Is Trulicity FDA-approved?
See the FDA status badge in the hero and our editorial review. Compounded versions are NOT FDA-approved.
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dulaglutidetroo-LIS-it-ee
Manufactured by Eli Lilly
Trulicity (dulaglutide) is a once-weekly subcutaneous GLP-1 receptor agonist FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular event reduction in adults with T2D. It is NOT approved for weight loss, though produces modest weight reduction (~3% at 1.5mg). In the REWIND trial, Trulicity reduced major adverse cardiovascular events by 12% over 5+ years. Trulicity's distinguishing feature is its very simple auto-injector — widely considered the easiest GLP-1 device to use, with the needle hidden until activation.
Coverage commonly accepted by
M. in TX switched Ozempic → compounded semaglutide — $8,160/year
2 min ago · illustrative aggregate
8 editorial articles · 4 how-to guides
Pivotal trial & FDA snapshot
Class
GLP-1
glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist
Dosing
Varies
see prescribing information
Prescription
Required
via licensed clinician
Reviewed by GLP1Zoom editorial board
M. Kapoor, MD
Board-Certified, Internal Medicine
Medical Reviewer — endocrine & metabolic content
J. Tomić, PharmD
Doctor of Pharmacy, MPH
Pharmacy Reviewer — drug interaction & dosing content
A. Reyes, RD, CDCES
Registered Dietitian, Certified Diabetes Educator
Nutrition Reviewer — lifestyle & adherence content
Reviewers are independent contractors paid flat editorial fees — no commission, no endorsement of any partner provider. See the full board →

Image: Wikimedia Commons contributor · CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Glyphs are illustrative monograms — not the carriers' trademarked logos. Carrier acceptance varies by employer plan, state, and FDA-approved indication. Check yours →
Cost
Trulicity cost
Considering a switch from Trulicity?
Compare Trulicity alternatives — cost, efficacy, regulatory status.
How GLP1Zoom works
GLP1Zoom is a comparison platform. We don't prescribe, dispense, or sell. Partners do. Partner clicks redirect directlyto that company's website.
Side-by-side price + FDA status across 8–12 telehealth partners. No signup required.
Filter by price, FDA status, dosage range, and state availability. Read our editorial review.
Partner runs medical questionnaire and (where required) live video visit. Licensed clinicians prescribe.
Partner pharmacy ships directly to you. Ongoing care, dose changes, and refills handled by the partner.
GLP1Zoom is not a pharmacy, prescriber, or insurance provider. We do not process payments, ship medication, or carry liability for partner services, prices, or outcomes — the partner you choose is solely responsible.
Clinical trial evidence
Each row is the headline efficacy number from the drug's FDA-pivotal trial. Click NCT ID to verify on ClinicalTrials.gov.
| Drug · Dose | Weight loss | A1C reduction | CV outcome | Trial · n · year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Wegovy 2.4mg weekly | −14.9% 68 weeks | — | 20% MACE reduction (SELECT) | STEP-1 n = 1,961 · 2021 NCT03548935 |
Zepbound 15mg weekly | −22.5% 72 weeks | — | — | SURMOUNT-1 n = 2,539 · 2022 NCT04184622 |
Ozempic 1mg weekly | −6% 40 weeks | −1.6 pp 40 weeks | 26% MACE reduction (SUSTAIN-6) | SUSTAIN-6 n = 3,297 · 2016 NCT01720446 |
Mounjaro 15mg weekly | −12.4% 40 weeks | −2.3 pp 40 weeks | — | SURPASS-2 n = 1,879 · 2021 NCT03987919 |
Rybelsus 14mg daily | −4.4% 26 weeks | −1.5 pp 26 weeks | — | PIONEER-1 n = 703 · 2019 NCT02906930 |
Saxenda 3mg daily | −7.4% 56 weeks | — | — | SCALE-Obesity n = 3,731 · 2015 NCT01272219 |
Trulicity 1.5mg weekly | −3% 52 weeks | −1.2 pp 52 weeks | 12% MACE reduction (REWIND) | REWIND n = 9,901 · 2019 NCT01394952 |
Victoza 1.8mg daily | −2.5% 52 weeks | −1.1 pp 52 weeks | 13% MACE reduction (LEADER) | LEADER n = 9,340 · 2016 NCT01179048 |
Cost projection
Project your total spend based on drug + coverage scenario. Numbers are 2026 estimates — confirm with your insurer and pharmacy.
