Zepbound (tirzepatide for weight loss) is one of the most effective weight loss medications available. It's also expensive — over $1,000 per month at list price.
This guide explains what you'll actually pay and how to reduce your cost.
Zepbound List Price
$1,060 per month (before insurance or savings)
This is the manufacturer's suggested price. Almost no one pays full price, but you might if you have no insurance and no savings program.
What You'll Actually Pay
Your real cost depends on three things:
1. Insurance Coverage
This is the biggest factor.
Commercial insurance:
- Some plans cover Zepbound with a copay of $25-100
- Many plans require prior authorization
- Some plans exclude weight loss medications entirely
- Coverage varies by employer and state
Medicare:
- Part D plans rarely cover weight loss medications
- You'll likely pay full price
- Savings cards don't work with Medicare
Medicaid:
- Coverage varies by state
Products for tracking costs and progress:
- File organizer - organize insurance paperwork
- Smart scale - track weight loss progress
- Many states don't cover weight loss medications
- Check with your state's Medicaid program
2. Savings Programs
Eli Lilly offers savings programs:
Zepbound Savings Card (Lilly Direct):
- Available to commercially insured patients 18+
- Pay as little as $25/month
- Maximum savings per fill varies
- Not valid with Medicare or Medicaid
Patient Assistance:
- For patients with no insurance
- Income-based eligibility
- May receive medication for free
- Application required
3. Pharmacy Choice
Prices vary between pharmacies. However, Zepbound savings programs typically override pharmacy pricing differences.
Step-by-Step: Getting the Best Price
Step 1: Check your insurance
Call the number on your insurance card. Ask:
- Is Zepbound covered?
- What's my copay or coinsurance?
- Is prior authorization required?
- Are there step therapy requirements?
Step 2: Apply for the savings card
If you have commercial insurance:
- Visit Lilly Direct website
- Answer eligibility questions
- Download or print your savings card
- Show it at the pharmacy
Step 3: Ask about prior authorization
If insurance requires prior authorization:
- Your doctor submits clinical information
- Insurance reviews (takes days to weeks)
- You get approved or denied
- If denied, you can appeal
Step 4: Compare pharmacy options
If paying full price:
- Call multiple pharmacies
- Ask about self-pay pricing
- Consider mail-order options
Cost by Scenario
Scenario 1: Commercial insurance, covered
Expected cost: $25-100/month
Steps: Savings card + insurance
Potential issues: Prior authorization delay
Scenario 2: Commercial insurance, not covered
Expected cost: $1,060/month (or denied)
Steps: Ask about formulary exceptions
Alternative: Consider compounded tirzepatide (safety concerns)
Scenario 3: Medicare
Expected cost: Full price (~$1,060/month)
Steps: Savings card not available
Alternative: Ask about diabetes coverage if applicable
Scenario 4: No insurance, low income
Expected cost: Free (if eligible for patient assistance)
Steps: Apply through Eli Lilly
Income limit: ~300% federal poverty level
Scenario 5: No insurance, not low income
Expected cost: $1,060/month or compounded alternative
Steps: Compounded tirzepatide $300-500/month
Caution: Quality and safety vary
Zepbound vs Mounjaro Cost
Same drug, different costs:
| Zepbound | Mounjaro | |
|---|---|---|
| List price | ~$1,060 | ~$1,023 |
| Approved for | Weight loss | Diabetes |
| Savings card | Yes | Yes |
If you have diabetes, your insurance may cover Mounjaro but not Zepbound.
How to Talk to Your Doctor About Cost
Bring these questions to your appointment:
- Which GLP-1 does my insurance cover?
- Can we check coverage before prescribing?
- What if prior authorization is denied?
- Are there samples or bridge programs?
- What if I can't afford the medication?
Doctors deal with insurance issues daily. They can help navigate the system.
Avoiding Cost-Related Gaps
GLP-1 medications work best when taken consistently. To avoid gaps:
- Refill early — don't wait until the last day
- Set reminders — phone alerts for refills
- Use mail-order — automatic refills, 90-day supply
- Keep savings card updated — renew before it expires
- Have a backup plan — know what you'll do if coverage changes
Bottom Line
Zepbound costs over $1,000/month at list price. But most insured patients pay $25-100/month with savings programs.
The key is checking insurance coverage before you start, applying for savings programs immediately, and having a plan if coverage is denied.
Costs vary by location and insurance plan. Check with your pharmacy and insurance provider for your specific situation.
