Cash-Pay vs. Insurance for Weight Loss Medication: The Real Math
"Just use insurance" sounds obvious, until you do the actual math. For GLP-1 weight loss, the cash-pay route is often simpler and cheaper than people expect.
Why this question is so confusing
Insurance feels like it should always be the cheaper path. But weight-loss medication coverage is one of the most heavily gated categories in U.S. health insurance, and the gates have real costs, in dollars and in time.
The insurance path: what it actually costs
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$297 Skeptics’ Trial, see if it works for you
One month of medical-grade compounded semaglutide, the $119 doctor review, and a free B-12/lipotropic injection. No long-term commitment.
Start the 30-day trial- Prior authorization, your physician has to justify the prescription to the insurer, which takes time and is often denied the first round.
- Step therapy, many plans require you to "fail" cheaper interventions first before they will cover a GLP-1.
- Formulary exclusions, a growing number of plans simply do not cover GLP-1s for weight loss at all.
- Brand-only coverage, when a plan does cover, it covers the brand-name drug, and your copay plus the path to get there can still be significant.
- Time, weeks of back-and-forth before a single dose, with no guarantee of approval.
The cash-pay path: transparent, no gatekeeping
Cash-pay removes the insurer from the decision. There is no prior authorization, no step therapy, no formulary exclusion. You and your physician decide, and the price is a flat, known number. For compounded GLP-1 therapy, that number is often dramatically lower than the cash price of the brand-name drug.
When insurance does make sense
If your plan covers a GLP-1 for weight loss with a low copay and minimal friction, that may genuinely be your cheapest route, and you should use it. The point is not "never use insurance." The point is to do the math honestly instead of assuming insurance always wins.
Our cash-pay pricing, stated plainly
- Physician visit / get started: $119 one-time (physician review and first prescription if approved; not charged if you are not a candidate).
- Essential Reset, compounded semaglutide, 90 days: $499 total (about $166/month).
- Advanced Reset, compounded tirzepatide, 90 days: $699 total (about $233/month).
- Skeptic's Trial, one month of compounded semaglutide: $297 one-time.
- Medication is billed separately from the visit. HSA and FSA accepted; Klarna and Affirm available.
Frequently asked questions
Is cash-pay really cheaper than insurance for weight loss medication?
Often, yes. Brand-name GLP-1s run roughly $935-$1,349 per month at cash price, and the insurance route adds prior authorization, step therapy, possible denials, and weeks of delay. Compounded GLP-1 therapy on a flat cash-pay basis, about $166/month for semaglutide, frequently costs less and skips the gatekeeping entirely. Always do the math for your own plan.
Why is weight loss medication so hard to get covered by insurance?
Weight-loss medication is one of the most heavily gated categories in U.S. health insurance. Plans use prior authorization, step therapy requirements, and outright formulary exclusions, and a growing number do not cover GLP-1s for weight loss at all. The gates have real costs in both dollars and time, even when coverage technically exists.
What does cash-pay weight loss treatment cost at your clinic?
The physician visit is $119 one-time. Compounded semaglutide is $499 for 90 days (about $166/month); compounded tirzepatide is $699 for 90 days (about $233/month); and the Skeptic's Trial is $297 for one month of semaglutide. Medication is billed separately from the visit. HSA and FSA are accepted, and Klarna and Affirm are available.
Should I ever use insurance instead of cash-pay?
Yes, if your plan covers a GLP-1 for weight loss with a low copay and minimal friction, that may genuinely be your cheapest route, and you should use it. The point is not to avoid insurance on principle. It is to do the math honestly for your specific plan instead of assuming insurance always wins.
Can I use my HSA or FSA for cash-pay weight loss treatment?
Yes. HSA and FSA funds can generally be applied to physician-supervised medical weight loss treatment, and we accept both. We also offer Klarna and Affirm for patients who want to spread the cost. Keep your receipts and check your specific HSA/FSA plan rules, since administration varies by provider.
This article is informational only and not medical advice. Speak with a licensed physician before starting or changing any GLP-1 therapy. Individual results vary. New Hope Weight Loss is a physician-supervised medical weight loss clinic in Costa Mesa, CA. Eligibility for treatment is determined during the medical consultation. Compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide are not the same products as Wegovy®, Ozempic®, Mounjaro®, or Zepbound®.