Scenario: Manufacturer savings card (commercial insurance)
Savings cards exclude Medicare, Medicaid, and federal plans. Annual savings typically capped at ~$3,600. Eligibility depends on your specific insurance.
Projections assume steady monthly pricing without dose changes or supply disruptions. We don't sell or prescribe — these are estimates to inform conversations with your prescriber and pharmacy.
Side-effect timeline
Typical severity arc over the first 12 weeks of titration. Most GI side effects peak weeks 2-4 of each dose increase and resolve as the body adapts. Individual experience varies.
Source: STEP-1, SURMOUNT-1, SCALE-Obesity adverse-event reporting + patient survey aggregations. Severity arcs are typical patterns; individual experiences vary substantially.
Each strategy targets a different patient situation. Stack them where eligible — most patients qualify for at least one.
Compare partners
12 telehealth providers side-by-side. Sort by price, FDA status, and shipping speed. Compounded options often cheapest for cash-pay.
See all providers →Patient assistance
PAP programs through manufacturer foundation. Income + insurance criteria apply.
See savings programs →Insurance check
Most commercial plans cover at least one GLP-1 use case. PA usually required. If denied, use our appeal-letter generator.
Appeal-letter tool →See the FDA status badge in the hero and our editorial review. Compounded versions are NOT FDA-approved.
Most partners accept cash-pay. Insurance coverage varies — verify with the partner before paying.
Most clinical trials reach the endpoint at 56–72 weeks. Patient experience varies; consult your provider.
Sorry, we don't have any provider pricing for this medication yet. There are a few potential reasons:
Weekly GLP-1 for type 2 diabetes with cardiovascular event reduction.
Manufacturer
Eli Lilly
1 typical-fit criteria · 3 disqualifying conditions. Quick-screen yourself, then confirm with a licensed prescriber.
Eligibility is determined by a licensed prescriber, not GLP1Zoom. See our medical disclaimer.
Indications Trulicity is currently FDA-approved for, c maintenance dose per pivotal trial. Actual prescribed dose depends on individual response — defer to prescriber.
| Indication | Maintenance dose | FDA approval | Pivotal trial |
|---|---|---|---|
Type 2 diabetes glycemic control Adults with type 2 diabetes | 0.75-4.5 mg subcutaneous weekly | 2014 | AWARD-6 (NCT01624259) |
Cardiovascular event risk reduction (T2D) Adults with T2D + cardiovascular risk factors | 1.5 mg subcutaneous weekly | 2020 | REWIND (NCT01394952) |
Source: FDA prescribing information. Off-label uses prescribed at clinician's discretion; only FDA-approved indications shown here.
5.4%
discontinued Trulicity
Tolerability reading
Class-typical tolerability — 3.0 pp excess matches average GLP-1 (range 3-10 pp).
These are trial-level discontinuation rates due to adverse events. Real-world adherence varies based on dose titration speed, prescriber follow-up, and patient-specific tolerability. Discuss expectations with your prescriber.
Mean body-weight change across 68 weeks on Trulicity from the class average trial. Curve smoothed from published endpoints; individual results vary significantly.
Trial participants also received lifestyle counseling. Real-world results depend on dose adherence, side-effect tolerance, and lifestyle factors.
Every legitimate savings path — manufacturer copay cards, 90-day fills, compounded alternatives, and Patient Assistance Programs. We may earn affiliate commission on some, but list all so you can pick what actually fits. Disclosure
Eligibility: Commercially insured (varies by plan). NOT for Medicare, Medicaid, or other federally-funded programs.
Savings cap: As little as $25 per month for eligible patients with coverage; $650/month for eligible cash-pay patients on Zepbound.
Visit Eli Lilly savings program ↗Many pharmacies and mail-order programs offer a 3-month supply at a reduced per-month rate vs three separate 30-day fills. Ask your prescriber to write for a 90-day quantity (where allowed by your plan and state laws), then check:
What it is: A licensed compounding pharmacy formulates the same active ingredient (dulaglutide) under a prescription. NOT FDA-approved as a finished product — regulatory oversight differs from brand drugs.
Why people consider it: Lower cash-pay cost when insurance denies brand coverage. Trade-off: compounded products are not reviewed by FDA for finished-product safety, potency, or quality; availability is also narrowing as of 2026.
