Barrett’s Research
Northeast · Pop. 1.4MMedicaid: Diabetes only

Affording a GLP-1 in New Hampshire

If you live in New Hampshire and you've been wondering what a GLP-1 will really cost you, let's sort it out together. We'll cover where New Hampshire Medicaid stands, which telehealth providers serve you, what you'd pay with and without insurance, and the new Medicare Bridge that's almost here — all in plain, honest terms.

Medicaid

Where New Hampshire Medicaid stands

This is the first thing worth checking, because it can change everything about what you pay.

Diabetes onlyNot for weight loss yet — GLP-1s are reimbursed only for diabetes.

For now, New Hampshire Medicaid doesn't cover GLP-1s for weight loss — reimbursement is limited to diabetes. We know that's not the answer you were hoping for. The encouraging part: cash-pay telehealth has become genuinely affordable, and it's the path most residents here turn to.

What you'll typically need in New Hampshire

  • Prior authorization from your prescribing physician
  • BMI of 30+ (or 27+ with a weight-related comorbidity)
  • Documentation of failed diet and exercise attempts
  • Enrollment in a state Medicaid or managed-care plan

Estimated costs

What you might pay in New Hampshire

Here's a realistic look at what people across the state actually pay, depending on how they're covered. Find the row that matches your situation.

Cost categoryPrice rangeDescription
Telehealth (compounded)Best value
$99–$299/moCompounded semaglutide or tirzepatide mailed straight to your door. For most people paying cash, this is the gentlest option on the budget.
Telehealth (brand-name)
$300–$1,200/moFDA-approved Wegovy or Zepbound through an online clinic. If you have insurance, it may pick up part of the cost.
With insurance
$25–$250/moWhen an employer plan or your state's Medicaid covers GLP-1s for weight loss, your copay comes down to your plan's tier — often the cheapest route of all.
Cash, no insurance
$800–$1,500/moThe full retail price for brand-name GLP-1s at a local pharmacy with no coupons applied. It's the costliest path, and rarely the one you have to settle for.

These estimates come from publicly available data as of April 2026. Your real cost will depend on your dose, medication, plan, and provider, and compounded medications aren't FDA-approved. Seed data — please verify before relying on it.

Telehealth providers

Providers that serve New Hampshire

All 6 providers below are licensed to prescribe GLP-1 medications in New Hampshire and ship right to your door. We've sorted them by starting price so the most budget-friendly options are easy to spot first.

ProviderPriceRatingTypeCoverageReview
Embody$99/mo8.7CompoundedAll 50Review
Yucca Health$129/mo9.3CompoundedAll 50Review
Bodybuilding Health+$139/mo8.6CompoundedAll 50Review
MEDVi$179/mo8.8Brand & CompoundedAll 50Review
ShedRx$195/mo8.9Brand & CompoundedAll 50Review
SkinnyRx$199/mo9Brand & CompoundedAll 50Review
Coming July 2026

The Medicare Bridge is coming to New Hampshire

If you're on Medicare, this is worth circling on the calendar. From July 1, 2026, Part D enrollees in New Hampshire can get Wegovy or Zepbound for $50 a month through the GLP-1 Bridge — the very first time Medicare has covered weight-loss medications. An estimated ~3.4 million people nationwide are expected to qualify.

Patient cost
$50/mo
Launch date
July 1, 2026
Duration
6 months

Verify your plan

How to check what your own plan covers

Even within New Hampshire, no two plans are exactly alike — so the only way to know for sure is to check yours. Don't worry, it's just four short steps, and we'll walk you through each one.

01

Start with a quick call to your insurer

Ask plainly whether your plan covers semaglutide (Wegovy) or tirzepatide (Zepbound) for weight loss — and ask them to put the answer in writing so you have it on hand.

02

Peek at your formulary

Request the plan's drug list and look for Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, or Mounjaro. Note the tier each one sits on — a lower tier usually means a lower copay for you.

03

Ask what the prior authorization needs

Most plans require one, and that's okay. Just ask exactly which documents your doctor has to send — your BMI history, any related conditions, and past weight-loss attempts — so nothing holds it up.

04

If it's a no, you still have options

A denial isn't the end of the road. Ask about step therapy, appeals, or switching plans at open enrollment. And remember: cash-pay telehealth is always there as a reliable backup.

Your New Hampshire questions, answered

Not for weight loss just yet. In New Hampshire, Medicaid reimburses GLP-1s only when they're prescribed for diabetes. If that's not you, don't lose heart — cash-pay telehealth is usually the most realistic and affordable path, and we'll point you to it below.
For most people paying out of pocket, compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide through telehealth comes out cheapest — Embody starts at $99/mo. If you have qualifying insurance, a copay can drop as low as $25/mo, and from July 2026 the Medicare Bridge will offer $50/mo for those who are eligible.
Absolutely. Every provider listed above is licensed to prescribe GLP-1 medications in New Hampshire, and telehealth GLP-1 care is legal in all 50 states. Your medication ships right to your door — no in-person visit, no waiting room.
Yes, and this is a meaningful change. The Medicare GLP-1 Bridge opens July 1, 2026 for Part D enrollees nationwide, New Hampshire included. It covers Wegovy and Zepbound at $50/mo for anyone with a BMI of 30+ (or 27+ with a related condition), running through December 2026 before the BALANCE Model picks up in January 2027.
2-minute match quiz

Let's find the right provider for you in New Hampshire

Answer a few quick questions and we'll match you on budget, insurance, and what you're hoping to achieve — no pressure, no spam.