brand-name: Exact dose every time (FDA-verified)

Compounded: May vary 10-30% between vials

Impact: Unpredictable results and side effects

🦠

Contamination Risk

Brand-name: Sterile, single-use pens

Compounded: Multi-dose vials (puncture risk)

Impact: Infections, abscesses, illness

πŸ”¬

Wrong Ingredients

Some use wrong salt forms (semaglutide sodium vs base)

Mislabeled concentrations

Impact: Ineffective or dangerous overdose

πŸ“‹

No Clinical Trials

Brand-name: Extensively tested

Compounded: Zero efficacy or safety studies

Impact: Unknown long-term effects

When Compounded Makes Sense

βœ…Consider Compounded If

βœ“You have NO insurance coverage for brand-name GLP-1s
βœ“You cannot afford $1,000-$1,400/month out-of-pocket
βœ“You use a reputable 503B certified compounding pharmacy
βœ“Your doctor supports and monitors your use
βœ“You understand and accept the risks
βœ“You're comfortable with vials and syringes

❌Avoid Compounded If

βœ“You have insurance that covers brand-name (even with copay)
βœ“You can access manufacturer savings programs
βœ“You have type 2 diabetes (brand-name better for monitoring)
βœ“You're risk-averse about quality control
βœ“You have health conditions requiring precise dosing

Side Effect Comparison

Nausea Rates by Medication

20-30%

Rybelsus (oral) - Mildest

30-40%

Ozempic - Moderate

40-50%

Wegovy - Higher dose

35-45%

Mounjaro - Moderate

40-48%

Zepbound - Highest

πŸ’‘

Pattern

Higher doses = more nausea. Tirzepatide and semaglutide have similar rates at comparable efficacy levels. Most nausea improves after 4-8 weeks.

Which Has the "Best" Side Effect Profile?

Fewest side effects overall: Rybelsus (oral) - but lowest efficacy

Best balance: Ozempic 0.5-1mg - moderate efficacy, moderate side effects

Most tolerable high-efficacy: Mounjaro 10mg - high efficacy with manageable side effects

Highest efficacy despite side effects: Wegovy 2.4mg or Zepbound 15mg

ℹ️

Individual Variation

Some people have zero side effects on Zepbound 15mg. Others can't tolerate Ozempic 0.5mg. You won't know until you try. Most side effects are temporary and improve significantly after the first month.


Cost Comparison: The Financial Reality

Out-of-Pocket Costs (No Insurance)

$900-$1,000

Ozempic per month

$1,300-$1,400

Wegovy per month

$1,000-$1,100

Mounjaro per month

$1,000-$1,100

Zepbound per month

$900-$1,000

Rybelsus per month

$200-$400

Compounded per month

Reality check: Without insurance or savings programs, brand-name GLP-1s cost $12,000-$16,800 per year. This is unsustainable for most people.

Manufacturer Savings Programs

πŸ’³

Ozempic Savings Card

Saves up to $150/month

Requires commercial insurance

Can lower cost to $25/month

πŸ’³

Wegovy Savings Card

Saves up to $500/month for 13 months

Then up to $200/month

Most helpful for uninsured

πŸ’³

Mounjaro Savings Card

Saves up to $150/month

Requires commercial insurance

Can lower cost to $25/month

πŸ’³

Zepbound Savings Card

Saves up to $550/month for 13 months

Most generous program

Can reduce to ~$450-$550/month

⚠️

Savings Program Restrictions

  • Most require commercial insurance (employer-based)
  • Cannot use with Medicare, Medicaid, or Tricare
  • Many exclude if insurance covers the medication at all
  • Annual limits apply

Insurance Coverage Reality

Type 2 Diabetes (Ozempic, Mounjaro, Rybelsus):

  • 70-80% of commercial plans cover
  • Often requires prior authorization
  • Typical copay: $25-$100/month

Weight Loss (Wegovy, Zepbound):

  • Only 30-40% of commercial plans cover
  • Often explicitly excluded
  • If covered: $50-$200+ copay

Medicare:

  • Does NOT cover weight loss medications (federal law)
  • Covers diabetes medications
  • Average copay: $50-$150/month for diabetes

Decision Framework: Which Medication Is Right for You?

By Primary Goal

πŸ₯

Type 2 Diabetes

Maximum A1C reduction: Mounjaro

Proven efficacy, less titration: Ozempic

No injections: Rybelsus

βš–οΈ

Weight Loss Only

Maximum weight loss (>20%): Zepbound

Proven results (15-20%): Wegovy

Budget-friendly: Ozempic off-label

πŸ’°

Cost Priority

Lowest cost: Compounded ($200-$500/mo)

Best insurance: Ozempic/Mounjaro with savings card

Best savings program: Zepbound ($550 off/mo)

😌

Minimize Side Effects

Lowest overall: Rybelsus (but least effective)

Best balance: Ozempic 0.5-1mg

High efficacy, tolerable: Mounjaro 10mg

Decision Tree

🎯Choose Your Medication

βœ“Do you have type 2 diabetes? β†’ YES: Mounjaro or Ozempic | NO: Continue
βœ“Want >20% weight loss? β†’ YES: Zepbound | NO: Continue
βœ“Hate needles? β†’ YES: Rybelsus | NO: Continue
βœ“Cost primary concern? β†’ YES: Compounded or savings programs | NO: Continue
βœ“Have good insurance? β†’ Use what's covered with savings card

Your Action Plan

πŸ“‹This Week: Research & Prepare

βœ“Review this comparison guide thoroughly
βœ“Identify your top priorities (cost, efficacy, side effects)
βœ“Check your insurance formulary (which meds are covered)
βœ“Calculate out-of-pocket costs with savings programs
βœ“List questions for your doctor appointment

🩺At Your Doctor Appointment

βœ“Discuss your priorities (weight loss goals, budget, diabetes status)
βœ“Ask which medication doctor recommends and why
βœ“Discuss insurance coverage and prior authorization process
βœ“Ask about doctor's experience with each medication
βœ“Request prescription and prior authorization submission

βœ…After Getting Prescription

βœ“Apply for manufacturer savings card immediately
βœ“Fill prescription at preferred pharmacy
βœ“Review injection technique (if applicable)
βœ“Set up tracking system for monitoring progress
βœ“Schedule follow-up appointments for monitoring

⚠️If Insurance Denies

βœ“Request detailed denial reason
βœ“Ask doctor to submit appeal letter
βœ“Emphasize medical necessity and comorbidities
βœ“Consider alternative medications covered by insurance
βœ“Explore compounded options if brand-name unaffordable

The Bottom Line:

The "best" GLP-1 medication is the one that your insurance covers (or you can afford), achieves your goals, has tolerable side effects, fits your lifestyle, and you can access consistently. All GLP-1 medications are effective. The differences, while real, are less important than choosing a medication you can stick with long-term. Your journey is uniqueβ€”what works for someone else may not work for you.

πŸ“Š
GLP-1 Medication Level Calculator

Visualize medication levels for your specific GLP-1 medication and plan around peak side effect days.

Try it now β†’

GLP AI Medical Team

Medical & Health Experts

Reviewed by licensed healthcare professionals

Our medical team includes healthcare professionals with expertise in GLP-1 medications, weight management, and nutrition. We provide evidence-based guidance to help you succeed on your GLP-1 journey safely and effectively.