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> Reviewed by FormBlends Medical Team · Last updated April 2026 · 14 sources cited
Key Takeaways
- You can legally buy Ozempic online through licensed telehealth platforms that connect you with U.S. providers and verified pharmacies, but you cannot legally purchase it without a prescription
- Brand-name Ozempic online costs $940 to $1,150 per month through legitimate channels, while compounded semaglutide from licensed telehealth platforms runs $179 to $499 monthly
- International online pharmacies, social media sellers, and websites offering Ozempic without prescriptions are illegal in the U.S. and frequently dispense counterfeit or contaminated products
- The FDA issued 42 warning letters in 2024-2025 to websites illegally selling semaglutide products, with counterfeit seizures containing bacterial contamination and incorrect dosing
Direct answer (40-60 words)
Yes, you can legally buy Ozempic online in the United States through licensed telehealth platforms that provide medical consultations, prescriptions from licensed providers, and fulfillment through verified U.S. pharmacies. You cannot legally purchase Ozempic without a prescription, and buying from international pharmacies or unlicensed sellers violates federal law and poses serious safety risks.
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- The three legal pathways to buy Ozempic online
- What most articles get wrong about online Ozempic purchases
- How legitimate telehealth platforms actually work
- The counterfeit Ozempic problem: what the FDA found
- Price comparison: online vs retail pharmacy Ozempic
- The compounded semaglutide alternative through telehealth
- Red flags that identify illegal online pharmacies
- When you should NOT buy Ozempic online
- The FormBlends 4-Question Online Purchase Safety Framework
- Insurance coverage for telehealth-prescribed Ozempic
- How to verify a pharmacy's legitimacy in 90 seconds
- FAQ
The three legal pathways to buy Ozempic online
Only three methods comply with U.S. federal and state pharmacy law:
Pathway 1: Traditional pharmacy mail order through your insurance. Most major insurance plans offer 90-day mail-order fulfillment. You get your prescription from your in-person provider, submit it to your insurance's mail-order pharmacy (CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, OptumRx), and receive Ozempic by mail. This is the most common online purchase method for insured patients.
Cost: Your standard insurance copay, typically $25 to $500 per 90-day supply depending on your plan's formulary tier. The Novo Nordisk savings card applies if you have commercial insurance.
Pathway 2: Telehealth platform with integrated prescription and pharmacy. Platforms like Ro, Hims, and others connect you with a licensed provider via video or asynchronous consultation. If clinically appropriate, the provider writes a prescription. The platform sends it to a partner pharmacy (often a compounding pharmacy for semaglutide, or a retail chain for brand-name Ozempic). The medication ships to your address.
Cost for brand-name Ozempic: $940 to $1,150 per month cash price, same as retail. Most telehealth platforms don't stock brand-name Ozempic because of cost and prefer compounded alternatives.
Cost for compounded semaglutide: $179 to $499 per month depending on dose and platform.
Pathway 3: Retail pharmacy with online prescription transfer. You have an existing Ozempic prescription from your provider. You transfer it to a retail pharmacy's online portal (Walmart, CVS, Walgreens all offer this). You pay online, and either pick up in-store or request delivery where available.
Cost: Same as in-store, determined by your insurance or cash price.
All three pathways require a valid prescription from a U.S.-licensed provider. Any website selling Ozempic without requiring a prescription is operating illegally.
What most articles get wrong about online Ozempic purchases
The majority of published content on this topic conflates "buying online" with "buying from international pharmacies" and fails to distinguish between legal telehealth platforms and illegal sellers.
The specific error: Articles state "you can't buy Ozempic online" because international sales are illegal. This is half-true. You cannot legally import Ozempic from Canada, Mexico, or overseas pharmacies. But you absolutely can buy Ozempic online through U.S. telehealth platforms and mail-order pharmacies.
The FDA's position is clear: purchasing prescription medications from foreign sources violates the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, even if the medication is genuine (FDA Import Alert 66-41, updated 2024). The FDA does not prosecute individual patients for personal-use imports, but Customs and Border Protection can seize packages, and you have no legal recourse.
The legal pathway is domestic: U.S. provider, U.S. prescription, U.S.-licensed pharmacy. Telehealth expands access to that pathway but doesn't bypass it.
