Tirzepatide vs Semaglutide: Which Weight Loss Injection Wins?

May 4, 2026
Evidence Based

Tirzepatide (Zepbound) produces greater average weight loss than semaglutide (Wegovy) in head-to-head trial data. The SURMOUNT-5 trial (2025) found tirzepatide reduced body weight by approximately 20.2% vs. 13.7% for semaglutide over 72 weeks. Both are FDA-approved injectable medications for chronic weight management, but they work through different receptor mechanisms, follow different dosing schedules, and carry distinct cost and tolerability profiles. The better option depends on the individual patient’s response, medical history, and access to coverage.

Tirzepatide (Zepbound)

Mean body weight reduction: 20.2% at 72 weeks (15mg, SURMOUNT-1). 47% of patients achieved 20% or more total weight loss. Dual GIP/GLP-1 mechanism.

Semaglutide (Wegovy)

Mean body weight reduction: 14.9% at 68 weeks (2.4mg, STEP-1). 32% achieved 15% or more total weight loss. GLP-1 only mechanism. SELECT CV outcomes data available.

How They Work: One Receptor vs. Two

The core pharmacologic difference between tirzepatide and semaglutide is the number of receptors each drug activates. Understanding this difference explains most of the gap in efficacy data.

Semaglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist. It mimics glucagon-like peptide-1, a gut-derived hormone that slows gastric emptying, suppresses appetite signals in the hypothalamus, and stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion. Semaglutide is a highly optimized version of this mechanism, with a half-life extended to approximately 7 days through fatty acid conjugation, enabling once-weekly dosing.

Tirzepatide is a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist, sometimes called a “twincretin.” It activates both the GIP (glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide) receptor and the GLP-1 receptor simultaneously. GIP has distinct and complementary metabolic effects: it enhances insulin sensitivity in adipose tissue, reduces adipogenesis, and may sensitize the hypothalamic GLP-1 signaling pathway, amplifying appetite suppression beyond what GLP-1 activation alone produces.

In practice, this dual mechanism translates to deeper appetite suppression, greater reductions in caloric intake, and a steeper weight loss trajectory at equivalent treatment durations.

ℹ️ Both are approved for weight management, but under different brand names.
Semaglutide for weight loss is Wegovy (2.4mg weekly). Ozempic is the same molecule approved for type 2 diabetes. Tirzepatide for weight loss is Zepbound. Mounjaro is tirzepatide approved for type 2 diabetes. Prescribing the diabetes formulation off-label for weight management is common in clinical practice but affects insurance coverage.

Efficacy Comparison: What the Trial Data Shows

Direct comparison between tirzepatide and semaglutide requires careful reading of the evidence. Most efficacy data comes from separate trials with different populations and endpoints. The SURMOUNT-5 trial (2025) is the only published head-to-head comparison at approved weight-management doses.

Head-to-head: SURMOUNT-5 (2025)

SURMOUNT-5 randomized adults with obesity or overweight plus a weight-related comorbidity to tirzepatide (10mg or 15mg) or semaglutide 2.4mg for 72 weeks. Tirzepatide produced approximately 20.2% mean body weight reduction vs. 13.7% for semaglutide. The proportion of patients achieving 20% or more weight loss was 47% with tirzepatide vs. 22% with semaglutide. These are clinically meaningful differences across the full distribution, not just at the high end.

Individual trial benchmarks

Trial Drug / Dose Duration Mean Weight Loss Achieved 15%+
SURMOUNT-1 Tirzepatide 15mg 72 weeks 20.2% 57%
SURMOUNT-1 Tirzepatide 10mg 72 weeks 19.5% 51%
STEP-1 Semaglutide 2.4mg 68 weeks 14.9% 32%
STEP-5 Semaglutide 2.4mg 104 weeks 15.2% 34%
SURMOUNT-5 Head-to-head 72 weeks 20.2% vs. 13.7% 47% vs. 22%
📊 Important context on comparing trial results: SURMOUNT-1 and STEP-1 enrolled slightly different populations and used different endpoints, which limits direct cross-trial comparison. SURMOUNT-5 is the only controlled head-to-head comparison at approved weight-management doses. Its results are consistent with what indirect analyses predicted, but the magnitude of the difference is larger than many clinicians expected.

Side Effect Profiles: How Do They Compare?

Both medications share a core GLP-1-driven side effect profile. The main adverse effects are gastrointestinal: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation. These occur most frequently during dose escalation and typically improve with each stable dose period.

