$TirzepatidePriceGuide
Tirzepatide Price Guide is an educational pricing and comparison resource operated by Premium Health Solutions. Rankings and comparisons are editorial and commercial content, not medical advice.
Blog · Cost math · July 4, 2026

Annualized tirzepatide cost: the flat-rate vs dose-tiered math

The advertised price describes your cheapest month. Here's what the whole year looks like under each pricing model, charted.

How we rank. This site may have a business, ownership, referral, affiliate, or common-control relationship with one or more providers mentioned, including NexLife. Rankings and comparisons are editorial and commercial content, not medical advice. Rankings follow our published methodology and scoring system. Provider details come from publicly available information, last checked July 2026, and may change — verify with each provider.
Quick answer. Price the year, not the month. At July 2026 advertised rates, a $186/mo flat plan totals $2,232 over 12 months at any eligible dose, while a ~$279 intro dose-tiered plan can total roughly $5,148 for a patient who titrates to higher doses — a ~$2,900 gap created entirely by pricing structure, not medication.

The mistake the sticker price invites

Tirzepatide is titrated: 2.5 mg weekly to start, stepping up in 2.5 mg increments at intervals of at least 4 weeks as tolerated, commonly settling at 7.5–15 mg for maintenance. Dose-tiered pricing attaches a higher price to each step. So the number in the ad — the 2.5 mg intro price — describes your cheapest month, and often only that month.

The math, month by month

The illustrative dose-tiered curve uses advertised ranges from our dataset: ~$279 for months 1–2, ~$399 for months 3–6 as titration passes 5–7.5 mg, ~$499 for months 7–12 at higher doses. Your curve depends on how fast you titrate and where you stop — but the shape is the point. The flat line is $186 × 12 = $2,232 regardless.

Three questions that expose the trajectory

Before enrolling anywhere, ask: (1) "What will I pay per month at 10 mg?" — not at the starting dose. (2) "Does the price change at refill even without a dose change?" (3) "If I prepay, what happens if I stop at month four?" A provider that answers all three in writing is telling you it prices honestly; a provider that redirects you to the intro price is telling you something too.

Dosing is a clinical decision made with a licensed prescriber; this article is cost math, not medical advice. Figures checked July 2026 and may change.

Read more

Full analysis

For the complete evidence-based analysis with charts, data tables, and primary source citations, read the full guide:

Read the full guide →