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semaglutide · Novo Nordisk · Massachusetts
Looking for Ozempic in Boston? Here's what to know about local availability, pricing paths, telehealth options, and how Massachusetts Medicaid handles GLP-1 coverage.
Availability and prices vary by pharmacy and date. We do not maintain real-time per-pharmacy stock or pricing data for Boston. Confirm availability and pricing with pharmacies directly before traveling for a fill.
Boston is a northeast-region city with a population of approximately 660,000 (city proper) and 4,900,000 in the broader metropolitan area. MassHealth covers T2D GLP-1s with prior auth; Mass General Brigham runs nationally ranked obesity-medicine programs.
Massachusetts Medicaid expansion: Yes — Massachusetts expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Low-income adults can typically qualify for MassHealth coverage, which generally includes Ozempic for FDA-approved type 2 diabetes with prior authorization. Weight-loss indications may have additional criteria.
The following academic medical centers and major hospital systems serve Boston residents and frequently prescribe GLP-1 medications through their endocrinology and obesity-medicine clinics:
If you have commercial insurance or Medicare that includes Ozempic on formulary, your physician or telehealth provider can send a prescription to any major retail pharmacy in Boston: CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, or grocery-store pharmacy counters. Copays depend on your plan's tier placement and any prior-authorization requirements. For type 2 diabetes, prior authorization typically requires documented T2D diagnosis (ICD-10 codes, A1c results) and often a metformin trial.
Multiple telehealth providers are licensed to prescribe Ozempic to MA residents. These services typically include the medical consultation, ongoing follow-up, and a prescription sent to a pharmacy of your choice or to an affiliated mail-order pharmacy. See our provider directory to filter by MA-licensed services.
Novo Nordisk operates NovoCare, a direct-pay program with uniform national pricing for eligible self-pay patients of Ozempic. NovoCare pricing applies in Boston the same as anywhere else in the US. Eligibility criteria typically include US residency, prescription for an FDA-approved indication, and proof of self-pay status (no insurance billing for this fill).
Compounded semaglutide is offered by some telehealth providers serving Massachusetts. Compounded GLP-1 medications are NOT FDA-approved as finished products. FDA removed both semaglutide and tirzepatide from the official drug shortage list in 2024-2025, which constrains commercial-scale compounding under FDCA §503B; patient-specific compounding under §503A remains permitted in narrow circumstances. See our compounded GLP-1 buyer guide for current safety considerations.
Boston has dense coverage from the major US retail pharmacy chains: CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, Rite Aid (in regions where it operates), and grocery-store pharmacies. Independent and compounding pharmacies also serve the city. Stock varies by location and date — chain-pharmacy websites provide stock-check tools for many GLP-1 medications.
For a structured search across Boston pharmacies, see our pharmacy locator. We do not maintain a verified directory of which specific Boston pharmacies have Ozempic in stock on any given day. Call ahead to confirm before traveling for a fill.
State-level coverage patterns for Ozempic in Massachusetts:
For a structured state-by-state coverage breakdown, see our pricing-by-state map and payer-coverage guides.
Ozempic is a prescription medication that can be filled at most major retail pharmacy chains operating in Boston, including CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, and grocery-store pharmacy counters (Kroger, Publix, Vons, Safeway, depending on the region). Independent pharmacies and mail-order pharmacies also fill Ozempic. Stock varies by location and date — call ahead or use the pharmacy's online stock tool to confirm availability before traveling for the fill.
Massachusetts expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, and MassHealth typically covers Ozempic for FDA-approved type 2 diabetes with prior authorization. Prior authorization typically requires documented diagnosis and prior-therapy trials. Verify with your specific plan and current formulary.
Yes — telehealth providers serving Massachusetts can prescribe Ozempic when clinically appropriate. State telehealth rules govern whether video-based or asynchronous consultations are permitted; some states require synchronous video for new GLP-1 prescriptions. See our telehealth provider directory for providers licensed in MA.
Ozempic cash pricing in Boston follows national patterns rather than city-specific pricing. Manufacturer programs are uniform nationally: Novo Nordisk's NovoCare program lists self-pay pricing for eligible patients. Retail pharmacy cash prices vary by chain and discount-card use (GoodRx, SingleCare). We do not maintain real-time per-pharmacy local prices.
Compounded semaglutide is available through some telehealth providers serving Massachusetts. Compounded GLP-1 medications are NOT FDA-approved as finished products and are subject to evolving FDA enforcement. As of 2025, FDA removed both semaglutide and tirzepatide from the official drug shortage list, which constrains commercial compounding under FDCA §503B. Patient-specific compounding (§503A) remains permitted in narrow circumstances. See our compounded GLP-1 buyer guide for safety considerations.
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