See compounded alternative providers →Why it works: several GLP-1 medications share the same active ingredient or drug class. Your prescriber can switch you to a cheaper sibling when insurance denies the brand you started on (e.g. Wegovy → Ozempic off-label under PA, or Saxenda → Wegovy for better efficacy at similar cost).
Trade-off: efficacy, dose schedule, and FDA-approved indication vary. Always discuss switches with your prescribing clinician before changing.
Compare Trulicity to alternatives →Eligibility: Lilly Cares provides Lilly medications at no cost to eligible patients (uninsured, low-income, or insurance does not cover the drug). Income and residency criteria apply.
Commercial-insurance copay reduction
Eligible patient cash price
As low as $25/month (commercial insurance, eligible)
Eligibility requirements
Manufacturer programs change frequently. Last verified 2026-06-02 via Eli Lilly public materials. Verify current eligibility c manufacturer directly or with prescriber before relying on quoted prices.
Class-typical schedule. Your prescriber may individualize the schedule based on tolerance and goals.
Week 1+
Starting
Begin at lowest dose
Step up
Titrate
Every 4 weeks as tolerated
Maintenance
Target
Per prescribing physician
Practical handling guidance. Always follow the dispensed label.
Before use
36°F–46°F (2°C–8°C) before use
At room temperature
Per product-specific instructions
After first use
Per product-specific instructions
When to inject
Per prescribing label
If you miss a dose
Refer to product label or contact prescriber
Missed dose · Pregnancy · Boxed warning · Side-effect prevalence · Doctor's note
Within 5 days of missed dose: take as soon as you remember, then resume your regular weekly schedule on the original day.
More than 5 days have passed: skip the missed dose and resume the next dose on your regular schedule.
Never double the dose to make up for a missed one. Confirm with your prescriber if uncertain.
Overdose of Trulicity may cause severe nausea, vomiting, and (if combined with insulin or sulfonylureas) severe hypoglycemia.
If you suspect overdose:
Poison Help (US, free, confidential): 1-800-222-1222
Trulicity is not recommended during pregnancy. Animal studies suggest potential reproductive harm. Discontinue Trulicity at least 2 months before planned conception per FDA label guidance. If you become pregnant while taking Trulicity, contact your prescriber immediately.
It is unknown whether Trulicity passes into breast milk. The decision to continue or discontinueTrulicity during breastfeeding should be made with your prescriber, weighing benefits to the mother against potential risks to the infant.
Pregnancy exposure registry: 1-800-545-5979
If you become pregnant while taking Trulicity, the manufacturer maintains a registry to track outcomes. Reporting helps improve future guidance for other patients.
This summary reflects general FDA label guidance. Individual decisions about pregnancy and Trulicity should always involve a prescriber who knows your full medical history. GLP1Zoom does not prescribe or recommend doses.
Why a slow titration matters
Most GI side effects on Trulicity come from titrating too fast. The 4-week minimum at each dose step isn't conservative — it's the threshold below which patient discontinuation rates spike. If your prescriber suggests holding a dose longer, that's evidence-based, not under-treatment.
Detailed safety + lifestyle
Five FDA-label safety topics most readers ask about. Educational summary — always confirm specifics with your prescribing clinician.
GLP-1 medications are NOT recommended during pregnancy. Animal studies have shown potential harm to fetal development at clinical doses. The FDA advises discontinuation at least 2 months before a planned pregnancy due to the long half-life of weekly-dosed GLP-1s.
Clinical recommendation: Discontinue at least 2 months before planned pregnancy. If pregnancy occurs while on therapy, discontinue immediately and notify your prescriber. Report exposures to the manufacturer pregnancy registry (where available).
It is not known whether GLP-1 receptor agonists are excreted in human milk. Animal studies show small amounts of the drug class are excreted in rat milk. The decision to use during breastfeeding requires weighing maternal benefit against potential infant exposure.
Clinical recommendation: Discuss benefits and risks with your prescriber and pediatrician. Most labels suggest avoiding breastfeeding while on therapy.
Summarized from the FDA-approved prescribing information. Always review the full label and discuss with your prescriber.
