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How much does the Wegovy pill cost in the UK?

Robbie Puddick (RNutr)
Written by

Robbie Puddick (RNutr)

Content and SEO Lead

Dr Rachel Hall
Medically reviewed by

Dr Rachel Hall (MBCHB)

Principal Doctor

10 min read
Last updated June 2026
title

Jump to: How much the Wegovy pill costs in the UK | What the Wegovy pill costs by dose | Is the Wegovy pill cheaper than the injection? | Why the Wegovy pill isn’t on the NHS yet | What’s included in the price | The cost of regain over time | Frequently asked questions

The Wegovy pill costs around £150-£230 per month on a private prescription in the UK, depending on your dose and provider, if you’re eligible. Most providers also take £30-£50 off your first month as an introductory offer.

It’s licensed for adults with a BMI of 30 or above, or between 27 and 30 with a weight-related condition such as type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure.1

There’s no single official price yet. Novo Nordisk, the company that makes Wegovy, hasn’t published a UK list price for the tablet, so each pharmacy and online provider sets its own.

The pill isn’t available on the NHS, so it’s only available via private prescription for now.1 The UK’s medicines regulator, the MHRA, only approved it on 11th June 2026.1

Important safety information: Wegovy (semaglutide) is a prescription-only medication for managing obesity and overweight. It’s available in the UK as a once-a-week injection and, since June 2026, as a once-a-day tablet. This article is for informational purposes only. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting any new medication.

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How much the Wegovy pill costs in the UK

On a private prescription, the Wegovy pill currently costs between about £150 and £230 a month in the UK, depending on the dose and your provider.

Because there’s no official UK list price yet, you’ll see figures from around £150 a month at the lower doses up to around £230 a month at the maintenance dose. Most providers also offer an introductory discount, usually £30-£50 off your first month.

Any lower prices you see usually apply to the starting dose rather than the higher doses you’re likely to titrate up to. The cost climbs as your dose increases.

In short:

  • The Wegovy pill costs around £150 to £230 a month privately, depending on the dose
  • There’s no official UK list price yet, so each provider sets its own
  • Most providers take £30 to £50 off the first month
  • It isn’t available on the NHS, so a private prescription is the only option for now

What the Wegovy pill costs by dose

The price rises with the dose, because a higher dose contains more medication.

You begin at 1.5 mg, then increase to 4 mg, then 9 mg, and finally the maintenance dose of 25 mg, spending at least a month at each dose.1

That means you reach the 25 mg maintenance dose after about 12 weeks, so your first few months usually cost less than the maintenance price.

Here’s how that looks at Second Nature, as an example of how dose-based pricing works in practice.

Dose Monthly price 12-month plan
1.5 mg (starting dose) £149 a month £124 a month
4 mg £179 a month £154 a month
9 mg £199 a month £174 a month
25 mg (maintenance dose) £229 a month £204 a month

These are the standard monthly prices, with £50 off your first month.

The 12-month plan lowers the monthly cost compared with paying month-to-month.

Over your first year, your average monthly cost is lower than the 25 mg figure because the early months are spent on lower, cheaper doses.

Plus, we recommend staying on the lowest effective dose for as long as possible. If you’re losing weight at a sustainable rate of about 1 lb per week, there’s no clinical reason to increase it.

Is the Wegovy pill cheaper than the injection?

The Wegovy pill and the injection will cost around the same. Once you reach the maintenance dose, the pill and the injection cost a similar amount at most providers.

Many providers heavily discount the first 0.25 mg injection pen, sometimes to £79- £99 per month, and this might be comparable to the Wegovy pill’s 1.5 mg dose.

The pill’s appeal is that it’s a tablet rather than an injection, not that it’s going to be cheaper.

Wegovy pill Wegovy injection
How you take it One tablet a day One injection a week
Starting-dose price From about £150 a month From about £79 to £99 a month
Maintenance-dose price About £200 to £230 a month About £200 to £300 a month
Average weight loss in trials 13.6% at 25 mg2 Up to 20.7% at 7.2 mg5
Available on the NHS? Not yet Specialist services only

Our guide to the Wegovy pill versus the injection covers how they differ in how they’re taken, their side effects, and their weight-loss results.

