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Drug-to-drug breakdown

Saxenda vs Compounded Semaglutide: Cost, FDA Approval, and Which to Choose

Compare Saxenda (GLP-1 agonist) and Compounded Semaglutide (Compounded GLP-1). Pricing, FDA status, side effects, and which medication is the better fit for your goals.

FDA Compliance Notice

Saxenda is available only in compounded forms. As of March 2026, the FDA has issued warning letters to multiple telehealth providers regarding compounded GLP-1 marketing. Compounded medications are not FDA-reviewed for safety, effectiveness, or quality.

Learn more →
FDA approvedSaxenda

liraglutide

From

$1100/mo

Score

8.0/10

CompoundedCompounded Semaglutide

semaglutide (compounded)

From

$99/mo

Score

6.5/10

Key takeaways

  • Saxenda is in the GLP-1 agonist class; Compounded Semaglutide is in the Compounded GLP-1 class.
  • Saxenda is FDA-approved. Compounded Semaglutide is compounded and not FDA-reviewed.
  • Discuss compounded medication risks with a licensed prescriber.
  • Manufacturer savings programs and telehealth cash-pay options can reduce out-of-pocket costs significantly.

Quick visual breakdown

Saxenda wins 1 · Compounded Semaglutide wins 2

Saxenda

1 of 3 wins

vs

Compounded Semaglutide

2 of 3 wins

Price (lower wins)
1349
250
Savings card max
25
0
Without insurance
1100
99

Side-by-side comparison

Feature
Saxenda
Compounded Semaglutide
Generic name
liraglutide
semaglutide (compounded)
Manufacturer
Novo Nordisk
Various compounding pharmacies
FDA approved for
Chronic weight management in adults with BMI ≥30
Average retail price
$1349/mo
$250/mo
Without insurance (low)
$1100/mo
$99/mo
Savings card
$25/mo
Shortage status
not_listed
not_listed

How Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide work — mechanism comparison

Saxenda (liraglutide) and Compounded Semaglutide (semaglutide (compounded)) belong to overlapping but distinct drug classes. Both work via the incretin (gut-hormone) pathway, but they have different molecular targets:

  • Saxenda (liraglutide) — GLP-1 Agonists
  • Compounded Semaglutide (semaglutide (compounded)) — GLP-1 Agonists

This mechanistic difference matters because it determines: efficacy (how much weight loss / blood-sugar control you can expect), side-effect profile, dosing schedule, and which patients may benefit most. Read more in our Saxenda mechanism guide and Compounded Semaglutide mechanism guide.

Efficacy head-to-head

In their respective pivotal trials, mean body-weight reduction reached:

  • Saxenda: 8% at 56 weeks (trial: SCALE)
  • Compounded Semaglutide: 14.9% at 68 weeks (trial: STEP-1)

Compounded Semaglutide produced 6.9 percentage points more weight loss than Saxendain head-to-head comparison. Note that trials weren't conducted head-to-head — these are separate trial endpoints in different populations. Real-world differences may be smaller. Individual variability is also large.

Side-by-side radar: Saxenda vs Compounded Semaglutide

Editorial scoring across 5 dimensions, overlaid. Higher area = better overall fit.

EfficacyConvenienceAffordabilityToleranceEvidence
Saxenda
Compounded Semaglutide
AxisSaxendaCompounded Semaglutide
Efficacy68
Convenience59
Affordability6
Tolerance5
Evidence1010

Higher score = better on that axis. Editorial scoring; not a substitute for prescriber judgment.

Side effects compared

Both drugs share the GLP-1 class side-effect profile — primarily gastrointestinal (nausea, diarrhea, constipation, vomiting) in early treatment, fading as the body adapts. Both carry the FDA boxed warning for thyroid C-cell tumors and contraindications for personal/family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma.

Comparative trial data on common side effects (rates may differ from real-world):

  • Nausea rate (Saxenda): 39%
  • Nausea rate (Compounded Semaglutide): 44%
  • Diarrhea rate (Saxenda): 21%
  • Diarrhea rate (Compounded Semaglutide): 30%

Patients who tolerate one GLP-1 well often (but not always) tolerate another. Switching between class members typically requires re-titration regardless of prior tolerability. See full side-effect breakdowns for Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide.