Risk factors:Hypersensitivity to active ingredientPregnancyPersonal/family MTC historyMEN 2 syndrome
Vs placebo bar · sortable prevalence table · 8-week timing curve
Percent of Trulicity trial participants reporting each side effect during the trial period, c placebo comparator + absolute excess. Sorted by Trulicity incidence (descending).
| Side effect | Trulicity | Placebo | Excess |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nausea | 35% | 12% | +23.0 pp |
| Diarrhea | 22% | 10% | +12.0 pp |
| Constipation | 16% | 7% | +9.0 pp |
| Vomiting | 16% | 4% | +12.0 pp |
"pp" = percentage points. Trial-level incidence rates from FDA-approved prescribing information. Individual experience varies based on dose titration speed, prescriber follow-up, and personal tolerability.
Drug-interaction count by severity + full list of documented pairs
Common medications that may interact with Trulicity. This is not exhaustive — always tell your prescriber every medication you take, including supplements.
Insulin
Class-wide hypoglycemia risk.
Oral medications (general)
Class-wide delayed gastric emptying effect.
In-depth interaction guides
Editorial summary, not a complete drug-interaction database. Verify against the full prescribing information and discuss with your prescriber. Full disclaimer.
Typical service tiers for Trulicity across the partner network. Individual partners may bundle differently — see the live provider list above for partner-specific terms.
Compare on GLP1Zoom
Free / Browse
$0/mo
Median partner offer
Starter
$199–349/mo
FDA-brand + concierge
Premium
$499–899/mo
Editorial reference of typical partner offers. GLP1Zoom does not sell, prescribe, or process payments — clicking a tier scrolls you to the live provider list where partner buttons redirect directly to that partner's site.
Trulicity cost per pound lost
200 lb, 6 months
Cheaper monthly cost ≠ cheaper per pound. Plug your own numbers in the full calculator — rankings often shift surprisingly.
Open full calculator →Free tool
Pick Trulicity + another drug → see severity, mechanism, and management. No signup.
Trulicity is part of a relatively young drug class — GLP-1 receptor agonists first reached US patients in 2005 with the approval of Byetta (exenatide), but it was the longer-acting, once-weekly molecules introduced in the 2010s and 2020s that transformed weight-loss medicine. Trulicity entered the market through FDA approval following multi-year clinical development including the class average pivotal trial that established its current efficacy profile.
Trulicity is an FDA-approved branded medication manufactured by Eli Lilly. Its development required nine-figure R&D investment, multiple phase 1-3 trials over 8-12 years, and ongoing post-market surveillance for the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). The drug remains under patent protection in the US — generic equivalents are not yet available and unlikely before the late 2020s or early 2030s.
Eli Lilly is one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world and the developer of Trulicity. The company runs its own clinical trials, manufactures the active ingredient, formulates the final injectable, and distributes through licensed wholesalers to US pharmacies. It also operates patient-support programs, savings card programs, and (in some cases) direct-to-consumer cash-pay channels that bypass traditional pharmacies.
For ongoing safety monitoring, Eli Lillymaintains a medical information line that healthcare providers and patients can use to report adverse events. Reports also feed the FDA's FAERS database. If you experience a serious side effect from Trulicity, report it via FDA MedWatch in addition to contacting your prescriber.
Trulicity is generally contraindicated in pregnancy — animal studies have shown reproductive toxicity at clinical doses, and the FDA labels recommend discontinuation at least 2 months before a planned pregnancy. If you become pregnant while on Trulicity, contact your prescriber immediately. The drug has not been adequately studied in breastfeeding — most clinical guidance recommends discontinuation if breastfeeding is planned.
Trulicity can be used in older adults but with additional caution. The risk of dehydration from GI side effects is higher, and dehydration can trigger acute kidney injury. Prescribers often start with slower titration and monitor renal function more frequently. Polypharmacy is common in this population — review all medications for potential interactions (see side effects guide).
Trulicity's FDA-approved indications vary by age. Some GLP-1 medications (notably Wegovy and Saxenda) are approved for adolescents aged 12+ with obesity; others are adults-only. Always check the current FDA label and discuss with a pediatric endocrinologist before considering use in patients under 18.
Trulicitydoesn't typically require dose adjustment for mild-to-moderate kidney disease, but severe chronic kidney disease (CKD stage 4-5) warrants close monitoring due to acute kidney injury risk if dehydration occurs from GI side effects.
Personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) or Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2) is a contraindication per the FDA boxed warning. Patients should disclose family history of thyroid cancer before starting any GLP-1 medication.
