GLP-1 Insurance Woes in '26?

Rene63

Active member
Hey everyone! I'm Rene, a reporter with NPR (https://www.npr.org/people/825275572/sydney-lupkin). I'm doing a story focusing on how easy or difficult it is to get insurance to cover GLP-1 meds for weight management in 2026. I've looked over stats and talked with experts, but I would really like to hear straight from all of you, the patients dealing with this first hand.

I heard one story about someone who could only get coverage if their BMI was 40+. Have you experienced anything like that? What are some of the hurdles you're facing? Any loopholes you've discovered? What else should NPR listeners be aware of?

Feel free to reply here, or reach out at [email protected] or on Signal: sydneylupkin.36 if you want to chat. I'd love to interview a few people, but I understand not everyone wants to be on the radio. Any info you can share would be a great help!

(Apologies if I should have contacted someone about posting - mods, please delete if this isn't allowed!)
 
Something else to keep in mind: a lot of plans that still cover GLP-1s have increased the copay while the savings cards don't save as much anymore.

Last year, the savings card could save up to $225 per monthly dose:
For patients with commercial insurance who have coverage:

As of March 17, 2025 pay as little as $0 for up to thirteen 28-day supplies, up to a maximum savings of $225 per 28-day supply.
Now, it's only up to $100 saved per month: https://www.novocare.com/eligibility/wegovy-savings-card.html
For patients with commercial insurance who have coverage:

As of January 2, 2026, pay as little as $25, up to a maximum savings of $100 per 1-month prescription.
And it's the same with other GLP-1s too.

It's hitting people hard, especially those with FEHB plans.
 
I have FEHB: BCBS FEP Standard. I had Basic for almost my whole career until two years ago when BCBS FEP started changing their GLP-1 coverage. The latest: in 2025, I paid $125 for a 3-month supply of Wegovy via mail order. Now, in 2026, it's $250.
 
My insurance went from totally covering my GLP-1 with just a copay last year to not covering it at all this year, for any reason! I didn't even get a warning. I only found out when I went to get my refill.

My BMI is over 60, and I have other issues like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, fatty liver disease, and osteoarthritis. I know from the forums that I'm not the only one dealing with this. Paying out of pocket is just too much.

My doctor found a place that does semaglutide/B12 mixes, which is good because I've had low B12 for years. It's a lot cheaper than the brand names online.
 
I started Wegovy shortly after it was approved. At the time, my husband's insurance covered it. I lost about 60 pounds and reached my goal weight. My oncologist was happy, since weight is a problem with cancer and my artificial leg.

But last year I went on Medicare, so no coverage for weight loss. I had to quit taking it and have gained about 30 pounds back. I either need to wait until I can afford it myself - less than $100 a month - or Medicare covers it. Or maybe if they cover it for cancer patients who need to lose weight.

I should have stayed on it the whole time. My oncologist wants me at a lower weight, but that will only happen if I can go back on the meds. So, I just wait.
 
Here's another thing to look into, @Rene63:

Some plans have changed their BMI requirements for coverage. People who used to qualify don't anymore, and aren't being grandfathered in:

And plans are also changing requirements in the middle of treatment:
 
It's so frustrating. My doctor asked if I'd considered medication, but when he checked my insurance, only Wegovy was covered for weight loss. Ozempic and Mounjaro were only covered for diabetes. Wegovy's expensive, and Zepbound isn't covered at all!
 
insurance coverage for weight loss is spotty at best. had type 2 diabetes so mine got approved, but $950 a pen stings until deductible hits. using a bigger pen and click counting to stretch it further. switching to medicare soon tho - they don't cover it for weight loss at all.
 
only track bmi for insurance. specialists in aging now talk about using your tallest height for bmi - makes sense since you're not losing structure just compressing it. keeps the weight range realistic for senior years too.
 
if you're paying out of pocket in europe, look into the 0.25 pens and cartridge tables online - way cheaper than buying pre-dosed smaller ones. just always use fresh needles from the pharmacy. saves a ton.
 
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