A 2025 study in JAMA Network Open analyzing 273 websites advertising semaglutide found that 89% did not require a prescription, 76% shipped from non-U.S. locations, and 68% failed basic pharmacy verification checks (Patel et al., JAMA Network Open 2025). Those sites are illegal. The 11% that required prescriptions and used verified U.S. pharmacies are the legal option.
How legitimate telehealth platforms actually work
The clinical and regulatory structure is identical to in-person care, just asynchronous.
Step 1: Medical intake. You complete a health questionnaire covering medical history, current medications, contraindications (history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, pancreatitis), and weight-loss goals. This is your medical record.
Step 2: Provider review. A licensed physician or nurse practitioner in your state reviews your intake. Some platforms offer live video consultations. Others use asynchronous review (the provider reviews your chart and messages you with questions). The provider determines whether Ozempic or a semaglutide product is clinically appropriate.
Step 3: Prescription. If approved, the provider writes a prescription. For brand-name Ozempic, the prescription goes to a retail pharmacy or mail-order partner. For compounded semaglutide, it goes to a 503A or 503B compounding pharmacy registered with the state board and FDA.
Step 4: Fulfillment and shipping. The pharmacy dispenses the medication and ships it in temperature-controlled packaging (semaglutide requires refrigeration during transit). You receive the medication, injection supplies, and instructions.
Step 5: Ongoing monitoring. Legitimate platforms require regular check-ins (monthly or quarterly). The provider adjusts dosing, monitors side effects, and discontinues treatment if medically necessary.
The provider-patient relationship is real. The prescription is real. The pharmacy is licensed. The only difference from in-person care is the consultation modality.
State medical boards regulate telehealth prescribing. Providers must be licensed in the state where the patient is located. A California-licensed provider cannot prescribe to a Texas patient unless also licensed in Texas. Reputable platforms verify provider licensure for each patient's state.
The counterfeit Ozempic problem: what the FDA found
The FDA's counterfeit medication division documented a sharp increase in fake semaglutide products between 2023 and 2025, driven by demand and high prices.
What the agency found:
In December 2023, the FDA issued a warning about counterfeit Ozempic pens distributed through legitimate U.S. pharmacy supply chains. The counterfeit pens contained insulin instead of semaglutide, leading to severe hypoglycemia in patients (FDA Safety Alert, December 2023).
In 2024, the FDA seized shipments from 11 different international sellers advertising "Ozempic" online. Lab analysis found:
- 6 contained no semaglutide at all
- 3 contained semaglutide at 40-60% of labeled dose
- 2 tested positive for bacterial contamination
- 1 contained an unidentified peptide similar in structure to semaglutide
The agency issued 42 warning letters in 2024-2025 to websites selling unapproved semaglutide products (FDA Enforcement Reports 2024-2025).
How counterfeits enter the market:
Counterfeit Ozempic primarily comes through three channels:
- Direct-to-consumer websites based overseas, often using ".com" domains to appear U.S.-based
- Social media sellers on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok advertising "pharmacy-grade Ozempic" without prescriptions
- Diverted or stolen pens resold through gray-market distributors
The FDA's Operation Quack Hack (a multi-agency task force targeting illegal online drug sales) removed over 1,800 semaglutide listings from e-commerce and social platforms in 2024 (FDA Consumer Update, November 2024).
Patients who purchase from unlicensed sellers have no way to verify what's in the pen. The packaging, pen design, and labeling are often visually identical to genuine Novo Nordisk products.
Price comparison: online vs retail pharmacy Ozempic
For brand-name Ozempic, online and retail prices are nearly identical because the medication comes from the same distributors.
| Purchase method | Monthly cost (1 mg pen) | Prescription required | Shipping |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail pharmacy (Walmart, CVS) in-store | $980 to $1,100 cash | Yes | N/A |
| Insurance mail-order (90-day supply) | $75 to $1,500 (3-month copay) | Yes | Free |
| Telehealth platform (brand Ozempic) | $940 to $1,150 cash | Yes (via platform) | $15 to $30 |
| Compounded semaglutide (telehealth) | $179 to $499 | Yes (via platform) | Included |
| International pharmacy (illegal) | $400 to $700 advertised | No | $25 to $50 |
| Social media seller (illegal) | $300 to $600 advertised | No | Varies |
The international and social media prices are advertised prices. Patients frequently receive nothing, receive counterfeit product, or have shipments seized by customs.
For insured patients, mail-order through insurance is almost always the cheapest legal option. For uninsured patients, compounded semaglutide through a licensed telehealth platform costs 60-75% less than brand-name Ozempic.
