Pills vs. Shots: My Semaglutide Switch

FitFam

Well-known member
Okay, so I've been doing the Wegovy injections for about three quarters of a year, and when my doc mentioned the new oral version back in January, I was all over it. Seriously, needles were getting old. I've been popping the pill for five weeks now, and here's the deal for anyone thinking about making the switch.

The worry:
I was so scared I would screw it up. Nine months down, the shots were working, and my brain kept screaming, "Don't break what ain't broke!" My doctor went over the clinical trial info with me and reminded me it's still semaglutide, just absorbed differently. The fact that the weight loss was pretty much the same (around 14% vs. 16% for the shot) made me feel better.

The biggest change — the 30-minute rule:
You gotta take it as soon as you wake up on an empty stomach with a tiny sip of water. Then you have to wait half an hour before you eat or drink ANYTHING. No java. No water. Nothing. Thirty minutes. Every. Single. Day.

Week one, I thought this would be impossible. I'm a "coffee before words" kinda person. But by week three, I'd gotten used to it. I pop my pill, get my morning stuff done (shower, get dressed, pack lunches), and by the time I'm done, the 30 minutes is up. It's part of my routine now. But heads up: if you break the rule, you'll pay for it. I had coffee 20 minutes in once, and my stomach was a mess for hours.

Side effects — different, but not worse:
This was interesting. With the shot, my week was easy to predict: injection day, a couple of bleh days of feeling nauseous, then 4-5 good days. Repeat. Very up and down.

The pill smoothed it out. Instead of 2 awful days and 5 great ones, every day is kinda like a 2-3 out of 10 on the queasiness scale. It's always kinda there, but never knocks me out. Honestly? I think I like it better. The bad injection days were AWFUL — I'd bail on plans, skip food, just feel awful. Now it's just a background thing I deal with. The constipation and bloating are about the same.

The stuff I don't miss:
- Needles (duh)
- Having to keep the pens cold and freaking out when I forgot one on trips
- The pain and bruises from the shot
- Hating injection day every week
- Trying to remember which side of my stomach I used last time

I didn't realize how much stress the injection routine gave me until it was gone.

Weight and appetite — the important stuff:
Pretty much the same. Appetite control feels the same. Food noise is still gone. I've dropped 4 pounds in 5 weeks on the pill, which is about where I was with the shot (the initial big losses were over months ago). My protein intake has been steady at 90-100g/day — I've been tracking my food in [app name] the whole time to make sure my nutrition wasn't falling apart, and honestly my weekly averages look almost exactly like they did on the shot. That was what I needed to know.

Cost:
The starting dose is $150/month which is way more affordable. At my current dose it's a bit more, but still less than what I was paying for the injection even with my insurance. Check your plan, though.

Bottom line at 5 weeks:
I'm happy I made the switch. The daily pill + fasting thing is a little annoying, but it's automatic now. Not having to deal with needles is great for my head. And it seems to work just as well, which was my biggest worry.

If you're thinking about it: talk to your doctor, but from my experience, it's been easier than I thought.

Anyone else made the jump? I'm curious how people who were on higher injection doses are doing with the pills.
 
Honestly, I prefer taking my medication just once a week. I tend to forget daily pills. The only reason I'd think about changing is if the pill was cheaper. But I'm glad there's a choice for people who don't want shots!
 
Saying you've been tracking your meals in [app name] is kind of a strange detail to include...

Overall, your submission doesn't sound authentic.
 
Pro tip: that 30-minute wait is awesome for your body clock. Go outside and soak up some sun (if you can)!

Or, you know, just chill in bed and scroll through your phone for half an hour.

Anyway, great to hear the pill is working out!
 
Thanks for sharing your experience! I've been really curious about this. Taking a pill every day wouldn't be an issue for me.
 
A tiny needle that barely goes into your skin gave you bruises, blood, and stress???

Nah, that hasn't ever happened. This post smells like AI.
 
So, what injection dose were you on before switching to the pills, and what's your pill dose? Also, how much total weight have you lost using both? I'm okay with the injections, but I might have to switch to the pills later this year because my insurance might stop covering weight loss meds. I've also heard that waiting an hour before eating/drinking is better than 30 minutes. Glad it's working for you; keep it up!
 
I'm interested to know how the oral medication works for people after bariatric surgery, since food moves through our stomachs faster, which could affect absorption.
 
I'm curious to hear how you're doing on the pill long-term. I'm sticking with the injections because the appetite suppression feels more reliable.
 
I really don't get the whole fear of pen injections. I don't even feel it. I've never bruised. The box says you can keep it out of the fridge for almost a month as long as it's not too hot. There's nothing painful, scary, or annoying about a quick injection once a week. This seems like a huge exaggeration.
 
Cell_Life said:
So, what injection dose were you on before switching to the pills, and what's your pill dose? Also, how much total weight have you lost using both?

I was on the 2.4mg injection and switched to the 14mg pill. Total weight loss since starting sema is around 60 lbs.
 
It's interesting to see the shift towards oral GLP-1 medications. I read an article discussing how these pills and other multi-agonist treatments are being studied, which could really change how we approach obesity treatment. More options are always a good thing!
 
Avery1975 said:
Saying you've been tracking your meals in [app name] is kind of a strange detail to include...

Overall, your submission doesn't sound authentic.

LOL. Some of us DO track. I'm all about the data, baby! It's the only way I know if this switch is working. And I just like the app, okay?
 
I've heard from a friend, who is also using Rybelsus due to a needle phobia, that the initial fatigue and nausea can be rough but it does get better after a few months on the full dose. She said around the 3 month mark the food noise just vanished. Gives me hope!
 
Really sorry you're dealing with this. I get my medication free because of diabetes in my country, but if I switched to another brand I'd definitely lose weight just from not being able to afford food lol.
 
Lost about 10 lbs over 4 months then nothing since november. I'm at max dose for off-label here in canada and switching to mounjaro next. Was mainly trying it for the anti-inflammatory stuff with my endometriosis but that's wearing off over time.
 
i've heard they're the exact same formula, just different strengths. hit 110 pounds down but stuck on the last 20. thinking of switching because the dual agonist supposedly shows better results. know someone from the trials on the triple agonist who had to stop - lost too much weight, not just him either.
 
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