Medication Guides
Semaglutide vs. Tirzepatide for Weight Loss: How They Compare in 2026
Both are highly effective GLP-1-based weight-loss medications, but they are not the same drug. Here is how they differ in mechanism, trial results, side effects, dosing, and cost — and how to think about which one fits you.
The short answer: Semaglutide and tirzepatide both produce substantial weight loss by curbing appetite, but they work through different receptors. In clinical trials, tirzepatide produced more weight loss on average — up to ~24.3% of body weight in SURMOUNT-1, versus ~15% for semaglutide in STEP 1. Semaglutide is usually cheaper and has a longer track record. The right choice depends on your goals, tolerance for side effects, budget, and a licensed provider's assessment.
How each one works
Semaglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist. It mimics glucagon-like peptide-1, a gut hormone that signals fullness to the brain, slows how fast the stomach empties, and helps regulate blood sugar. It is the active ingredient in the brand-name drugs Ozempic® and Wegovy® (Novo Nordisk).
Tirzepatide is a dual agonist: it activates the GLP-1 receptor and the GIP (glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide) receptor. The added GIP activity is believed to enhance the appetite-suppressing and metabolic effects, which may explain its higher average weight loss in trials. It is the active ingredient in Mounjaro® and Zepbound® (Eli Lilly).
What the clinical trials showed
The clearest evidence comes from each drug's pivotal trial. In STEP 1 (NEJM, 2021), adults with obesity taking semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly lost an average of ~14.9% of body weight over 68 weeks, alongside diet and exercise. In SURMOUNT-1 (NEJM, 2022), tirzepatide produced average reductions that climbed with dose, reaching up to ~24.3% at the highest dose over 72 weeks.
Semaglutide (STEP 1, 68 wks)
Tirzepatide (SURMOUNT-1, 72 wks)
Figures are clinical-trial averages combining medication with diet and exercise. Trials enrolled different populations and are not a head-to-head comparison. Individual results vary and are not guaranteed.
A direct comparison came later. In SURMOUNT-5, a head-to-head trial reported in 2025, tirzepatide produced significantly greater weight loss than semaglutide in adults with obesity — the first large randomized trial to compare the two directly. Even so, the difference is an average: many people do very well on semaglutide, and tolerability matters as much as the headline number.
Side effects and safety
The two drugs share a similar safety profile. The most common side effects are gastrointestinal — nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and constipation — and they are usually most noticeable when the dose is being increased. Starting low and titrating slowly is the standard approach to limit them.
Both carry a boxed warning regarding the risk of thyroid C-cell tumors, based on rodent studies; they are not recommended for people with a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN 2. Rarer but serious risks include pancreatitis and gallbladder problems. A licensed provider should review your full medical history before prescribing either medication.
Dosing and administration
Both are once-weekly subcutaneous injections, self-administered with a small needle into the abdomen, thigh, or upper arm. Both start at a low dose that is increased gradually over weeks to the target dose, which improves tolerability. An oral form of semaglutide also exists; tirzepatide is currently injection-only.
Cost: what to expect
Cost varies widely by format. Brand-name Wegovy and Zepbound carry manufacturer list prices that are often over $1,000/month before insurance or savings programs. Compounded versions — prepared by licensed compounding pharmacies — are typically far less expensive, and semaglutide generally costs less than tirzepatide at a comparable program.
As a current reference point, one telehealth provider in our reviews, MaxLife, lists compounded semaglutide from $175/month and compounded tirzepatide from $195/month, with the per-month cost falling on longer plans. Prices across the market change frequently — always confirm current pricing and exactly what is included (consultation, shipping, dose changes) before enrolling.
How to choose between them
Reasonable factors to weigh with your provider:
- Weight-loss goal. If maximizing average weight loss is the priority and you tolerate it, the trial data favor tirzepatide. For solid, well-established results at lower cost, semaglutide is a strong option.
- Side-effect tolerance. Both can cause GI effects; some people tolerate one better than the other. Slow titration helps with either.
- Budget. Semaglutide is generally the lower-cost choice, especially in compounded form.
- Track record. Semaglutide has been in wide weight-management use longer.
- Medical history. Certain conditions make either drug inappropriate — this is the provider's call.
The bottom line
Both semaglutide and tirzepatide are effective, evidence-backed medications for weight management when combined with diet and lifestyle changes. Tirzepatide shows higher average weight loss in trials; semaglutide is typically cheaper with a longer history. There is no universally "better" drug — only the one that best fits your goals, tolerance, budget, and medical history, prescribed and monitored by a licensed provider.
Frequently asked questions
Is tirzepatide more effective than semaglutide?
In separate pivotal trials, tirzepatide produced higher average weight loss (up to ~24.3% in SURMOUNT-1) than semaglutide (~15% in STEP 1), and the 2025 head-to-head SURMOUNT-5 trial also favored tirzepatide. But these are averages across different populations; individual results vary and semaglutide works very well for many people.
Can I switch from one to the other?
Switching is sometimes done — for tolerability, cost, or results — but it should be managed by a licensed provider, who will set an appropriate starting dose on the new medication rather than matching the old one directly.
Are the compounded versions the same as the brand-name drugs?
No. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide use the same active ingredient but are prepared by compounding pharmacies and are not FDA-approved. Compounded semaglutide is not Ozempic® or Wegovy®; compounded tirzepatide is not Mounjaro® or Zepbound®.
How long do I need to take it?
GLP-1 medications are generally used long-term for weight management; studies show weight tends to return after stopping. The right duration is an individual decision made with your provider.
References
- Wilding JPH, et al. "Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity" (STEP 1). New England Journal of Medicine, 2021. nejm.org
- Jastreboff AM, et al. "Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity" (SURMOUNT-1). New England Journal of Medicine, 2022. nejm.org
- U.S. Food & Drug Administration — prescribing information for Wegovy®, Ozempic®, Zepbound®, Mounjaro®. fda.gov