Most patients notice appetite reduction within 5-10 days of the first injection. The «food noise» — constant background thoughts about food — often quiets noticeably. Some patients lose 1-3 pounds in the first two weeks from reduced caloric intake. Side effects typically peak now: nausea is most intense, sometimes with vomiting or constipation. Many patients describe the first two weeks as the hardest period of treatment.
By the end of month 1, the body adapts. Nausea fades for most patients (about 75% report tolerable or no GI side effects by week 8). Weight loss continues steadily — typical pace is 1-2 pounds per week during titration. Dose increases happen every 4 weeks until you reach the target dose. Each increase can trigger a fresh wave of side effects that resolves within 1-2 weeks. Energy levels often improve as inflammation drops with weight loss.
Weight loss plateaus in waves rather than a smooth curve. Most patients see their fastest loss in months 1-6 and slower-but-steady loss through month 12. By the trial endpoint (68 weeks), trial participants on Trulicity had lost a mean of 12% of starting body weight. Individual results vary widely — some patients exceed the trial average; others plateau earlier. Plateau-breaking tactics include reviewing diet quality, increasing resistance training, and discussing dose optimization with your prescriber.
Most clinical data for Trulicity covers the first 1-2 years of treatment. Long-term sustainability is the open question: continued treatment generally maintains weight loss; stopping leads to gradual regain (roughly 2/3 of lost weight within 1 year per extension studies). For this reason, Trulicity is increasingly viewed as a long-term medication for chronic disease (obesity, type 2 diabetes) rather than a short-term course.
Commercial insurance coverage for Trulicity is the single largest factor determining what you actually pay. Most US commercial plans (private employer coverage, ACA marketplace plans, individual plans) cover Trulicity for FDA-approved indications, but they typically require prior authorization (PA) — a process where your prescriber documents medical justification before the plan agrees to cover the prescription.
Prior auth processing typically takes 3-7 business days. About 30-50% of initial PA requests are denied — usually for missing documentation rather than coverage denial. Appeal success rate for properly documented requests is high (75%+). See our Trulicity cost guide for full coverage breakdown.
Medicare Part D coverage for GLP-1s when prescribed solely for weight loss is currently excluded under federal law (the Medicare Improvement and Modernization Act prohibits coverage of «drugs used for anorexia, weight loss, or weight gain»). However, coverage for FDA-approved non-weight-loss indications (type 2 diabetes for Ozempic/Mounjoaro/Trulicity, cardiovascular risk reduction for Wegovy in some plans) is widely available. Pending legislation could change this.
State Medicaid programs vary widely in their coverage of Trulicity for weight loss — approximately half of states cover it, half do not. Coverage for diabetes indication is more universal across states. Check your state Medicaid formulary for current rules.
Trulicity requires refrigerated storage before first use, and once-weekly injections fit into most travel schedules — but plan ahead for trips.
The Transportation Security Administration explicitly allows injectable medications and the required syringes/pens through airport security in carry-on bags. Keep medications in original labeled packaging and consider carrying a copy of your prescription. Declare medications to the TSA officer at screening. Trulicity pens are subject to the 3-1-1 liquid rule unless accompanied by a prescription showing necessity — declaring them as medical items typically exempts them.
For trips longer than the pen's room-temperature shelf-life, use an insulated medication travel case with ice packs (Frio bags work well). Avoid leaving pens in checked luggage (cargo holds can drop below freezing, destroying the medication) or in a car on hot days.
Trulicitydoesn't have a hard contraindication with moderate alcohol, but several considerations apply: alcohol can amplify hypoglycemia risk (particularly if combined with insulin or sulfonylureas), worsen GI side effects, and add empty calories that undermine weight-loss goals. Many patients on Trulicity report decreased alcohol tolerance and reduced desire for alcohol — a documented secondary effect being researched.
Many GLP-1 medications, including Trulicity, are prescribed off-label for conditions beyond the FDA-approved indications. Common off-label uses include:
Off-label prescribing is legal and common in US medicine but typically isn't covered by insurance for non-FDA-approved indications. Discuss with your prescriber before pursuing off-label use.
Unopened Trulicitypens left at room temperature should typically be discarded if they were unrefrigerated for longer than the manufacturer's allowed room-temperature window (varies by drug — typically 21-56 days). If exposed for less, they remain usable but consider noting the exposure date. Once opened (after first use), the room-temperature shelf life clock starts.
Discard frozen pens.Freezing damages the peptide structure of GLP-1 medications, rendering them ineffective or potentially unsafe. Never put pens in the freezer, and avoid refrigerator zones that drop below 36°F (2°C). Check your refrigerator's temperature periodically.
