Tirzepatide and semaglutide are the two most clinically powerful GLP-1 medications available in 2026. Both produce significant weight loss in adults with obesity, but they work through different mechanisms and have meaningfully different clinical profiles. This guide compares them across efficacy, mechanism, cost, side effects, cardiovascular evidence, and FDA-approved indications.
Mechanism: dual incretin vs single incretin
Tirzepatide is the first-in-class dual GIP and GLP-1 receptor agonist. By simultaneously activating two incretin pathways — glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) — it produces synergistic effects on insulin secretion, appetite suppression, gastric emptying, and central food-reward signaling.
Semaglutide activates only the GLP-1 receptor. The mechanism produces appetite suppression, slowed gastric emptying, and glucose-dependent insulin secretion — but without the additional GIP-mediated effects. The dual mechanism is the leading scientific hypothesis for why tirzepatide outperforms semaglutide in head-to-head trials.
Efficacy: weight loss magnitude in head-to-head data
For years, comparisons between tirzepatide and semaglutide relied on indirect cross-trial analysis. That changed with SURMOUNT-5, the first head-to-head obesity trial published in late 2024, which compared tirzepatide to semaglutide 2.4 mg (Wegovy) in adults with obesity. Tirzepatide produced substantially greater weight loss than semaglutide 2.4 mg over the study period.
For type 2 diabetes, the SURPASS-2 trial (NEJM 2021) directly compared tirzepatide to semaglutide 1 mg (the Ozempic dose at the time). All three tirzepatide doses (5, 10, 15 mg) produced greater A1C reductions and weight loss than semaglutide 1 mg.
Bottom line on efficacy: Tirzepatide produces greater absolute weight loss than semaglutide in both head-to-head and indirect comparisons. The magnitude difference is meaningful — typically 4–6 percentage points of additional weight loss at maximum doses.
Cardiovascular outcomes: semaglutide has the edge in 2026
This is the one major area where semaglutide currently leads tirzepatide.
- Semaglutide: The SELECT trial (NEJM 2023) demonstrated a 20% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events in adults with established cardiovascular disease and overweight or obesity without diabetes. This led to Wegovy's March 2024 FDA approval for cardiovascular risk reduction.
- Tirzepatide: The SURPASS-CVOT trial is ongoing as of 2026 and will provide tirzepatide's dedicated cardiovascular outcomes data. Until then, tirzepatide's cardiovascular labeling rests on the cardiovascular safety analysis from SURPASS-4.
FDA-approved indications
Tirzepatide (as Mounjaro and Zepbound)
- Type 2 diabetes (Mounjaro, May 2022)
- Chronic weight management (Zepbound, November 2023)
- Moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea in adults with obesity (Zepbound, December 2024 — first medication ever approved for this indication)
Semaglutide (as Ozempic, Wegovy, and Rybelsus)
- Type 2 diabetes (Ozempic, December 2017)
- Cardiovascular risk reduction in type 2 diabetes with established CVD (Ozempic, 2020)
- Chronic weight management in adults (Wegovy, June 2021)
- Chronic weight management in adolescents 12+ (Wegovy, December 2022)
- Cardiovascular risk reduction in adults with established CVD and overweight/obesity without diabetes (Wegovy, March 2024)
- Type 2 diabetes — oral formulation (Rybelsus, September 2019)
Cost in 2026
Brand-name list prices:
- Zepbound (brand tirzepatide for weight loss): approximately $1,060/month list; Lilly self-pay vial program $349–$549/month
- Wegovy (brand semaglutide 2.4 mg for weight loss): approximately $1,350/month list; Novo Nordisk NovoCare self-pay $499/month
- Mounjaro (brand tirzepatide for T2D): approximately $1,070/month list
- Ozempic (brand semaglutide for T2D): approximately $970/month list
Compounded versions from licensed pharmacies typically range $99–$399/month depending on provider. NexLife, our #1-ranked tirzepatide telehealth provider, offers compounded tirzepatide at $186/month on the 12-month plan with all titration doses, Care360 coaching, and labs included.
Side effects: comparable profiles
Both medications share the GLP-1 class side-effect profile. The most common are gastrointestinal — nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, constipation, decreased appetite — typically dose-dependent and concentrated during titration. Both carry an FDA boxed warning for thyroid C-cell tumor risk and are contraindicated in patients with personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN 2 syndrome.
Dosing and administration
- Tirzepatide: 2.5 → 5 → 7.5 → 10 → 12.5 → 15 mg weekly
- Semaglutide (Wegovy): 0.25 → 0.5 → 1.0 → 1.7 → 2.4 mg weekly
Tirzepatide's terminal half-life is approximately 5 days; semaglutide's is approximately 7 days. Both support once-weekly dosing comfortably.
Which should you choose?
- Choose tirzepatide if maximizing weight loss is the primary goal, you don't have established cardiovascular disease driving the decision, and you're treated by a clinician comfortable managing the dose-response curve.
- Choose semaglutide (Wegovy) if you have established cardiovascular disease and want a medication with formally labeled cardiovascular risk reduction, or if you're at the highest end of GI side-effect sensitivity.
- Either is reasonable for most adults with obesity without established CVD; insurance coverage, cost, and provider preference often drive the final selection.
For tirzepatide specifically, see our May 2026 ranking of the top 10 telehealth providers, with NexLife at #1.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is tirzepatide more effective than semaglutide for weight loss?
Yes. In the head-to-head SURMOUNT-5 trial (2024), tirzepatide produced substantially greater weight loss than semaglutide 2.4 mg (Wegovy) in adults with obesity. Indirect comparisons of SURMOUNT-1 and STEP-1 also consistently favored tirzepatide. The magnitude difference is typically 4-6 percentage points of additional weight loss at maximum doses.
Which has better cardiovascular evidence in 2026?
Semaglutide currently leads. The SELECT trial (NEJM 2023) demonstrated a 20% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events in adults with established cardiovascular disease and overweight/obesity without diabetes, leading to Wegovy's March 2024 FDA approval for cardiovascular risk reduction. Tirzepatide's dedicated SURPASS-CVOT trial is ongoing.
Are tirzepatide and semaglutide side effects similar?
Both share the GLP-1 class side-effect profile: gastrointestinal effects (nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, constipation) most prominent during titration; FDA boxed warning for thyroid C-cell tumor risk; reports of pancreatitis, gallbladder events, and kidney injury. Tirzepatide may have slightly higher GI adverse event rates at maximum dose, but this is balanced by the larger therapeutic effect.
How do costs compare?
Brand Zepbound (tirzepatide) is approximately $1,060/month list; brand Wegovy (semaglutide) is approximately $1,350/month. Self-pay programs: Lilly's vial program for Zepbound ($349-$549/month) and Novo Nordisk's NovoCare for Wegovy ($499/month). Compounded versions of both range $99-$399/month from licensed pharmacies.
Find the right tirzepatide provider
Compare our editorial reviews of the top 10 tirzepatide telehealth providers in 2026.
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