Data investigation
GLP-1 Compounded Pricing Index 2026
What 80+ telehealth providers actually charge for compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide — median, p10, p90, and how the gap to brand-name Wegovy has evolved.
- Pricing data
- Compounded GLP-1
- Live dataset
Compounded GLP-1 medications have rewritten the cash-pay weight-loss market. A year ago, brand-name Wegovy at roughly $1,349/month was the only injectable semaglutide most uninsured Americans could access. Today, 43 of the 82 telehealth providers we track offer compounded semaglutide — and the median monthly price is $184, a 86% discount to brand.
That gap, repeated thousands of times across our dataset, is the single biggest force shaping the consumer GLP-1 market right now. This article puts hard numbers on it: the median, the cheapest decile, the most expensive decile, the distribution shape, and how the savings compare against the brand-name baseline. The data updates every time we verify a provider — so the numbers below are always current as of the timestamp at the top of the page.
The headline numbers
Across our entire telehealth dataset, here's what people are actually paying per month for compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide — the same active ingredients in Wegovy and Zepbound respectively:
Compounded semaglutide
86% below Wegovy list price ($1,349/mo)
- p10
- $95
- p90
- $344
- n
- 43
Compounded tirzepatide
75% below Zepbound list price ($1,086/mo)
- p10
- $131
- p90
- $411
- n
- 35
For semaglutide, the median monthly cost is $184. The cheapest 10% of providers (the “p10”) charge $95 or less. The most expensive decile starts at $344. That spread — roughly 4× from cheapest to priciest — is much wider than most readers expect, and it's the main reason it's worth comparing providers directly instead of taking the first ad you see at face value.[1]
At the median compounded price, a patient choosing semaglutide saves roughly $13,980 per year versus Wegovy at list price. For tirzepatide, the median compounded price produces an annual savings of about $9,732 versus Zepbound at list. These are real numbers that reset the calculation for anyone whose insurance excludes GLP-1s for obesity (which is most of the privately insured market).[2]
How prices are distributed
Aggregate medians hide a lot. The histograms below show how the market actually breaks out by price band. Compounded semaglutide skews heavily toward the $100–$200 range, with a long tail of more expensive providers — usually programs that bundle clinical coaching, lab work, or in-network pharmacy guarantees on top of the injection itself.
Compounded semaglutide — monthly price distribution
43 providers · live data as of 2026-04-06
- <$10010 providers19%
- $100–14911 providers21%
- $150–19915 providers29%
- $200–29910 providers19%
- $300–4993 providers6%
- $500–9993 providers6%
- $1,000+0%
Compounded tirzepatide — monthly price distribution
35 providers · live data as of 2026-04-06
- <$1001 provider3%
- $100–1497 providers19%
- $150–1996 providers16%
- $200–29910 providers27%
- $300–49910 providers27%
- $500–9993 providers8%
- $1,000+0%
Tirzepatide's distribution sits noticeably higher. There are two reasons: tirzepatide's active pharmaceutical ingredient is more expensive at the wholesale level, and the FDA only removed it from the official drug shortage list in late 2024, which constrained the number of 503A pharmacies legally allowed to compound it during most of 2024.[3]
The cheapest decile right now
The most useful number for most readers isn't the median — it's the actual list of providers at the cheapest end. These update live from our verified dataset:
Cheapest compounded semaglutide
- 1.Lemonaid Health$30/mo
- 2.Boston Medical Group$66/mo
- 3.OrderlyMeds$74/mo
- 4.Ivim Health$75/mo
- 5.Pomegranate Health$90/mo
Cheapest compounded tirzepatide
- 1.Lemonaid Health$30/mo
- 2.Lavender Sky Health$104/mo
- 3.Trimi Health$125/mo
- 4.Found$129/mo
- 5.LumiMeds$133/mo
The lowest list prices are usually first-month introductory deals. Always read the fine print on whether the rate jumps after month one and whether the listed price includes shipping, the consult, and the medication itself, or whether some of those are billed separately. Our individual side-by-side comparisons normalize for these differences.
