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This page is educational and does not replace medical advice. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved, and the FDA does not verify their safety, effectiveness or quality before marketing. Eligibility is determined by a licensed clinician.
Reviewed by Jonathan Snipes, MD · Fact-verified July 15, 2026 · Price-verified July 15, 2026
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 listed on this website. All providers are evaluated using the same documented evidence, pricing, and verification methodology, regardless of relationship status.

Tirzepatide cost in 2026: compounded, brand and by provider

Compounded tirzepatide costs more than compounded semaglutide, and the gap is structural: fewer FDA-registered facilities can produce injectable-grade tirzepatide, which lifts the price floor across every legitimate provider.

Quick answer

As of July 15, 2026, compounded tirzepatide runs roughly $199–$297 per month for standard programs, with MEDVi reporting the lowest published self-pay price near $199/month and Mochi at $278/month all-in ($199 medication + $79 required membership). Brand Zepbound lists near $1,086/month, with LillyDirect self-pay vials from $299. All competitor figures are Provider Reported; only prices we capture first-party are labeled Verified.

Why tirzepatide costs more than semaglutide

Tirzepatide is a dual GIP and GLP-1 receptor agonist, a more complex molecule than semaglutide, and fewer FDA-registered outsourcing facilities can produce injectable-grade tirzepatide active ingredient. That supply constraint raises the cost floor across all legitimate 503A and 503B providers, which is why a compounded tirzepatide program almost always costs more than the same provider’s compounded semaglutide. Industry reporting flags sustained maintenance pricing below about $200 per month as a red flag for bait-and-switch pricing or non-legitimate sourcing.

Compounded tirzepatide price by provider

Compounded tirzepatide monthly cost, verified July 2026. Effective all-in includes required membership.
ProviderMedicationEffective all-inMembershipEvidence status
MEDVi$199 (starting)$199SometimesVerification Pending
Eden Health$249–296$249–296None (bundled)Verification Pending
Mochi Health$199$278$79 (required)Provider Reported
Henry Meds$297 (m2m)$297–549NoneProvider Reported

Sources: provider pricing pages, Forbes Health, U.S. News, and market reporting captured July 2026. Ledger records CMP-*-TIRZ-*. See our affordability methodology.

Brand tirzepatide: Zepbound and Mounjaro

Brand tirzepatide is sold as Zepbound (approved for chronic weight management and obstructive sleep apnea) and Mounjaro (approved for type 2 diabetes). List price is near $1,086 per month, but Eli Lilly’s LillyDirect self-pay vials start around $299 per month. Medicare does not cover Zepbound for weight loss under the current statutory exclusion, though it covers Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes; commercial coverage of Zepbound for weight loss reaches roughly 30–40 percent of large employer plans, almost always with prior authorization.

Compounded versus brand: the trade-off

Compounded tirzepatide is far cheaper than brand at the pharmacy counter, but it is not FDA-approved and carries none of the SURMOUNT trial evidence that backs Zepbound. After the 2025 tirzepatide shortage resolution, routine compounding of copies is restricted to patient-specific circumstances with a documented clinical difference, the same framework that governs compounded semaglutide. Weigh the price gap against the loss of FDA review and trial-backed evidence, and confirm any program dispenses base tirzepatide through a named, state-licensed pharmacy.

Limitations

Most competitor figures here are Provider Reported or Verification Pending, not first-party Verified, because tier-1 provider sites often render pricing client-side or block automated retrieval. Prices shift with promotions, dose strength, and commitment; always confirm the current published price and total mandatory fees on the provider’s own site before enrolling.

Sources

  1. Forbes Health — Henry Meds review. forbes.com/health
  2. Evidence ledger records CMP-*-TIRZ-*, BRAND-ZEP-001. evidence-ledger.csv
  3. Provider pricing and market reporting captured July 2026.

Sources: FDA — human drug compounding and GLP-1 status; clinical evidence via NEJM. Pricing captured July 2026; see evidence ledger. Last reviewed July 2026.