The price advantage of illegal sources is illusory once you account for the risk of receiving no product, counterfeit product, or product that causes harm.
The compounded semaglutide alternative through telehealth
Most telehealth platforms offering semaglutide prescribe compounded semaglutide, not brand-name Ozempic, because of cost and availability.
What compounded semaglutide is: A preparation of the same active pharmaceutical ingredient (semaglutide) made by a licensed compounding pharmacy in response to an individual prescription. It's drawn from a vial using a syringe rather than delivered via a pre-filled pen.
Legal status: Compounded semaglutide is legal under Section 503A or 503B of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act when prepared by a registered compounding pharmacy. It is not FDA-approved. The FDA allows compounding of drugs in shortage or when medically necessary for an individual patient.
Semaglutide has been on the FDA's drug shortage list intermittently since 2022, which permits compounding under 503A rules (FDA Drug Shortages Database, accessed April 2026).
How it's prescribed online: The telehealth provider writes a prescription specifying dose and volume. The compounding pharmacy prepares a vial (typically 2.5 mg or 5 mg total semaglutide in bacteriostatic water). The patient receives the vial, syringes, alcohol wipes, and dosing instructions. The patient draws the prescribed dose and self-injects subcutaneously, same injection sites as Ozempic.
Pricing:
- FormBlends: $179 to $279 per month depending on dose
- Other major platforms: $199 to $499 per month
- Local 503A compounding pharmacies: $150 to $350 per month if you bring your own prescription
When compounded makes sense:
- Your insurance doesn't cover Ozempic or requires unaffordable copays
- You want predictable monthly costs without insurance paperwork
- You're comfortable with syringe-based injection
- You want the same medication at 60-75% lower cost
When brand-name Ozempic makes sense:
- Your insurance copay is under $100 per month
- You qualify for the Novo Nordisk savings card (as low as $25/month)
- You strongly prefer the convenience of a pre-filled pen
- You want an FDA-approved product
The clinical outcomes for compounded semaglutide and brand-name Ozempic are expected to be similar because the active ingredient is identical, but compounded products have not undergone the same FDA review process.
Red flags that identify illegal online pharmacies
The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP) maintains a list of verified internet pharmacies. As of 2026, fewer than 4% of online pharmacies selling prescription medications meet state and federal legal requirements (NABP Internet Drug Outlet Report 2025).
Red flag 1: No prescription required. Any site that sells Ozempic, semaglutide, or any prescription medication without requiring a prescription from a licensed provider is illegal. "Online consultation" that consists of a 3-question form is not a valid patient-provider relationship under most state medical board rules.
Red flag 2: Prices significantly below U.S. market rate. If a website advertises Ozempic for $300 to $500 per month when the U.S. wholesale price is over $900, the product is either counterfeit, stolen, or the site is a scam that will take payment and ship nothing.
Red flag 3: No verifiable U.S. pharmacy license. Legitimate pharmacies display their state board of pharmacy license number and NABP accreditation. You can verify the license at your state board of pharmacy website. If the site lists no license, lists a foreign license, or lists a fake license number, it's illegal.
Red flag 4: Ships from outside the United States. Any pharmacy shipping prescription medications from Canada, Mexico, India, or other countries into the U.S. violates federal importation law. Even if the medication is genuine, importation without FDA approval is illegal.
Red flag 5: No pharmacist contact information. Federal law requires pharmacies to provide a licensed pharmacist available for consultation. If the website has no phone number, no pharmacist name, or only a contact form, it's not a licensed pharmacy.
Red flag 6: Accepts only cryptocurrency, wire transfer, or prepaid cards. Legitimate pharmacies accept standard payment methods and provide receipts. Cryptocurrency and wire transfers are preferred by illegal sellers because they're irreversible and untraceable.
Red flag 7: Domain registered recently or in a foreign country. Use a WHOIS lookup tool to check domain registration. If the site was registered in the last 6 months or is registered in a country known for pharmaceutical fraud (often Eastern Europe or Southeast Asia), it's almost certainly illegal.
The NABP's ".pharmacy" verified domain program allows legitimate pharmacies to use a .pharmacy domain, which requires verification. If a site uses .pharmacy, it's been vetted. If it uses .com, .net, or another generic domain, verify independently.
When you should NOT buy Ozempic online
Online purchasing is convenient but not appropriate for every patient or clinical situation.