Side Effect Comparison: Tirzepatide vs. Semaglutide

Shared Side Effects
Nausea (most common)
Vomiting
Diarrhea
Constipation
Decreased appetite
Fatigue during escalation
Injection site reactions
Abdominal discomfort

Tirzepatide (Zepbound)
Nausea: ~31% (SURMOUNT-1)
Vomiting: ~18%
Diarrhea: ~23%
Constipation: ~17%
Hair loss: ~5%
Black Box Warning:
Thyroid C-cell tumors (MTC/MEN2)
Pancreatitis risk (rare)

Semaglutide (Wegovy)
Nausea: ~44% (STEP-1)
Vomiting: ~24%
Diarrhea: ~30%
Constipation: ~24%
Headache: ~14%
Black Box Warning:
Thyroid C-cell tumors (same)
Pancreatitis risk (rare)

Incidence rates from pivotal trials. Direct comparison is approximate due to different trial designs.

⚠️ Both Zepbound and Wegovy carry an FDA Black Box Warning.

Both medications are contraindicated in patients with a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) or Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia type 2 (MEN2). Neither drug should be used in patients with a prior serious hypersensitivity reaction to the active ingredient. Pancreatitis has been reported with both agents. Stop the medication and seek immediate care for severe abdominal pain radiating to the back.

For a complete breakdown of tirzepatide’s safety profile across all doses, see our complete guide to tirzepatide side effects.

Dosing Schedules: How Each Escalation Works

Both medications are administered once weekly by subcutaneous injection into the abdomen, thigh, or upper arm. The escalation schedules differ in the number of dose steps and the maximum approved dose.

Phase Tirzepatide (Zepbound) Semaglutide (Wegovy)
Starting dose 2.5mg weekly x 4 weeks 0.25mg weekly x 4 weeks
Escalation steps 2.5 to 5 to 7.5 to 10 to 12.5 to 15mg (every 4 weeks) 0.25 to 0.5 to 1 to 1.7 to 2.4mg (every 4 weeks)
Maximum dose 15mg weekly 2.4mg weekly
Time to max dose 20 weeks minimum 16 weeks minimum
Pen type Single-dose autoinjector pen Single-dose pen (Wegovy); multi-dose pen (Ozempic)
Storage Refrigerated; room temp up to 30 days Refrigerated; room temp up to 28 days

Patients switching from semaglutide to tirzepatide still begin at the 2.5mg starting dose regardless of their prior semaglutide dose. The GIP receptor component requires the same adaptation period. For a detailed guide on tirzepatide’s escalation schedule, see our article on semaglutide dosing and weight management expectations.

Cardiovascular Benefits: The Evidence So Far

Cardiovascular outcome data now exists for both agents, and this is an increasingly important factor in prescribing decisions for higher-risk patients.

Semaglutide: SELECT trial (2023)

The SELECT trial enrolled 17,604 overweight or obese adults with established cardiovascular disease but without diabetes. Semaglutide 2.4mg reduced the composite endpoint of cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and nonfatal stroke by 20% vs. placebo over a median follow-up of 39.8 months (Lincoff et al., NEJM, 2023). This was the first trial to demonstrate a cardiovascular benefit of a GLP-1 agonist in people without diabetes, and it resulted in an expanded FDA label for Wegovy to include reduction of cardiovascular events.

Tirzepatide: SURPASS-CVOT ongoing

The dedicated cardiovascular outcomes trial for tirzepatide (SURPASS-CVOT) was ongoing at the time of publication. Earlier SURPASS trials showed favorable cardiovascular risk factor profiles with tirzepatide, including reductions in HbA1c, blood pressure, triglycerides, and LDL-C. A powered cardiovascular outcomes trial for tirzepatide in obesity without diabetes has not yet reported.

ℹ️ For patients with established cardiovascular disease.
Semaglutide currently has a stronger cardiovascular evidence base, supported by the SELECT trial outcomes data. Tirzepatide’s cardiovascular profile in this population will be clarified when SURPASS-CVOT reports. If cardiovascular risk reduction is a primary treatment goal alongside weight loss, discuss this distinction with your physician.

Cost, Access, and Insurance Coverage

For most patients in the United States, cost and insurance coverage are the dominant practical factors in choosing between these two medications. Both carry list prices above $1,000 per month without insurance, and coverage varies considerably by plan and employer.