After the manufacturer's allowed room-temperature period (e.g., 56 days for Wegovy after first use), discard the pen even if medication remains visible inside. Stability declines past the labeled window; doses become unpredictable.
Trulicity received its initial FDA approval and has been on the US market since the early 2020s for its current indication. Post-marketing surveillance continues to expand the long-term safety database.
Yes — moderate exercise is encouraged and amplifies the weight-loss benefit. Some patients experience reduced exercise tolerance in early treatment due to calorie deficit + nausea; this typically resolves by week 4-8. Resistance training is especially recommended to preserve lean muscle during weight loss.
Most patients report no negative mood changes; some report improved mood alongside weight loss and metabolic improvement. The FDA is currently investigating reports of suicidal ideation associated with GLP-1s — no causal link has been established, but discuss any mood changes with your prescriber promptly.
Current long-term safety data extends to 2-3 years for most GLP-1 medications. Ongoing surveillance and clinical research are expanding this window. Established long-term risks include the boxed-warning thyroid consideration, pancreatitis risk, and gallbladder disease. Most patients tolerate long-term treatment well.
Yes, but typically requires re-titration from the lowest dose of the new drug. Direct switches between same-active-ingredient products (e.g., Mounjaro ↔ Zepbound) can sometimes maintain dose. See our Trulicity alternatives guide for switching considerations.
Most patients regain approximately two-thirds of lost weight within one year of stopping treatment, per published extension studies. The drug doesn't permanently alter metabolism — it provides ongoing appetite suppression that stops when the medication is withdrawn. This is why Trulicity is increasingly treated as a long-term medication rather than a short course.
Trulicity can slow gastric emptying enough to reduce oral contraceptive absorption during the titration period. Consider a backup contraceptive method (condoms) for the first 4 weeks after starting Trulicityand after each dose increase. Long-acting reversible contraceptives (IUD, implant) aren't affected.
No specific diet is required, but most prescribers recommend a balanced approach: adequate protein (0.8-1g/kg body weight) to preserve muscle, fiber from vegetables and whole grains, and avoiding ultra-high-fat or very sweet foods that often worsen nausea in early treatment.
Used pens contain residual medication and a needle — they are sharps. Dispose via an FDA-cleared sharps container or your state's sharps disposal program. Don't throw pens in regular trash. Many pharmacies accept used pens for safe disposal.
Trulicityisn't FDA-approved for type 1 diabetes. Off-label use in type 1 is rare and requires close endocrinologist supervision due to hypoglycemia risk and the fundamental difference in disease mechanism (T1 is insulin deficiency, not insulin resistance). Discuss with your prescriber.
If you miss several consecutive doses (typically more than 2 weeks for a once-weekly drug), contact your prescriber. You may need to restart at a lower titration dose to avoid severe nausea on restart. Don't double up missed doses.
Trulicitydoesn't produce dependence in the addiction-medicine sense (no withdrawal syndrome, no cravings, no dopaminergic reward). The desire to stay on it often reflects fear of weight regain rather than psychological dependence on the drug itself.
For specific topic deep-dives, see our dedicated guides: cost · side effects · dosage · how it works · alternatives
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Cash-pay range, insurance coverage, manufacturer copay cards, and cheaper alternatives.
Trulicity's list price is approximately $987/month. Eli Lilly's manufacturer savings card can reduce commercial-insurance copays. Trulicity is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes only — insurance coverage is generally consistent for that indication. It is not FDA-approved for weight loss, though it produces ~3% average weight reduction at the 1.5mg dose in trials.
Head-to-head trials (SURPASS-2 + related) showed Mounjaro (tirzepatide) achieved greater A1C reduction and weight loss vs Trulicity (dulaglutide). Mounjaro is the dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist with higher potency. Trulicity is older but valued for its very simple auto-injector device and 12% cardiovascular event reduction shown in REWIND. Choice depends on your priorities: maximum potency (Mounjaro) vs simplicity + CV data (Trulicity).
Trulicity produces modest weight loss — average 3% body weight at the 1.5mg dose over 52 weeks in REWIND. This is lower than semaglutide-based or tirzepatide-based GLP-1s. Trulicity is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular event reduction in adults with T2D plus established CVD, not for weight loss specifically.
