Why do tirzepatide prices increase by dose?
If your monthly bill climbs every time your clinician steps up your dose, here's what's happening — and how flat-rate plans avoid it.
The two pricing models
Compounded tirzepatide is titrated: most patients start at 2.5 mg weekly and step up gradually over weeks to months toward a maintenance dose, often 10–15 mg. How a provider prices that journey falls into one of two models.
Dose-tiered pricing charges more as the dose increases. A program may advertise an attractive starter price and then raise the monthly cost at each step up. By maintenance, the price can be substantially higher than where you began.
Flat-rate (dose-independent) pricing holds one monthly price regardless of dose. The figure at 2.5 mg is the same figure at 15 mg.
Why some providers tier by dose
There are two reasons. The first is real: a higher dose contains more active pharmaceutical ingredient, and ingredient cost is part of what a compounding pharmacy charges. The second is commercial: a low introductory price attracts sign-ups, and the increases arrive later, after a patient has already started and is less likely to switch. Neither reason is hidden or improper on its own — but it means the price you see at sign-up may not be the price you pay in month six.
What this means for your budget
Because nearly everyone titrates upward, the maintenance-dose price matters more than the starter price for total cost. As of June 2026, a dose-tiered program such as MEDVi can start near $279 and rise to roughly $399–$499 at higher doses. A flat-rate program such as NexLife ($186–$215/month) or Trimi (~$125/month on an annual plan) charges the same amount whether you are at a low or high dose. Over a year of treatment that difference can be significant. See starter price vs maintenance price for a worked comparison.
How to tell which model you're on
Provider pricing pages do not always state the model plainly. The reliable way to find out is to ask directly: "Does my monthly price change as my dose increases?" and "What will I pay at 10 mg and at 15 mg?" A flat-rate provider will give you one number; a dose-tiered provider will give you a schedule. See what flat-rate pricing means.
What to verify before choosing
- Whether the monthly price changes as your dose increases
- The exact price at 5 mg, 10 mg and 15 mg
- Whether the starter price is promotional or ongoing
- Total projected cost over 12 months at your target dose
- Whether dose changes require a new consult fee
Common questions
Why does compounded tirzepatide cost more at higher doses?
With dose-tiered providers, higher doses use more active ingredient and are often priced higher as a strategy. Flat-rate providers charge the same price across all eligible doses.
Do all providers raise the price by dose?
No. Some use flat, dose-independent pricing (one price for every dose) and others use dose-tiered pricing that rises as you titrate up. Confirm the model before enrolling.
Which is cheaper overall, flat-rate or dose-tiered?
It depends on your maintenance dose. Flat-rate tends to cost less over a full year and at higher doses; a dose-tiered intro can be cheaper only in the first month or two.