List prices and manufacturer savings programs

Wegovy (semaglutide 2.4mg) has a list price of approximately $1,349 per month. Zepbound (tirzepatide) launched at approximately $1,059 per month, making it modestly less expensive at list price. Both Novo Nordisk (Wegovy) and Eli Lilly (Zepbound) offer savings cards that can reduce out-of-pocket costs significantly for commercially insured patients. Patients without insurance coverage can access Zepbound vials at lower cost through Lilly’s self-pay program.

Prior authorization and step therapy

Most commercial insurers require prior authorization for both medications. Some plans require step therapy, meaning patients must try and fail on a lower-cost agent before approving a GLP-1 agonist. Medicare Part D covers Wegovy for weight management in patients with cardiovascular disease following the SELECT trial label expansion, but coverage for Zepbound under Medicare remains restricted pending cardiovascular outcomes data.

✅ Compounded tirzepatide: important regulatory note.
Compounded tirzepatide was available during the FDA drug shortage period (2022 to 2024). The FDA removed tirzepatide from the shortage list in early 2025, significantly restricting legal compounding. Compounded formulations are not FDA-approved. If you are using or considering a compounded product, confirm current legal status with your physician before continuing. For full guidance, see our guide to safe tirzepatide use and Black Box Warning compliance.
Last verified: March 2026. Regulatory status may change.

Which Is Right for You? A Clinical Decision Framework

The choice between tirzepatide and semaglutide is not simply “which one works better.” Several clinical and practical factors should guide the decision together with a physician.

Tirzepatide vs. Semaglutide: Clinical Decision Guide

Consider Tirzepatide if…
Goal is maximum weight loss (20%+ body weight)
Type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance present
Prior inadequate response to semaglutide
No history of MTC or MEN2
Commercial insurance or self-pay access
Willing to work through 6-step escalation

Consider Semaglutide if…
Established cardiovascular disease (SELECT data)
Medicare coverage (Wegovy approved post-SELECT)
Previous good response to GLP-1 therapy
Fewer escalation steps preferred
No history of MTC or MEN2
Prior authorization already approved

Neither is appropriate if…
Personal or family history of MTC or MEN2
Active or history of pancreatitis
Pregnancy or planned pregnancy
Severe gastroparesis
Prior serious hypersensitivity to either drug
BMI below 27 without comorbidity (off-label)

Summary guide only. Final prescribing decision requires individual medical evaluation.

✅ Individual response matters more than population averages.
Trial averages mask substantial individual variation. Some patients lose 5% on tirzepatide; others lose 30% on semaglutide. Response at 12 to 16 weeks is a reasonable predictor of long-term outcome. Patients who have not lost at least 5% of body weight by week 16 at a therapeutic dose are unlikely to achieve meaningful long-term results on that agent and should discuss alternatives with their physician.

What Happens When You Stop Either Medication?

Weight regain after discontinuation is well-documented for both tirzepatide and semaglutide. In the STEP-4 extension trial, patients who stopped semaglutide regained approximately two-thirds of their lost weight within one year. Similar patterns are emerging from tirzepatide discontinuation data. Both medications suppress appetite through receptor activation that reverses when the drug clears. The underlying drivers of weight gain return when treatment stops.

This has important implications for how both medications should be framed: as long-term chronic disease management tools, not short-term interventions. Patients considering starting either treatment should understand that ongoing use is typically required to maintain weight loss outcomes. Discussing the long-term treatment plan upfront is an important part of a supervised programme.

Get Started With a Supervised Weight Loss Programme

Advanced TRT Clinic provides physician-supervised tirzepatide and semaglutide treatment via telemedicine, including initial consultation, dose management, lab coordination, and ongoing clinical support. Availability varies by state.

Learn More About Our Weight Loss Programme →

FAQs
Is tirzepatide stronger than semaglutide for weight loss?

Based on available trial data, yes. The SURMOUNT-5 trial (2025) is the only published head-to-head comparison at approved weight-management doses. Tirzepatide produced approximately 20.2% mean body weight reduction vs. 13.7% for semaglutide over 72 weeks. The proportion of patients achieving 20% or more total weight loss was 47% with tirzepatide vs. 22% with semaglutide. These differences are clinically meaningful, but individual responses vary substantially. Some patients respond better to semaglutide, and the stronger drug is not necessarily the right choice for every individual.

Can I switch from semaglutide to tirzepatide?

