Costco to Sell Ozempic and Wegovy at a Discount for People Without Insurance
Posted3 months agoActive3 months ago
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Costco plans to offer discounts on Ozempic and Wegovy for uninsured customers, sparking discussion about the implications for healthcare access and pharmaceutical pricing.
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Oct 4, 2025 at 11:58 AM EDT
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ID: 45474250Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 2:49:46 PM
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In terms of safety, empirically, it seems extremely safe for a molecule with such a strong and reliable effect. I bought some peptides and the most frustrating part of the whole endeavor was buying 5 ml syringes: local pharmacies require a prescription, but I managed to buy them on Amazon. When something is so easy to produce and distribute, we will have many more people buying peptides on the gray market (cheaper) and syringes on Amazon (faster).
I expect there will soon be a crackdown on the gray market, or at least an attempt at one, but how effective can the government be when no one has ever said, “I can't find cocaine tonight”?
It's still about $200 per month in India.
Some people titrate (adjust the dose up every two weeks), others stay at the same dose as the initial one (1-2 mg per week), and some fit people use half of the initial dose (0.5 mg per week). Retatrutide/GLP-3, which has yet to be approved for human use (FDA is expected to give the thumbs up by the end of the year), is used, I'd venture to guess, by millions of people at this point.
And it's still ~6000% more than much of the rest of the world.
Compounding brick and mortar, real pharmacies adding vitamin b12 are selling it for $250/month (4 weeks actually) simply because the prices are of the auto injector Novo Nordisk version is insane.