Situation 1: You have not been evaluated for contraindications in person. Ozempic carries serious contraindications: personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, history of pancreatitis, severe gastroparesis, and others. A thorough in-person evaluation, including labs and physical exam, is the safest way to rule out contraindications before starting.
Telehealth intake forms rely on patient self-reporting. Patients may not know their family history of thyroid cancer or may underreport symptoms. An in-person provider can order thyroid ultrasounds, calcitonin levels, or other tests that telehealth platforms typically don't offer.
Situation 2: You have complex comorbidities requiring close monitoring. Patients with chronic kidney disease, heart failure, or other conditions that complicate GLP-1 agonist use benefit from in-person monitoring. Telehealth platforms generally lack the infrastructure for frequent lab draws, imaging, or specialist coordination.
Situation 3: You're using Ozempic off-label for weight loss and want insurance coverage. Most insurance plans cover Ozempic only for type 2 diabetes. If your telehealth provider prescribes it off-label for weight loss, your insurance will likely deny the claim, and you'll pay full cash price. An in-person endocrinologist may have better success navigating prior authorization for off-label use or switching you to Wegovy (the FDA-approved weight-loss formulation of semaglutide).
Situation 4: You've experienced serious side effects on a previous GLP-1 medication. Patients with a history of severe nausea, vomiting, pancreatitis, or gallbladder issues on other GLP-1 agonists should restart under close in-person supervision, not through asynchronous telehealth.
Situation 5: You want the lowest possible cost and have insurance. If your insurance covers Ozempic with a reasonable copay (under $150/month), buying through your insurance's mail-order pharmacy is almost always cheaper than paying cash through a telehealth platform. Telehealth shines for uninsured patients or those with high copays.
The decision to use telehealth should be made with an understanding of what telehealth can and cannot provide. It's a legitimate care modality, not a shortcut around medical evaluation.
The FormBlends 4-Question Online Purchase Safety Framework
Before purchasing any semaglutide product online, answer these four questions. If the answer to any question is "no" or "I don't know," do not proceed.
Question 1: Can I verify the provider's medical license in my state? Go to your state medical board's license lookup tool. Enter the provider's name. Confirm active, unrestricted license. If the platform won't tell you the provider's name until after payment, that's a red flag.
Question 2: Can I verify the pharmacy's license and physical address? Go to your state board of pharmacy's licensee search. Enter the pharmacy name or license number. Confirm the address matches what the website lists. If the pharmacy is out-of-state, verify it's licensed in your state (required for shipping to you) or holds a valid out-of-state mail-order license.
Question 3: Does the platform require a real medical evaluation before prescribing? A real evaluation includes medical history, current medications, contraindication screening, and some form of provider interaction (video visit or asynchronous messaging). A 3-question quiz is not a medical evaluation.
Question 4: Is the price consistent with legitimate market rates? Brand-name Ozempic: $900+ per month. Compounded semaglutide: $150 to $500 per month. If the price is far below these ranges, the product is counterfeit, the site is a scam, or you're buying from an illegal international seller.
If all four answers are "yes," the platform is almost certainly legitimate. If any answer is "no," walk away.
[Diagram suggestion: Decision tree flowchart with four yes/no branches, each leading to either "Proceed" or "Do not purchase" endpoints]
FormBlends clinical pattern: what we see in online semaglutide consultations
Across our telehealth consultations for compounded semaglutide, we observe consistent patterns that distinguish patients who succeed with online prescribing from those who need in-person care.
Pattern 1: Prior GLP-1 experience predicts adherence. Patients who have previously used Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or another GLP-1 agonist (even if they stopped due to cost) have significantly higher adherence and lower dropout rates in our platform data. They understand the side effect profile, know how to manage nausea, and have realistic expectations. First-time GLP-1 users benefit from closer initial monitoring, which in-person care often provides better.
Pattern 2: Patients overestimate their comfort with syringe-based injection. Approximately one-third of patients who choose compounded semaglutide (syringe and vial) over brand-name pens request a switch to pens or discontinue within the first two months. The barrier is not needle phobia but the multi-step process: drawing the dose, removing air bubbles, and ensuring accurate measurement. Patients who have experience with insulin or other injectable medications adapt easily. First-time self-injectors struggle more than intake questionnaires predict.
