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GLP-1 Cost Without Insurance: Every Cash-Pay Route Compared

By Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC · Reviewed by Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC · Published July 15, 2026 · 1,200+ words
Relationship disclosure: GLP-1 Price Index and its publisher, US Peptides Partners LLC, have no ownership, affiliate, referral, advertising, management, reviewer, or other material financial relationship with the providers named here. All are evaluated using the same documented methodology.
Quick answer

Without insurance, compounded semaglutide ($145-299) is usually cheapest, followed by oral Wegovy (from $149 for qualifying patients), brand self-pay via NovoCare/LillyDirect (~$299-349), and brand list (~$1,086-1,349). Compounded semaglutide from about $145 per month is usually the cheapest cash route, with brand self-pay near $349 as the FDA-approved alternative; total all mandatory fees and compare renewal, not introductory, pricing.

Key takeaways

The cash-pay landscape

Without insurance, GLP-1 pricing spans an enormous range — from about $145 per month for compounded semaglutide to about $1,349 list for brand Wegovy. The route you choose depends on whether you prioritize the lowest price or an FDA-approved product.

Cash pricing does not vary by state; it is set by the provider or manufacturer nationally. So the decision is about product type, not geography.

Cash-pay monthly cost (USD)Compounded sema$145Oral Wegovy$149Compounded tirz$199Brand self-pay$349

Compounded: usually cheapest

Compounded semaglutide from about $145 per month and compounded tirzepatide from about $199 are the lowest-cost legitimate routes for most uninsured patients. The trade-off is that these are not FDA-approved and carry no formulation-specific trial evidence.

Verify the dispensing pharmacy is named and state-licensed before enrolling, and confirm there is no hidden membership that inflates the effective cost.

Cash-pay GLP-1 routes by cost, July 2026
RouteMonthlyFDA-approved?
Compounded semaglutide$145–299No
Oral Wegovy (qualifying)from $149Yes
Compounded tirzepatide$199–297No
Brand self-pay$299–349Yes
Brand list$1,086–1,349Yes

Brand self-pay options

For patients who want the approved product without insurance, manufacturer self-pay programs are the route. NovoCare offers Wegovy near $349 per month; LillyDirect offers Zepbound vials from about $299. The oral Wegovy tablet is available from about $149 per month for qualifying patients at specified doses, though promotional pricing can change and some offers have expiration dates.

These cost more than compounded but deliver FDA-approved medication with full trial backing.

What each route delivers
RouteTrade-off
CompoundedCheapest, not FDA-approved
Oral WegovyApproved pill, dose-limited pricing
Brand self-payApproved, higher cost

Ranked by cost

For a cash-pay patient, the rough ranking is: compounded semaglutide (lowest), oral Wegovy for qualifying patients, compounded tirzepatide, brand self-pay via LillyDirect or NovoCare, and brand list (highest, and rarely what anyone should pay). Your clinician determines which is appropriate for you.

The cheapest option is not automatically best: weigh pharmacy transparency, dose coverage, and whether you need an approved product against the price difference.

Frequently asked questions

What is the cheapest GLP-1 without insurance?

Compounded semaglutide from about $145/month is usually the cheapest legitimate route, though it is not FDA-approved.

Is there an approved option under $200?

The oral Wegovy tablet is available from about $149/month for qualifying patients at specified doses, though offers can change and expire.

Does cash price vary by state?

No. GLP-1 cash pricing is set nationally by the provider or manufacturer; it does not change by state.

Sources

  1. FDA — human drug compounding and GLP-1 status.
  2. NovoCare and LillyDirect pricing, captured July 2026.
  3. Evidence ledger: evidence-ledger.csv.