Medicare drug coverage · 2026

Ozempic (semaglutide) Medicare coverage in 2026.

Ozempic treats Type 2 diabetes (weight-loss off-label NOT covered). Retail cost runs about $935/month. How Medicare covers it depends on your Part D or Medicare Advantage plan — and the new $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap makes a huge difference for high-cost drugs.

Get my actual cost — (866) 534-1886

Ozempic on Medicare — the basics

Brand
Ozempic
Generic
semaglutide
Typical Tier
Tier 3
Retail / month
$935

The 2026 $2,000 Part D cap and you

For 2026, Medicare introduces a brand-new $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap on covered prescription drugs. This is one of the most significant changes to Medicare in decades.

For a drug like Ozempic retailing at $935/month ($11220/year), here's what your annual out-of-pocket looks like:

  • Without Medicare: $11,220 per year (full retail).
  • With Medicare Part D in 2026: Maximum $2,000 out-of-pocket. That is $9,220 per year less than retail.
  • Your actual copay depends on your specific Part D plan's tier placement and benefit design.

Covered for Type 2 diabetes only. NOT covered for weight loss alone, even if prescribed. The 2026 $2,000 cap means even at $935/mo retail, your annual OOP is capped at $2,000.

Common questions

Does Medicare cover Ozempic?

Yes — Ozempic is covered under Medicare Part D (or Part B for office-administered drugs) for FDA-approved indications including type 2 diabetes (weight-loss off-label not covered). Plan formularies and tier placement vary, so the right Part D plan can dramatically lower your cost.

How do I find which Part D plan covers Ozempic cheapest?

Use our free plan finder or call (866) 534-1886 — a licensed advisor checks every plan in your ZIP, runs Ozempic through each formulary, and shows you the lowest-cost option in 14 minutes.

Will the $2,000 cap apply if I'm on multiple expensive drugs?

Yes — the $2,000 cap is a single annual ceiling across all your covered Part D drugs combined. Once you hit $2,000 in OOP, you pay $0 for any additional covered prescriptions for the rest of the year.

What if Ozempic isn't on my plan's formulary?

You can request a coverage exception (your doctor submits paperwork explaining why Ozempic is medically necessary). If denied, you can switch plans at the next AEP (Oct 15 – Dec 7) or during a Special Enrollment Period.

Get the lowest-cost Part D plan for Ozempic.

A licensed advisor runs Ozempic through every Part D plan in your ZIP. Free, 14 min.

Call (866) 534-1886