Dosing schedule comparison

Both medications use step-up titration to minimize side effects, but the schedule details differ:

Saxenda

  1. Week 1: 0.6 mg
  2. Week 2: 1.2 mg
  3. Week 3: 1.8 mg
  4. Week 4: 2.4 mg
  5. Week 5+: 3.0 mg

Compounded Semaglutide

  1. Week 1–4: 0.25 mg
  2. Week 5–8: 0.5 mg
  3. Week 9–12: 1.0 mg
  4. Week 13+: 1.7–2.4 mg

See full titration guides for Saxenda dosing and Compounded Semaglutide dosing.

Cost comparison

Cost differences between Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide depend on insurance coverage, manufacturer savings programs, and partner-network pricing — not just retail price.

  • Average retail price (Saxenda): $1349/month
  • Average retail price (Compounded Semaglutide): $250/month
  • Saxenda savings card: as low as $25/month for eligible commercial-insured
  • Compounded Semaglutide savings card: no standing savings card

For most patients, the actual out-of-pocket cost is driven by: (1) what your insurance formulary tier places Saxenda vs Compounded Semaglutide, (2) whether you qualify for manufacturer savings cards (commercial insurance only), and (3) telehealth partner network availability. Full cost breakdowns: Saxenda cost guide · Compounded Semaglutide cost guide.

Which one to choose — decision factors

There's no single «better» drug — the right choice depends on individual circumstances. The key decision factors:

Choose Saxenda if…

  • Your insurance covers it but not Compounded Semaglutide
  • Your prescriber has more experience with it
  • You're commercially insured and want maximum savings-card benefit

Choose Compounded Semaglutide if…

  • Your insurance covers it but not Saxenda
  • Your prescriber has more experience with it
  • Maximum weight loss is your priority (higher mean efficacy)
  • 0

Switching from Saxenda to Compounded Semaglutide (or vice versa)

Switching between Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide (different active ingredients) typically requires restarting titration from the lowest doseof the new drug. Different molecules have different potencies — your tolerated dose of one doesn't map directly to the other. Plan for:

  • Return of titration-period side effects (nausea, GI) for 2-4 weeks on restart
  • Possibly temporary weight regain during the transition
  • Fresh insurance prior-authorization (different drug = new PA)
  • 2-4 weeks for the new drug to reach steady-state plasma levels

FAQ — Saxenda vs Compounded Semaglutide

Are Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide the same drug?

No — they contain different active ingredients (liraglutide and semaglutide (compounded)). They belong to similar drug classes (GLP-1 family) but work via slightly different molecular targets.

Which is more effective for weight loss?

In separate pivotal trials, Compounded Semaglutide produced 6.9 percentage points more weight loss than Saxenda on average. However, these were separate trials with different populations — not head-to-head comparison. Individual response variability is also large. Most patients achieve clinically meaningful weight loss with either drug.

Can I take Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide together?

No. Combining two GLP-1 receptor agonists provides no added benefit and dramatically increases side-effect risk. Standard practice is to switch between them, not combine.

Which has fewer side effects?

Side-effect profiles are broadly similar across GLP-1 medications — primarily GI effects that fade with adaptation. Individual tolerance varies. Trial data shows comparable rates of nausea, diarrhea, and other common effects between Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide.

Will my insurance cover one but not the other?

Often yes. Insurance formularies are negotiated separately per drug — Saxenda may be on Tier 2 of your plan while Compounded Semaglutide is Tier 4 (or excluded). Check your formulary before assuming both are equally accessible.

Editorial comparison based on FDA prescribing information and published clinical data. Not a substitute for prescriber consultation. Full medical disclaimer.

Common questions about Saxenda

Can I switch between Saxenda and Compounded Semaglutide?

See full answer in editor.

Which is cheaper?

See full answer in editor.

Why trust our experts

Medically reviewed by:
Jane Smith, MD, FACP
Last reviewed:
May 15, 2026