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ForumsInsurance & AccessMounjaro savings card — manufacturer program changes 2026 Page 2

Mounjaro savings card — manufacturer program changes 2026

MounjBrad Mon, Jun 8, 2026 at 4:36 AM 10 replies 180 viewsPage 2 of 2
BrianDallas92
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Oct 2024
Dallas, TX
Jun 8, 2026 at 7:26 AM#6

Great breakdown. I'll add one more hack that most people don't know about:

If you're hitting a coverage gap or your insurance is giving you trouble, call the manufacturer directly and ask about their Bridge Program. Both Lilly and Novo Nordisk have programs for patients who are between insurance plans, waiting for PA approval, or experiencing a temporary coverage disruption. They can sometimes provide free medication for 30-90 days.

The phone numbers:

  • Lilly Patient Support: 1-800-545-6962
  • Novo Nordisk Patient Assistance: 1-866-310-7549

You'll need your prescription and income verification but it's worth the call.

7 20Dr.PathRoch, mona_PHX, andrew_nyc and 4 others
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maya_sedona
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Sep 2024
Sedona, AZ
Jun 8, 2026 at 7:43 AM#7

This is all great for people with decent commercial insurance. My situation: small employer plan through UHC. They explicitly exclude ALL anti-obesity medications. No Wegovy, no Zepbound, no Contrave, nothing.

The Zepbound savings card without coverage path gives me $550/month. That's $6,600/year. I make $52K. That's almost 13% of my pre-tax income on one medication.

I ended up going the compounded semaglutide route through a telehealth provider. $149/month. Is it the same as brand? Probably not exactly. But it's working — down 34 lbs in 5 months — and I can actually afford it without choosing between medication and rent.

The system is broken when insurance happily covers the downstream costs of obesity (joint replacements, diabetes meds, cardiac interventions) but won't cover a preventive medication that costs a fraction of those interventions.

Last edited: Jun 8, 2026 at 11:43 AM
1 0NurseAsh_DET
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SurmountFan_IN
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May 2024
Indianapolis, IN
Jun 8, 2026 at 8:00 AM#8

I completely agree about the system being broken. For what it's worth, some states are starting to mandate coverage. If you're in a state with pending legislation, it might be worth writing to your state rep.

Updated summary of all the paths discussed in this thread:

  1. Best case: Commercial insurance coverage + savings card = ~$25/mo
  2. Insurance covers but high copay: Savings card brings it down significantly
  3. No insurance coverage: Manufacturer savings card = ~$500-550/mo
  4. Between plans: Bridge programs for temporary free supply
  5. Budget route: Compounded semaglutide via telehealth = ~$100-200/mo
  6. Cash pay retail: $1,069-1,349/mo (avoid this if at all possible)
9 21traveltech_sara, AttorneyGrant, DebRD_ATL and 6 others
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