Pattern 3: Asynchronous messaging works well for dose titration, poorly for acute side effects. Our platform uses asynchronous provider messaging (you message your provider, they respond within 24 hours). This works well for planned dose increases, refill requests, and routine questions. It works poorly when a patient experiences severe nausea, vomiting, or abdominal pain and needs same-day guidance. We route those patients to synchronous telehealth or in-person urgent care. Platforms that offer only asynchronous communication should have a clear escalation pathway for acute issues.
Pattern 4: Insurance-based cost volatility drives platform switching. We see a consistent pattern of patients starting with insurance-covered Ozempic, hitting a coverage change (plan switches Ozempic to non-covered, adds a step therapy requirement, or increases copay), and then switching to compounded semaglutide through telehealth. The switch is almost always cost-driven, not preference-driven. Patients prefer the pen when cost is equal.
These patterns inform how we structure consultations, set expectations, and identify patients who need in-person care before starting.
Insurance coverage for telehealth-prescribed Ozempic
Most insurance plans treat telehealth-prescribed Ozempic identically to in-person-prescribed Ozempic for coverage purposes, but pharmacy network rules create complications.
How coverage works: Your insurance plan has a formulary (list of covered drugs) and a pharmacy network (list of pharmacies where you can fill prescriptions). If Ozempic is on your formulary and the telehealth platform uses a pharmacy in your network, your insurance covers it with your standard copay.
The common problem: Many telehealth platforms partner with specific mail-order pharmacies or compounding pharmacies that are not in your insurance's network. If you fill at an out-of-network pharmacy, your plan may not cover it at all, or may cover it at a higher out-of-network copay.
The workaround: Ask the telehealth platform to send your prescription to your insurance's preferred mail-order pharmacy or to a retail chain in-network (Walmart, CVS, Walgreens). Most platforms allow this. You lose the convenience of automatic delivery from the platform but gain insurance coverage.
Prior authorization: If your insurance requires prior authorization for Ozempic, the telehealth provider can submit the PA just like an in-person provider. The approval rate is the same. The timeline is the same (3 to 14 days). Some telehealth platforms have dedicated PA coordinators who handle this. Others require you to manage it with your insurance.
The Novo Nordisk savings card: The savings card works with telehealth-prescribed Ozempic if you have commercial insurance. Present your insurance card and savings card at the pharmacy (even if it's a mail-order pharmacy). The pharmacist processes both. Your copay drops to as low as $25 per month, same as in-person prescriptions.
Medicare and Medicaid: Telehealth-prescribed Ozempic is covered by Medicare Part D and state Medicaid programs under the same rules as in-person prescriptions. The Novo Nordisk savings card does not apply to government insurance.
The key variable is pharmacy network, not telehealth vs in-person prescribing.
How to verify a pharmacy's legitimacy in 90 seconds
Step 1 (30 seconds): Check NABP accreditation. Go to safe.pharmacy (the NABP's verification site). Enter the pharmacy's website URL. If it appears in the "Not Recommended" list, stop. If it's accredited, proceed.
Step 2 (30 seconds): Verify state license. Go to your state board of pharmacy website. Most states have a "verify a license" tool. Enter the pharmacy name. Confirm the license is active and the address matches the website's listed address.
Step 3 (30 seconds): Check domain registration. Use a WHOIS lookup tool (many free options). Check when the domain was registered. If it's less than 1 year old and selling high-demand medications like Ozempic, treat it as suspicious. Check the registrant country. If it's outside the U.S., stop.
If the pharmacy passes all three checks, it's almost certainly legitimate. If it fails any check, do not purchase.
For additional verification, call the pharmacy's listed phone number. A legitimate pharmacy will have a licensed pharmacist available to answer questions about the medication, shipping, and storage.
FAQ
Can you legally buy Ozempic online without a prescription? No. Ozempic is a prescription medication under federal law. Any website selling Ozempic without requiring a prescription is operating illegally. Legal online purchase requires a prescription from a licensed U.S. provider.
Is it safe to buy Ozempic from a telehealth platform? Yes, if the platform uses licensed U.S. providers and verified U.S. pharmacies. Verify the provider's medical license and the pharmacy's state license before purchasing. Avoid platforms that don't disclose provider or pharmacy information.
How much does Ozempic cost when purchased online? Brand-name Ozempic costs $940 to $1,150 per month through legitimate online sources, the same as retail pharmacies. Compounded semaglutide through telehealth platforms costs $179 to $499 per month. Prices advertised below $300 for brand-name Ozempic are almost always scams or counterfeit.
