Tirzepatide Guides

In-depth guides on cost, dosing, side effects, insurance coverage, and pharmacy pathways for tirzepatide.

Tirzepatide patient guides

Patient-focused guides covering the practical questions most people ask before, during, and after starting tirzepatide therapy. Each guide is built around how this question affects real treatment decisions: cost, insurance, dosing, side effects, and what compounded versus brand-name means. For deeper clinical reference, see the clinical reference section; for state-specific access information, see tirzepatide by state; for direct head-to-head comparisons, see side-by-side comparisons.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I get started on tirzepatide?

Most patients begin with a telehealth or in-person clinical visit to verify eligibility (BMI ≥30 or ≥27 with comorbidity for weight management; diabetes diagnosis for type 2 diabetes care). The provider reviews medical history, contraindications, and current medications, then writes a prescription. Insurance coverage is verified or a cash-pay pathway is chosen, and the medication is dispensed by a pharmacy.

How much does tirzepatide cost without insurance?

Brand-name Zepbound list price is approximately $1,060 per month in 2026; Eli Lilly's self-pay vial program for select doses costs $349–$549 per month. Compounded tirzepatide from licensed pharmacies typically prices between $159 and $399 per month depending on dose and provider. Total annual cost without insurance can range from approximately $1,800 to $12,000+.

How long until I see results on tirzepatide?

Weight loss typically begins within the first few weeks but is most pronounced over months. Mean weight loss continued through 72 weeks of treatment in the SURMOUNT-1 trial. Many patients see 5–10% body weight loss by month 3 and 15–20% by month 12 on adequate dosing.

Can I stop tirzepatide once I reach my goal weight?

Most clinicians recommend continuing tirzepatide as long-term therapy. The SURMOUNT-4 trial demonstrated substantial weight regain when patients were switched to placebo after initial weight loss. Tirzepatide is positioned analogously to medications for other chronic conditions — taken indefinitely under clinical supervision.