Why the Wegovy pill isn’t on the NHS yet

The Wegovy pill isn’t funded by the NHS.

NICE, the body that decides which medications the NHS pays for, hasn’t yet assessed the tablet for weight management.1

The Wegovy injection is available on the NHS, but only through specialist weight-management services rather than your GP.

NICE recommends the injection for adults with a BMI of 35 or above, or 32.5 or above for some ethnic groups, who also have a weight-related health condition.3

On the NHS, the injection is funded for up to 2 years.3

The tablet is expected to go through the same NICE process, and routine NHS access is unlikely before 2027.

Our guide to the Wegovy pill on the NHS covers the eligibility rules and the likely timeline in more detail.

What’s included in the price

Most providers bundle in an online consultation, a clinician to check whether the pill is right for you, and delivery.

Some charge a separate consultation fee, so it’s worth checking whether the monthly price is all-inclusive.

Unlike injections, the tablet doesn’t require needles, wipes, or a sharps bin, so there are fewer add-on costs to watch for.

What varies most is the support around the medication, as some providers will send you the medication without any additional support around nutrition and lifestlye.

Others, such as Second Nature, include structured habit-change support from registered dietitians and nutritionists.

That support is designed to help you build eating and activity habits that support sustainable weight loss and prevent future weight regain.

The cost of weight regain over time

Broadly, online pharmacies will offer GLP-1 medications at a lower monthly cost than habit-change programmes such as Second Nature.

But it’s important to consider the long-term cost and how likely you are to maintain weight loss over time.

In the main semaglutide withdrawal trial, people who stopped regained around two-thirds of the weight they had lost within a year.6

They had been given only basic lifestyle advice, so the habits they needed to develop to prevent regain weren’t in place.

Without that support, many people fall into a cycle of spending several months on the medication, stopping, regaining much of the weight, and then starting again.

Each restart means paying for the medication again, so the total cost climbs with every cycle.

A structured programme works more like a one-time investment.

You spend around a year or more on the medication, taper off gradually, and the habits built along the way keep the weight off afterwards.

Cumulative cost line chart over five years. The structured-programme line rises while you are on the pill, then stays flat once habits maintain the weight, ending around £3,100. The medication-only line climbs in repeated steps as the pill is restarted after each round of weight regain, ending higher, around £4,800.

Over five years, the medication-only pattern can cost more than a structured programme, even where the monthly price looks similar, because each round of regain leads to another round of medication.

Having the support of a registered dietitian, daily educational articles, protein-rich recipes, tracking, and clinical oversight in one place provides the structure that many people need to build and maintain a healthy lifestyle.

Second Nature has worked with the NHS since 2017, pairing the Wegovy pill with structured habit-change support from registered dietitians, designed to keep the weight off after you stop the medication. Take our 3-minute eligibility quiz, and a clinician will review your answers.

Frequently asked questions

How much does the Wegovy pill cost in the UK?

The Wegovy pill costs between £150 and £230 per month on a private prescription, depending on your dose. There’s no official UK list price yet, so the figure varies across providers, and most take £30-£50 off your first month.

Am I eligible for the Wegovy pill?

The pill is licensed for adults with a BMI of 30 or above, or between 27 and 30 with at least one weight-related condition such as type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure.1 A clinician checks whether it’s suitable for you before prescribing.

Is the Wegovy pill cheaper than the injection?

Wegovy injectables and the Wegovy pill have broadly comparable pricing across available doses. The pill’s advantage is convenience, not price.

Will the Wegovy pill be available on the NHS?

Not yet. NICE hasn’t assessed the tablet for NHS use, and routine NHS access is unlikely before 2027. For now, it’s only available on a private prescription.

Where can I buy the Wegovy pill in the UK?

You can get it through registered online providers and pharmacies that offer a private prescription, if you’re eligible. Our guide to buying the Wegovy pill online explains what to look for in a provider.

Does the Wegovy pill work as well as the injection?

In its main trial, the Wegovy pill produced an average weight loss of 13.6% over 64 weeks.2

The injection supports more weight loss, averaging 20.7% at its 7.2 mg dose, though the two haven’t been tested directly against each other.5

How much does the Wegovy pill cost per day?