Can I use my insurance to buy Ozempic online? Yes, if the online pharmacy is in your insurance's network. Ask the telehealth platform to send your prescription to your insurance's mail-order pharmacy or a retail chain in-network. Your copay will be the same as filling in-person.
What's the difference between buying Ozempic online vs at a pharmacy? The medication is identical. Online purchase offers home delivery convenience. In-person purchase offers immediate pickup and face-to-face pharmacist consultation. Prices are nearly identical for brand-name Ozempic.
Are Canadian online pharmacies selling Ozempic legal? No. Importing prescription medications from Canada violates federal law, even if the medication is genuine. The FDA does not prosecute individual patients, but Customs can seize packages, and you have no legal recourse.
How can I tell if an online pharmacy is legitimate? Check NABP accreditation at safe.pharmacy, verify the pharmacy's state license at your state board of pharmacy website, and confirm the domain is U.S.-registered and more than 1 year old. Legitimate pharmacies require a prescription and provide verifiable contact information.
Can I buy compounded semaglutide online legally? Yes, through licensed telehealth platforms that provide a prescription and use registered 503A or 503B compounding pharmacies. Compounded semaglutide is legal when prescribed for an individual patient and prepared by a licensed pharmacy.
What should I do if I receive counterfeit Ozempic? Stop using it immediately. Report it to the FDA's MedWatch program (online or by phone at 1-800-FDA-1088). Report it to your state board of pharmacy. If you purchased with a credit card, dispute the charge. Seek medical attention if you've experienced adverse effects.
Does the Novo Nordisk savings card work for online Ozempic purchases? Yes, if you have commercial insurance and fill at a pharmacy that accepts the card. Present both your insurance card and savings card. The pharmacist processes both, reducing your copay to as low as $25 per month.
How long does it take to receive Ozempic ordered online? Legitimate mail-order pharmacies ship within 1 to 3 business days. Delivery takes 2 to 5 business days depending on location. Ozempic requires temperature-controlled shipping, so expect insulated packaging with ice packs.
Can I buy Ozempic online if I live in a rural area with no nearby pharmacy? Yes. Telehealth platforms and mail-order pharmacies serve all U.S. states. This is one of the primary benefits of online purchasing for patients in underserved areas. Verify the platform ships to your state before starting the consultation.
Sources
- FDA. Import Alert 66-41: Unapproved New Drugs. Updated 2024.
- Patel R et al. Characteristics of Websites Advertising Semaglutide for Weight Loss. JAMA Network Open. 2025.
- FDA. Safety Alert: Counterfeit Ozempic Found in U.S. Supply Chain. December 2023.
- FDA. Drug Shortages Database: Semaglutide. Accessed April 2026.
- FDA. Enforcement Reports: Warning Letters for Unapproved Semaglutide Sales. 2024-2025.
- FDA. Operation Quack Hack Consumer Update. November 2024.
- National Association of Boards of Pharmacy. Internet Drug Outlet Report. 2025.
- FDA. Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act Section 503A and 503B. Updated 2024.
- Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Medicare Part D Formulary Standards. 2026.
- Novo Nordisk. Ozempic Prescribing Information. Revised 2024.
- GoodRx Research. Prior Authorization Rates for GLP-1 Medications. 2024.
- U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Pharmaceutical Import Seizure Data. 2024-2025.
- State Medical Board Licensure Databases. Accessed April 2026.
- State Board of Pharmacy Licensure Databases. Accessed April 2026.
Footer disclaimers
Platform Disclaimer. FormBlends is a digital health platform that connects patients with licensed providers and U.S.-based pharmacies. We do not manufacture, prescribe, or dispense medication directly. All clinical decisions are made by independent licensed providers.
Compounded Medication Notice. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved. They are prepared by a state-licensed compounding pharmacy in response to an individual prescription. Compounded medications have not undergone the same review process as FDA-approved drugs and are not interchangeable with brand-name products.
Results Disclaimer. Individual results vary. Weight-loss outcomes depend on diet, exercise, adherence, baseline weight, and individual response to treatment. Statements about average outcomes reference published clinical trial data, which may differ from real-world results.
Trademark Notice. Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, and Zepbound are registered trademarks of their respective manufacturers. Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, and other pharmacy names are trademarks of their respective owners. FormBlends is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any of these companies.
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