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Drugs · GLP-1

Zepbound vs Wegovy in 2026: Cost, Weight Loss, and Which to Choose

Updated July 2026·11 min read
Last reviewed July 10, 2026Next review due Oct 2026

By Vincent Couey, RxGrab founder. Reviewed by Vincent Wesley Couey. Updated .

Quick verdict: In the only head-to-head trial (SURMOUNT-5), Zepbound beat Wegovy on weight loss, 20.2% vs 13.7% over 72 weeks. And the old reason to pick Wegovy, that it was cheaper, has largely disappeared in 2026: on self-pay direct pricing both now run about $350 to $450 a month (Zepbound $299-$449 through LillyDirect, Wegovy about $350 direct, down from $1,350 retail). So for most people the decision now comes down to effectiveness, side-effect tolerance, and what your insurance actually covers, not price alone.

Zepbound (tirzepatide) and Wegovy (semaglutide) are the two FDA-approved GLP-1 medications for chronic weight management, and they are the two most-searched drugs in the category. For years the practical choice was muddied by wildly different cash prices and patchy insurance. Two things changed that in 2026: a direct clinical comparison finally settled the effectiveness question, and manufacturer self-pay programs collapsed the price gap. This guide covers both, with the real numbers. For the semaglutide-specific savings paths, see our full Ozempic and semaglutide cost breakdown.

Effectiveness: what the head-to-head trial found

Until 2025 there was no direct trial pitting the two drugs against each other, so comparisons relied on separate studies. SURMOUNT-5 changed that. Published in the New England Journal of Medicine, it randomized 751 adults with obesity and without type 2 diabetes to the maximum tolerated dose of either Zepbound or Wegovy for 72 weeks. The result was clear:

Outcome (SURMOUNT-5, 72 weeks)Zepbound (tirzepatide)Wegovy (semaglutide)
Average body-weight reduction20.2%13.7%
Approximate pounds lost~50 lb~33 lb
Waist circumference reduction18.4 cm13.0 cm
Receptors activatedGIP + GLP-1 (dual)GLP-1 only

Head-to-head weight loss, SURMOUNT-5 (72 weeks)

20.2% 13.7% Zepbound Wegovy
Average body-weight reduction at 72 weeks in adults with obesity and no diabetes (n=751). Zepbound's dual GIP/GLP-1 mechanism is the leading explanation for the gap. Source: SURMOUNT-5, New England Journal of Medicine, 2025.

The practical read: Zepbound is the more effective drug for weight loss on average, by a meaningful margin (roughly a third more weight lost). That does not mean Wegovy is ineffective, 13.7% is a strong result that clears the bar for clinically significant weight loss. But if maximum weight loss is the goal and you tolerate the drug, the trial favors Zepbound.

On the only head-to-head trial, Zepbound lost about a third more weight than Wegovy, 20.2% versus 13.7%.SURMOUNT-5, NEJM 2025

Cost in 2026: the price gap has closed

This is the part most older comparison pages get wrong. They still quote Wegovy at roughly $1,350 a month and Zepbound around $1,060, which made Wegovy look expensive and Zepbound look like the value pick, or vice versa depending on the year. In 2026 both manufacturers sell direct to self-pay patients, and the numbers are now close together and far below old retail.

PathZepbound (tirzepatide)Wegovy (semaglutide)
Direct self-pay vials (2026)$299 (2.5mg) / $399 (5mg) / $449 (7.5-15mg)~$350/mo direct
Via TrumpRx platform~$350/mo~$350/mo (from ~$1,350 retail)
Old retail cash price~$1,060/mo~$1,350/mo
With commercial coverage + savings cardas low as $25/moas low as $0-$25/mo

Zepbound single-dose vials through LillyDirect were reduced in 2026 to $299 a month at 2.5 mg, $399 at 5 mg, and $449 for every dose from 7.5 mg through 15 mg (with a 45-day refill window required to hold the $449 ceiling on higher doses). Wegovy is now about $350 a month direct, a dramatic drop from its roughly $1,350 retail price. In other words, on self-pay the two land within about $100 of each other, and the higher-dose Zepbound vial at $449 is the only meaningful spread. The "Wegovy is the budget option" era is over.

Important: self-pay direct prices, savings cards, and TrumpRx pricing all change, and Medicare/Medicaid patients follow separate tracks. The diabetes-labeled versions (Mounjaro for tirzepatide, Ozempic for semaglutide) are priced and covered differently. Confirm current pricing at LillyDirect, NovoCare, or TrumpRx.gov before you commit.

