ol.sources{margin:12px 0 0 20px;font-size:.9rem}ol.sources li{margin:6px 0}.tablewrap{overflow-x:auto;margin:18px 0}
Home / Journal / Cost & Science
This article is educational and does not replace medical advice. Prescription medication requires review by a licensed clinician and, when appropriate, a valid prescription. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved, and the FDA does not verify their safety, effectiveness or quality before marketing. Treatment eligibility is an individual clinical decision.
Relationship Disclosure: Semaglutide Watchdog and its publisher, US Peptides Partners LLC, have no ownership, affiliate, referral, advertising, management, reviewer, or other material financial relationship with certain providers listed on this website. All providers are evaluated using the same documented evidence, pricing, and verification methodology, regardless of relationship status.
Written by Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC·Reviewed by Jonathan Snipes, MD·Published July 15, 2026·Category Cost & Science

The Wegovy pill, priced and read against its own trial

The first oral semaglutide approved for weight loss is real, cheap to start, and more expensive once you reach the treatment dose. Here is the whole picture, and what it does to compounded oral products.

The short version

The FDA approved Wegovy tablets (oral semaglutide 25 mg) on December 22, 2025 — the first oral GLP-1 approved for chronic weight management — and it launched January 5, 2026 at $149 per month self-pay for the 1.5 mg starting dose. In the OASIS 4 trial, participants averaged 13.6% weight loss at 64 weeks (16.6% among those who stayed on treatment). The catch is dose-tier pricing: the 9 mg and 25 mg maintenance doses run about $299 per month cash.

Key takeaways

What OASIS 4 showed

OASIS 4 was a 64-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in adults with obesity, or overweight plus a weight-related condition, excluding people with diabetes. On the treatment-policy analysis — everyone randomized — oral semaglutide 25 mg produced 13.6 percent mean weight loss versus 2.4 percent with placebo. Among participants who adhered to treatment, the average was 16.6 percent.

Two secondary findings matter. About one-third of adherent participants lost at least 20 percent of body weight. And among those with prediabetes at baseline, a large majority returned to normal blood glucose. Serious adverse events were less frequent on semaglutide than placebo; the common side effects were the familiar GLP-1 trio of nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting.

Oral semaglutide (Wegovy pill) self-pay pricing by dose, 2026
DoseRoleCash price/moNotes
1.5 mgStarting dose$149Launch price; savings offers
4 mgTitration$149–$199Promo windows
9 mgTitration$299GoodRx / NovoCare
25 mgTreatment dose$299OASIS 4 dose
Insured copayAny covered dose~$25Savings program, eligibility required
Mean weight loss in pivotal trials (treatment-policy basis)
Oral sema 25 mg (OASIS 4)13.6%Wegovy 2.4 mg inj (STEP-1)14.9%Placebo (OASIS 4)2.4%

Pill versus injection versus Rybelsus

The 16.6 percent adherent figure is broadly in line with injectable Wegovy 2.4 mg, which produced about 14.9 percent in STEP-1. It sits below injectable tirzepatide, the class efficacy leader. So the pill is competitive with injectable semaglutide, not a leap beyond it.

It is also distinct from Rybelsus, the older oral semaglutide approved for type 2 diabetes at doses up to 14 mg. The Wegovy pill is a 25 mg formulation approved specifically for weight management. Both are swallowed tablets that share the empty-stomach, small-sip-of-water, 30-minute-wait protocol — the ritual that is the most common real-world adherence complaint with oral semaglutide.

The dose-tier pricing nobody headlines

The $149 launch price is for the 1.5 mg starting dose. The tablet comes in 1.5, 4, 9, and 25 mg strengths, and titration to the 25 mg treatment dose is the intended path — OASIS 4 escalated over about 12 weeks. Through GoodRx, starter doses were $149 and the 9 and 25 mg doses about $299 per month; Novo's savings offers can bring commercially insured copays as low as $25.

So a realistic self-pay year is not 12 × $149. A typical titration — a few months at starter tiers, the rest at 25 mg — lands roughly $2,900–$3,200 for year one before any clinic fees. That is comparable to injectable Wegovy's self-pay tiers and still above the lowest compounded semaglutide programs, with the difference that the pill is FDA-approved and trial-backed.

What it does to compounded oral products

The Wegovy pill directly undercuts the marketing premise of compounded oral and sublingual semaglutide. Those products — ODT tablets, sublingual drops — now compete against an FDA-approved oral semaglutide with published Phase III evidence at a $149 entry price. For any compounded oral product priced at or above that, the value proposition is hard to defend.

Compounded injectable semaglutide is a different calculation: the cheapest programs can still undercut the pill's maintenance-dose cost, which keeps that market alive for cash-pay patients — subject to the legality constraints covered in our compounding-rules guide. But the compounded oral segment specifically is the one the approved pill threatens most directly.

Who the pill fits, and who it doesn't

The pill fits needle-averse patients, travelers who can't refrigerate pens, and anyone whose insurance copay lands near $25. It fits less well if you struggle with a fasting-window routine, if you're chasing maximum weight loss and tolerate injections (where tirzepatide leads), or if you take morning medications whose timing conflicts with the 30-minute rule.

Switching is supported: Novo's labeling allows moving between the 25 mg tablet and the 2.4 mg weekly injection, and any switch — including from compounded semaglutide to the approved pill — should run through a prescriber, because dose equivalence between routes is not one-to-one. The pill's arrival mainly expands the menu of proven options rather than replacing injections.

The bottom line

For a patient weighing semaglutide options in 2026, the Wegovy pill adds a genuinely proven oral choice to a menu that previously forced a needle. Its trial results are solid, its entry price is low, and its maintenance price is moderate. Its main limitations are the fasting ritual and a maintenance cost above the compounded floor.

The strategic point for this site: the pill sits in the brand/approved tier of our pricing work, tracked against the compounded injectable floor. It does not make compounded semaglutide obsolete, but it removes the last easy argument for unproven compounded oral formulations — there is now a cheap, approved, trial-backed pill in that lane.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Wegovy pill the same as Rybelsus?

Same molecule, different product. Rybelsus is oral semaglutide approved for type 2 diabetes up to 14 mg; the Wegovy pill is a 25 mg formulation approved December 2025 for weight management, with its own OASIS trial evidence.

Does the $149 price last?

$149 is the launch price for the starter dose. Maintenance doses run about $299 cash, and promotional windows have end dates. Treat $149 as an entry price, not your steady-state cost.

Should I choose the pill over compounded semaglutide?

The pill is FDA-approved and trial-backed; the cheapest compounded injectable programs may still cost less per month. The pill most clearly outcompetes unproven compounded oral and sublingual products, which have no equivalent evidence.

Sources

  1. Novo Nordisk — Wegovy pill approval, Dec 22, 2025
  2. OASIS 4 publication (NEJM)
  3. Launch pricing (Fierce Pharma)
  4. STEP-1 injectable semaglutide (NEJM 2021)