Why the spread is so wide
A 95.39999999999999–$344 range for what is, at the molecular level, the same drug raises an obvious question: what are buyers in the higher tier actually paying for? Five things, in our experience working through provider data:
- Sourcing quality. The 503A pharmacies that supply compounded semaglutide vary in size, accreditation, and quality systems. Some publish their certificates of analysis on every batch; others won't share them at all. Providers that source from PCAB-accredited or NABP VPP facilities often charge more.[4]
- Bundled clinical care. The cheapest providers tend to be pure prescription delivery — a 5-minute async intake and the medication mailed out. The mid-tier programs include ongoing physician check-ins, dose titration support, and side- effect management. The most expensive include lab work, dietitian access, or in-app coaching.
- Brand-name fulfillment guarantees. A handful of providers will switch you to brand-name Wegovy (at brand-name prices) if compounded supply is interrupted. This is rare and usually buried in the fine print.
- State availability. Compounding rules differ state to state. Providers licensed in all 50 states have higher compliance overhead than ones operating in 20.
- Marketing and CAC. Some of the spread is just customer acquisition cost. The best-funded brands pay $200+ for a new sign-up and recover it through higher monthly prices or longer minimum commitments.
None of these inherently make the more expensive provider a worse deal — but they do mean that comparing on price alone misses the story. Our individual ranked best-of lists score on six dimensions (value, effectiveness, UX, trust, accessibility, support) precisely because price is just one input.
How the gap to brand has evolved
We started tracking GLP-1 telehealth pricing in early 2024. At that point, brand-name Wegovy was effectively unavailable to most uninsured patients — supply constraints meant pharmacies routinely ran out, and the cash price hovered near $1,349 when it could be filled at all. The compounded market existed but was concentrated among a small number of telehealth players, and prices clustered around $250–$350/month.[5]
Two things changed that. First, the FDA's formal drug shortage designation for semaglutide gave 503A pharmacies clear legal cover to compound it. That brought dozens of new entrants into the market and pushed prices down through ordinary competition. Second, the wholesale cost of semaglutide API itself fell sharply through 2024 and 2025 as more suppliers came online. The combination is why the median sits where it sits today rather than where it sat 18 months ago.[6]
The current state of play: compounded prices have largely stopped falling, and the cheapest decile is approaching what looks like a floor around $30–$80/month. Brand-name Wegovy and Zepbound, meanwhile, have started offering their own cash-pay programs at roughly half their old retail price as the manufacturers chase share. The gap has narrowed, but it's still meaningful — and for the median patient on the median compounded plan, the savings are still measured in five figures per year.
Methodology
Every price in this index is taken from the public-facing website of the named provider. We re-verify each provider on a rolling basis; the “data as of” stamp at the top of this page reflects the most recent verification across the dataset.
Where a provider lists both an introductory price and an ongoing rate, we use the introductory price (“promo price”) as the comparable monthly cost, because that's what readers actually pay when starting a program. Brand-name comparison baselines come from the manufacturer cash-pay list prices for Wegovy and Zepbound as published by Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly respectively.
Percentile calculations use linear interpolation between the two surrounding ranks (the same convention as Excel'sPERCENTILE function and NumPy's default). The full source is open on GitHub for anyone who wants to audit it.
References
- 1.Wilding JPH, Batterham RL, Calanna S, et al. Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity (STEP 1). N Engl J Med. 2021. PMID: 33567185.
- 2.Kaiser Family Foundation. Out-of-Pocket Spending and Affordability for GLP-1 Drugs Among Medicare Beneficiaries. KFF Issue Brief. 2024. https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/out-of-pocket-spending-and-affordability-for-glp-1-drugs-among-medicare-beneficiaries/
- 3.U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA Removes Tirzepatide From the Drug Shortage List — Updates and Compounding Guidance. FDA Drug Shortages Database. 2024. https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drug-shortages
- 4.Pharmacy Compounding Accreditation Board (PCAB). Standards for Compounded Sterile Preparations and 503A Facility Accreditation. PCAB / Accreditation Commission for Health Care. 2023. https://www.achc.org/pcab/
- 5.Whitley HP, Trujillo JM, Neumiller JJ. Special Report: Potential Strategies for Addressing GLP-1 Receptor Agonist Shortages. Clin Diabetes. 2023. PMID: 37456095.
- 6.Mahase E. Compounded GLP-1 Drugs: What Doctors and Patients Need to Know. BMJ. 2024. PMID: 39379084.