Compounded semaglutide, prescribed like medicine — not merchandise.
Semaglutide is the active ingredient in the FDA-approved medications Ozempic® and Wegovy®. Summit prescribes a once-weekly GLP-1 receptor agonist as an individually compounded preparation when — and only when — a physician evaluation determines it’s clinically appropriate for you.
One molecule. Two very different ways to buy it.
The medication
Semaglutide is a once-weekly GLP-1 receptor agonist. It works on the body’s own appetite and blood-sugar signaling: quieting food noise, slowing stomach emptying, and improving how your body responds to insulin — so a sustainable calorie deficit stops being a daily fight.
The compounded version
Compounded semaglutide contains the same active ingredient as Ozempic® and Wegovy®, prepared for you individually — your name, your dose — by an independent, state-licensed U.S. 503A compounding pharmacy under FDA and state board of pharmacy oversight.
What it is not
It is not the branded product, it is not a generic, and compounded medications are not approved or evaluated by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. That’s a real distinction — and we’d rather explain it plainly than bury it in fine print.
Why compounded, then? Individualized dosing — Dr. Miranda titrates to your response rather than a fixed escalation calendar, and many patients do well at doses the branded pens don’t come in — and honest economics: the pharmacy bills you at cost. If brand-name Ozempic® and Wegovy® is the better fit, or your insurance covers it, Dr. Miranda prescribes that instead. Summit never marks up medication, so there’s no financial thumb on the scale.
A physician’s process, start to finish.
Full evaluation
Dr. Miranda personally reviews your application, screens your history for contraindications, and orders baseline labs — before any prescription.
Individualized dose
Start low, titrate to response and tolerance. If semaglutide isn’t the right tool for you, he says so.
Monthly monitoring
Consultations, dose adjustments, and direct messaging with your physician — not a call center.
The exit plan
As your metabolism resets, we taper toward maintenance — the goal is to need less of this over time, not more.
What you’d actually pay.
Real numbers up front — the significant savings are the point, but so is knowing exactly what you’re buying.
- Dose-dependent — you pay for what you’re actually prescribed
- Plus flat $149/mo physician membership — never a teaser rate
- Shipped to you by the licensed 503A pharmacy
- If clinically appropriate after your evaluation
- FDA-approved branded products from Novo Nordisk
- Manufacturer self-pay programs, when you qualify, still run several hundred dollars a month
- The right choice when insurance covers it — and Dr. Miranda will prescribe it when it is
Brand-name price ranges reflect commonly published U.S. self-pay pharmacy pricing as of July 2026 and vary by pharmacy, dose and coverage. Compounded semaglutide is not Ozempic® and Wegovy®.
Read this part. It matters.
Boxed warning — thyroid C-cell tumors: in rodent studies, semaglutide caused thyroid C-cell tumors. It is not known whether it causes these tumors, including medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), in humans. Do not use semaglutide if you or a family member have had MTC, or if you have Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2).
Common side effects are digestive — nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal pain and reflux — usually early and dose-related. Slow titration and monthly physician check-ins exist largely to keep these manageable.
Serious risks include pancreatitis, gallbladder disease, kidney injury from dehydration, low blood sugar (especially with insulin or sulfonylureas), and delayed stomach emptying — tell any surgical or anesthesia team you take this class of medication. Do not use during pregnancy, while trying to become pregnant, or while breastfeeding.
This is a summary, not complete safety information. Dr. Miranda reviews your full history before prescribing, and you have direct messaging access to him throughout treatment — if something feels wrong, you talk to your physician, not a support queue.
Semaglutide questions, answered plainly.
Is compounded semaglutide FDA-approved?
No — and any provider who implies otherwise isn’t being straight with you. The branded medications Ozempic® and Wegovy® are FDA-approved; compounded semaglutide contains the same active ingredient but is prepared individually for you by prescription, and compounded medications are not approved or evaluated by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality. Dr. Miranda reviews both the compounded and brand-name options with you, and prescribes brand-name when it’s the better fit.
How do I know the pharmacy is safe?
Your prescription is filled by an independent, state-licensed U.S. 503A compounding pharmacy that prepares individualized prescriptions under FDA and state board of pharmacy oversight. A 503A pharmacy compounds one prescription at a time for one named patient — which is exactly the setting pharmacy compounding was designed for, and distinct from bulk manufacturing. Summit doesn’t dispense or mark up medication; the pharmacy bills you directly at cost.
How much does compounded semaglutide cost?
Typically $50–$200/month depending on your dose, billed at the pharmacy’s cost with no markup from Summit. For comparison, brand-name Ozempic® and Wegovy® commonly run $650–$1,100+ per month at the pharmacy without insurance coverage, and manufacturer self-pay programs still run several hundred dollars a month when you qualify. Your Summit membership itself is a flat $149/month — no first-month teaser pricing that balloons later.
Will I be prescribed semaglutide?
Only if it’s clinically appropriate for you. Dr. Miranda personally reviews every application, screens your history for contraindications, and orders baseline labs before any prescription. Some applicants are better served by a different medication, a different dose, or no medication at all — that judgment is the product.
Go deeper: Semaglutide vs. tirzepatide — an honest comparison · Compounded vs. brand-name GLP-1s, explained
Find out if semaglutide is right for you.
Apply in under five minutes. Dr. Miranda reviews every application personally — medication is prescribed only if it’s clinically appropriate after your evaluation.