Yes, and this is a relatively common clinical scenario for patients who achieved partial but insufficient response on semaglutide. The transition requires restarting at the tirzepatide 2.5mg starting dose regardless of the semaglutide dose you were on. This is because tirzepatide's GIP receptor component is new to your system and requires the same adaptation period. Your physician will typically discontinue semaglutide and begin tirzepatide the following week, overlapping the washout period of semaglutide with the tirzepatide ramp-up.

Which has fewer side effects, tirzepatide or semaglutide?

Both share the same core GLP-1-driven side effect profile (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation). In their pivotal trials, semaglutide reported numerically higher rates of nausea (44% vs. 31%) and diarrhea (30% vs. 23%) than tirzepatide, but direct cross-trial comparison has limitations because the studies enrolled slightly different populations. Some patients who experienced significant nausea on semaglutide tolerate tirzepatide better, while others experience the opposite. Individual tolerability cannot be predicted in advance from trial averages.

How long does it take to see results with each medication?

Both medications produce early weight loss during the escalation phase, though the magnitude is modest compared to what occurs at maintenance doses. Most patients lose 2 to 5% of body weight during the first 8 to 12 weeks of dose escalation. Meaningful, sustained weight loss accelerates after reaching a therapeutic dose (5mg and above for tirzepatide, 1.7mg and above for semaglutide). Clinical guidelines typically assess response at 16 weeks: patients who have not lost at least 5% of body weight by that point at a therapeutic dose are unlikely to achieve significant long-term results and should discuss alternatives with their physician.

Which drug is better for people with type 2 diabetes?

Both are approved for type 2 diabetes under different brand names (Mounjaro for tirzepatide, Ozempic for semaglutide). For HbA1c reduction, tirzepatide demonstrated greater glycemic lowering in the SURPASS-2 trial (head-to-head vs. semaglutide 1mg). For cardiovascular protection in type 2 diabetes, semaglutide has stronger accumulated evidence across the SUSTAIN and PIONEER trial programs, plus SELECT for overweight or obese patients without diabetes. The choice in the context of diabetes should factor in cardiovascular risk profile, weight loss goals, and individual tolerability.

Can tirzepatide and semaglutide be taken together?

No. Combining two GLP-1-based agents is not clinically appropriate and is not supported by any published evidence. Both drugs act on overlapping receptor pathways. Co-administration would not produce additive benefit and would significantly increase the risk of severe gastrointestinal adverse effects, dehydration, and potentially dangerous hypoglycemia in patients using insulin or sulfonylureas. If a patient is not achieving adequate response on one agent, the clinical approach is to optimize the dose of the current agent or switch to the alternative, not to combine them.

What happens if I stop taking either medication?

Weight regain after discontinuation is well-documented for both drugs. In the STEP-4 extension trial, patients who stopped semaglutide regained approximately two-thirds of their lost weight within one year. Tirzepatide discontinuation data shows similar patterns. The medications suppress appetite through receptor activation that reverses when the drug clears the system. The underlying biology driving weight gain returns. Both medications are most effective when framed as long-term chronic disease management tools rather than short-term interventions.

Does insurance cover both tirzepatide and semaglutide for weight loss?

Coverage varies substantially by insurer, plan type, and employer. Wegovy (semaglutide 2.4mg) gained an expanded FDA label following the SELECT cardiovascular outcomes trial, which improved Medicare Part D coverage for patients with obesity and established cardiovascular disease. Zepbound (tirzepatide) does not yet have a cardiovascular outcomes label for obesity without diabetes, which limits Medicare coverage. Commercial insurance coverage for both requires prior authorization at most plans. Both manufacturers offer savings programs that can significantly reduce out-of-pocket costs for commercially insured patients who qualify.

Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting or changing any therapy, medication, or supplement. Results may vary. Statements about treatments or supplements may not be evaluated by the FDA. Availability of services depends on local licensing laws.
References

1. Jastreboff AM, et al. Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity. New England Journal of Medicine. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2206038

2. Wilding JPH, et al. Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity. New England Journal of Medicine. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2032183

3. Frias JP, et al. Tirzepatide versus Semaglutide Once Weekly in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes. New England Journal of Medicine.doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2107519

4. Lincoff AM, et al. Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Obesity without Diabetes. New England Journal of Medicine. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2307563

5. Garvey WT, et al. Two-year effects of semaglutide in adults with overweight or obesity: the STEP 5 trial. Nature Medicine. doi:10.1038/s41591-022-02026-4

6. Rubino DM, et al. Effect of Weekly Subcutaneous Semaglutide vs Daily Liraglutide on Body Weight. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2021.23619

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