At around £150 to £230 a month, the pill works out at roughly £5 to £8 a day, depending on your dose. Introductory first-month discounts can bring that lower to begin with.

Who has the cheapest Wegovy pill in the UK?

Prices start from around £150 a month (or less with introductory offers), but the lowest headline price isn’t always the cheapest overall. Check whether it includes the consultation, delivery, and any ongoing support before comparing.

Why do Wegovy pill prices vary so much?

Because there’s no official UK list price yet, each provider sets its own. Prices also rise with the dose and vary depending on what’s included, such as clinical reviews and habit-change support.

Can I switch from the Wegovy injection to the pill?

Yes. If you’re on the 2.4 mg injection, you can usually move straight to the 25 mg tablet.1 Our guide to switching to the Wegovy pill explains how the change works.

Take home message

The Wegovy pill costs between £150 and £230 per month on a private prescription in the UK, depending on your dose. There’s no official list price yet, so the figure varies across providers, and most take £30-£50 off the first month.

It isn’t cheaper than the Wegovy injection; the two cost about the same. The pill’s main advantage is that it’s a tablet, rather than an injection.

It isn’t on the NHS yet either, so a private prescription is the only route for now.

Price is only part of the decision, though. The research is clear that these medications work best when combined with healthy lifestyle changes.

You’re more likely to avoid regaining the weight when the medication is combined with structured habit-change support than when it’s prescribed on its own.

Second Nature combines the Wegovy pill with support from registered dietitians and nutritionists, alongside a balanced-plate approach to eating, to help you build habits that last.

In our peer-reviewed service evaluation, members on our GLP-1-supported programme lost an average of 19.1% of their body weight at 12 months, and 77.7% lost at least 10%.4

Second Nature's Mounjaro and Wegovy programmes

Second Nature provides Mounjaro or Wegovy as part of our Mounjaro and Wegovy weight-loss programmes.

Why choose Second Nature over other medication providers, assuming you're eligible?

Because peace of mind matters.

We've had the privilege of working with the NHS for over eight years, helping people across the UK take meaningful steps toward a healthier, happier life.

Our programmes are designed to meet people where they are, whether that means support with weight loss through compassionate one-to-one health coaching, or access to the latest weight-loss medications (like Mounjaro and Wegovy) delivered alongside expert care from a multidisciplinary team of doctors, psychologists, dietitians, and personal trainers.

At the heart of everything we do is a simple belief: real, lasting change comes from building better habits, not relying on quick fixes. We're here to support that change every step of the way.

With over a decade of experience, thousands of lives changed, and a long-standing record of delivering programmes used by the NHS, we believe we're the UK's most trusted weight-loss programme.

We hope to offer you something invaluable: peace of mind, and the support you need to take that first step.

Lose weight your way and keep it off

GLP-1 medication, expert support, and a programme that fits your life

Mounjaro pen
Wegovy pen

References

  1. Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. (2026). First GLP-1 tablet for weight loss approved in the UK. GOV.UK.
  2. Wharton, S., Lingvay, I., Bogdanski, P., et al. (2025). Oral semaglutide at a dose of 25 mg in adults with overweight or obesity. New England Journal of Medicine, 393(11), 1077-1087. (OASIS 4 trial)
  3. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. (2023). Semaglutide for managing overweight and obesity. Technology appraisal guidance TA875.
  4. Richards, R., Whitman, M., Wren, G., et al. (2025). A remotely delivered GLP-1RA-supported specialist weight management program in adults living with obesity: retrospective service evaluation. JMIR Formative Research, 9(1), e72577.
  5. Wharton, S., Freitas, P., Hjelmesæth, J., et al. (2025). Once-weekly semaglutide 7.2 mg in adults with obesity (STEP UP): a randomised, controlled, phase 3b trial. Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, 13(11), 949-963. (STEP UP trial)
  6. Wilding, J.P.H., Batterham, R.L., Davies, M., et al. (2022). Weight regain and cardiometabolic effects after withdrawal of semaglutide: the STEP 1 trial extension. Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, 24(8), 1553-1564. (STEP 1 trial extension)
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