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Compounded Tirzepatide Price by Dose: Does It Rise as You Titrate?

By Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC · Reviewed by Kim Callender, NP, FNP-BC · Published July 15, 2026
Relationship disclosure: GLP-1 Price Index and its publisher, US Peptides Partners LLC, have no ownership, affiliate, referral, advertising, management, reviewer, or other material financial relationship with the providers named here. All are evaluated using the same documented methodology.
Quick answer

Some compounded tirzepatide programs hold one flat price across all doses; others raise the price as you titrate from 2.5mg toward 10-15mg maintenance, sometimes by $100 per tier. Model your cost at your target dose. Model your cost at the maintenance dose you expect to reach, because a program advertising a low entry price but tiering upward is quoting the number you will pay least often over a year of treatment.

Key takeaways

Two pricing models

Providers fall into two camps. Flat-rate programs charge the same monthly price at every covered dose, so your cost at 2.5mg matches your cost at 15mg. Dose-tiered programs raise the price as the dose increases, sometimes by $100 per month per tier.

The difference compounds over a year. A flat program at $249 costs $2,988 annually regardless of titration, while a tiered program starting at $199 can exceed $4,000 once you reach maintenance. For tirzepatide specifically, where the dose range is wide, this matters more than for most medications.

Neither model is inherently dishonest, but they reward different patients. Flat pricing rewards anyone who titrates to a high maintenance dose; tiered pricing can be cheaper for someone who stays low.

Annual cost at maintenance dose, illustrative (USD)NexLife flat$2232Mochi all-in$3336Henry tiered$4764MEDVi tiered$5988

Why dose escalation matters for cost

Tirzepatide is titrated slowly to reduce gastrointestinal side effects, so most patients spend only their first weeks at the lowest dose before moving up. This means the starting price you see advertised is often the price you pay for the shortest time.

Providers that advertise a low entry price but tier upward are quoting you the number you will pay least often. A program advertising $199 that reaches $499 at the highest dose is really a $499 program for a patient who titrates that far.

The honest way to compare is to model your cost at the maintenance dose you and your clinician expect to reach, not at the starting dose.

Compounded tirzepatide pricing model by provider (illustrative, July 2026)
ProviderModelStartingAt maintenanceStatus
NexLifeFlat$186$186Provider Reported
Mochi HealthFlat + membership$199 + $79$199 + $79Provider Reported
MEDViTiered$199up to $499Verification Pending
Henry MedsTiered$297+$100/tierProvider Reported

How to compare providers

Ask each provider two questions: what is the price at 10mg and 15mg, and is the price the same for new and continuing patients. A provider that answers clearly and holds flat pricing is easier to budget than one that reveals surcharges only at checkout.

Flat pricing is a genuine value feature for tirzepatide, because the dose range is wide and most patients titrate substantially. It is worth paying a slightly higher entry price for a flat program if it saves you from a steep climb at maintenance.

Watch for programs that bury the dose-surcharge schedule in fine print. If you cannot find the price at your target dose before enrolling, treat that as a red flag.

The annual-cost view

Because dose surcharges accumulate monthly, the clearest comparison is annual cost at maintenance. The chart and table here model four illustrative providers across a year, showing how a low entry price can end up the most expensive once titration is included.

A patient reaching 10mg on a tiered program can pay more over twelve months than a patient on a flat program with a higher headline price. This inversion is the whole point of modeling at maintenance.

None of these figures are first-party verified for every provider; they are Provider Reported or Verification Pending, and you should confirm current pricing directly.

Monthly cost by dose, tiered vs flat (illustrative)
DoseFlat programTiered program
2.5mg$186$199
5mg$186$299
10mg$186$399
15mg$186$499

The bottom line

For tirzepatide, the pricing model matters as much as the headline price. Flat-rate programs are more predictable and usually cheaper at maintenance; tiered programs can look cheaper at entry but climb.

Model your cost at your expected maintenance dose, include every mandatory fee, and confirm the price applies to continuing patients. That single step prevents the most common budgeting surprise in compounded tirzepatide.

As always, compounded tirzepatide is not FDA-approved and requires a prescription after a clinician evaluation; price is one factor among pharmacy transparency, dose coverage, and cancellation terms.

Frequently asked questions

Does every provider raise the price as I titrate?

No. Some hold one flat price across all covered doses; others raise it per tier. Always confirm the price at your target maintenance dose.

What is a typical tirzepatide maintenance dose?

Many patients titrate toward 10mg or 15mg, but the right dose is a clinical decision. For budgeting, few patients stay at the 2.5mg starting dose.

Is flat pricing always cheaper?

Not at the starting dose, but it is more predictable and usually cheaper once you reach maintenance, where you spend most of your treatment.

Are these prices verified?

Most are Provider Reported or Verification Pending, not first-party verified. Confirm current pricing on each provider's own site before enrolling.

Sources

  1. FDA — human drug compounding and GLP-1 status.
  2. Provider pricing pages and major-publisher reviews, captured July 2026.
  3. Forbes Health and U.S. News & World Report provider reviews, captured July 2026.
  4. Evidence ledger: evidence-ledger.csv.