Zepbound

tirzepatide, dual GIP/GLP-1

20.2% weight loss

more effective head-to-head$299-$449/mo self-pay

Wegovy

semaglutide, GLP-1 only

13.7% weight loss

strong, slightly cheaper high dose~$350/mo self-pay

Zepbound wins on effectiveness and now matches Wegovy on price. Wegovy remains a strong option, especially if you tolerate it well or your plan covers it better.

Which one for your situation

Effectiveness and price no longer split cleanly, so the decision comes down to your specific circumstances:

  1. You want maximum weight loss and tolerate the drug well. The head-to-head data favors Zepbound (20.2% vs 13.7%).
  2. Your insurance covers one but not the other. Take the covered one, coverage is worth far more than the small self-pay price difference. Check each plan's formulary and prior-authorization rules.
  3. You had bad gastrointestinal side effects on one. Side-effect tolerance is individual; some people tolerate semaglutide (Wegovy) better and some tolerate tirzepatide (Zepbound) better. The more tolerable drug you will actually stay on beats the theoretically stronger one you quit.
  4. You are paying cash and want the lowest number. At low doses Wegovy (~$350) and Zepbound 2.5 mg ($299) are close; at higher maintenance doses Wegovy (~$350) undercuts Zepbound's $449 vial by about $100 a month.
  5. You are managing type 2 diabetes, not just weight. Ask about the diabetes-labeled versions, Mounjaro (tirzepatide) or Ozempic (semaglutide), which are covered and priced differently. See our Ozempic cost guide.

Side effects and how they are taken

Both drugs are once-weekly self-injections, and both are titrated up slowly over several weeks so your body adjusts. The side-effect profiles are broadly similar because both act on the GLP-1 pathway: nausea, diarrhea, constipation, and vomiting are the most common, usually worst during dose increases and easing over time. Both carry a boxed warning about a risk of thyroid C-cell tumors seen in animal studies and should not be used by people with a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN 2. Zepbound's dual mechanism does not appear to make side effects meaningfully worse than Wegovy's despite the greater weight loss. As always, this is general information, your prescriber should guide dosing, titration, and any switch between the two.

The bottom line

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Zepbound or Wegovy more effective for weight loss?

Zepbound (tirzepatide) produced more weight loss than Wegovy (semaglutide) in SURMOUNT-5, the first head-to-head trial, published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2025. Over 72 weeks in 751 adults with obesity and no diabetes, Zepbound led to a 20.2% average body-weight reduction (about 50 pounds) versus 13.7% for Wegovy (about 33 pounds), and reduced waist circumference more (18.4 cm vs 13.0 cm). Zepbound activates two receptors, GIP and GLP-1; Wegovy activates only GLP-1.

Is Zepbound cheaper than Wegovy in 2026?

They are now close. Both are sold direct to self-pay patients at similar prices. Zepbound single-dose vials through LillyDirect run $299/month at 2.5 mg, $399 at 5 mg, and $449 for 7.5 mg through 15 mg, or about $350/month through TrumpRx. Wegovy is now about $350/month direct, down from roughly $1,350 at retail. The old assumption that Wegovy is dramatically cheaper no longer holds; on self-pay the two are within about $100 of each other.

What is the difference between Zepbound and Wegovy?

Both are once-weekly injections approved for chronic weight management. Wegovy is semaglutide (the same molecule as Ozempic) and activates the GLP-1 receptor. Zepbound is tirzepatide (the same molecule as Mounjaro) and activates two receptors, GIP and GLP-1. In the SURMOUNT-5 head-to-head trial Zepbound produced greater weight loss. Both require a prescription, are titrated up over several weeks, and are now available as self-pay vials in addition to prefilled pens.

Does insurance cover Zepbound or Wegovy for weight loss?

Coverage for weight loss is inconsistent for both. Many commercial plans exclude GLP-1 drugs when prescribed solely for weight management, and Medicare does not cover either for weight loss. Because coverage is unreliable, the 2026 self-pay direct programs (LillyDirect for Zepbound, NovoCare or TrumpRx for Wegovy) have become the practical path for many patients. Check your plan's formulary and ask about prior authorization.

Can I switch from Wegovy to Zepbound?

Many patients do, usually to pursue greater weight loss or because of coverage changes, but switching should be done with a prescriber. The two are not dosed one-to-one: your doctor will start you on a low Zepbound dose (2.5 mg) and titrate up regardless of your prior Wegovy dose, to manage side effects. Do not switch on your own or overlap the two.

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