"Compounded semaglutide" ads are everywhere, often implying you're getting cheap Ozempic. The reality is more complicated, and worth understanding before you click.

There's no generic Ozempic

Semaglutide and tirzepatide are sold only as brand-name, FDA-approved products. There is no FDA-approved generic. So any "generic" framing is, at best, loose marketing.

Where compounded versions came from

During periods when the approved drugs were in shortage, compounding pharmacies were able to prepare versions under specific conditions. As shortage status changed, so did the rules, and the FDA has issued warning letters over misleading marketing of compounded GLP-1s, including comparative and "generic" claims.

Compounded is not a synonym for generic, and "cheaper online GLP-1" is exactly the phrase that should make you slow down.

The safe way through

  • Work with a licensed provider who sources legitimately.
  • Be skeptical of "research use only" or "generic" GLP-1 sold direct-to-consumer.
  • Understand that compounding eligibility depends on current, changing rules.
Not medical advice

Whether a compounded option is appropriate and lawful in your case is a question for a licensed provider, not an ad.

Bottom line

Approved GLP-1s are well-evidenced; the compounded corner is where the marketing gets slippery. A licensed provider is the difference between a legitimate option and a gamble. More in our GLP-1 overview.