Illustrative patient journeys
Composite scenarios reflecting common GLP-1 paths — not specific patient outcomes or testimonials.
Maria
Aiming for 10-15% loss
James
A1c-focused on Mounjaro
Sonia
PCOS + compounded path
David
Insurance covered Wegovy
Aisha
Telehealth refill cycle
Ramon
Switched brand → compounded
Lin
Maintaining at week 52
Priya
Side-effects managed
Kenji
Restarted after pause
Elena
Med + protein-first diet
Maria
Aiming for 10-15% loss
James
A1c-focused on Mounjaro
Sonia
PCOS + compounded path
David
Insurance covered Wegovy
Aisha
Telehealth refill cycle
Ramon
Switched brand → compounded
Lin
Maintaining at week 52
Priya
Side-effects managed
Kenji
Restarted after pause
Elena
Med + protein-first diet
Names and avatars are illustrative composites — not real patients. Outcome descriptions are derived from published clinical-trial endpoints (STEP-1, SURMOUNT-1). Individual results vary; see our medical disclaimer.
Lifestyle on Trulicity
Form factor and administration. Photos are stock representations of the drug class — not manufacturer-branded marketing imagery.

More options to compare
Same drug class, different trade-offs — trial weight-loss %, FDA indication, and cash pricing side-by-side. Tap any card to open its full review or jump straight to a head-to-head.
Sister drugs
No direct contraindication, BUT GLP-1-induced delayed gastric emptying changes alcohol absorption kinetics. Patients often report that alcohol "hits harder" or causes worse hangover symptoms while on GLP-1 therapy. Hypoglycemia risk also increases when alcohol is combined with insulin or sulfonylureas (which a GLP-1 user may also be taking).
Practical guidance: Limit alcohol; if you do drink, eat first, hydrate, and monitor for any symptoms of low blood sugar (sweating, confusion, dizziness). Discuss any heavy use with your prescriber.
No specific food contraindications for injectable GLP-1 agonists (Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, Mounjaro, Saxenda). Inject the dose without regard to meals. However, severe gastrointestinal symptoms can occur with greasy or sugary meals — eat smaller, lighter meals especially during the first 4-8 weeks.
Sources: FDA-approved prescribing information accessed via our methodology. Specifics may differ for your dose, formulation, and personal medical history — confirm with your prescribing clinician.
Risk factors:Pancreatitis historyGallbladder diseaseKidney impairmentDiabetic retinopathyConcurrent insulin / sulfonylurea
Information is educational and not a substitute for the full prescribing label or clinical judgment. Read our full medical disclaimer.
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costAfter the FDA shortage ended, branded self-pay prices dropped while compounded options narrowed. Here is the cost math between LillyDirect, NovoCare, and remaining compounded routes.
May 29, 2026 · 11 min read
comparisonTirzepatide and semaglutide are the two dominant GLP-1 classes but work differently. Here is what SURMOUNT, STEP, and SURPASS data show about efficacy and tolerability.
May 29, 2026 · 12 min read
comparisonMounjaro and Zepbound contain identical tirzepatide but are FDA-approved for different conditions. Here is what that means for insurance, pricing, and prescriber decisions.
May 29, 2026 · 12 min read
comparisonSaxenda was the original GLP-1 weight-loss injection but Wegovy replaced it for most patients. Here is when liraglutide may still be the right molecule and how the two compare on trial data.
May 29, 2026 · 11 min read
how-toBoth Ozempic and Wegovy are semaglutide, but FDA-approved for different conditions. Here is exactly how to switch — clinically, administratively, and practically.
Apr 25, 2026 · 5 min read
costWegovy retails near $1,349/month without insurance. But several legitimate channels reduce the cost to $200-400/month. Here is a complete breakdown of your options in 2026.
Apr 14, 2026 · 7 min read
regulatoryIn March 2026, the FDA sent warning letters to dozens of telehealth providers marketing compounded GLP-1 medications. This explainer covers what changed, why, and what your options are now.
Apr 2, 2026 · 6 min read
side-effects"Ozempic face" refers to facial volume loss seen in some patients during GLP-1 weight loss. It is not a side effect of the drug itself, but a consequence of rapid fat loss. Here is what to know.
Mar 20, 2026 · 5 min read
educationClinical trial data shows where you are likely to be at each stage of GLP-1 weight loss treatment. Here is a month-by-month timeline of realistic expectations.
Feb 25, 2026 · 6 min read