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By GLP1.tools Editorial TeamLast updated Informational only · not medical advice

Trulicity vs Ozempic: Which Should You Actually Pick?

Quick Answer

In short: Trulicity (GLP-1 receptor agonist) and Ozempic (GLP-1 receptor agonist) overlap in some ways but differ in mechanism, dosing, and typical use case. The right choice depends on the specific situation.

Trulicity at a glance:

  • Drug class: GLP-1 receptor agonist
  • Manufacturer: Eli Lilly
  • FDA approved: 2014
  • Route: subcutaneous injection (single-dose pen)
  • Typical frequency: once weekly
  • Half-life: approximately 5 days
  • Cash price (US): ~$987/month list; commercial savings card available
  • Receptor target: GLP-1 receptor

If you're choosing between two specific options, the right framework is rarely "which is better in general" — it's "which is better for me, given my insurance, side-effect tolerance, and dosing preference." We try to make that comparison honest below.

Mechanism

Trulicity: Dulaglutide is a long-acting GLP-1 analog fused to a human IgG4 Fc fragment, extending half-life to enable weekly dosing.

Ozempic: Ozempic is the brand name for semaglutide approved for type 2 diabetes. Semaglutide is a long-acting GLP-1 receptor agonist that increases insulin secretion in response to food, suppresses glucagon, slows gastric emptying, and reduces appetite.

For people new to this comparison, the practical takeaway is that both work through similar pathways but have different pharmacokinetics.

Dosing & Administration

FeatureTrulicityOzempic
Routesubcutaneous injection (single-dose pen)subcutaneous injection (multi-dose pen)
Frequencyonce weeklyonce weekly
Half-lifeapproximately 5 daysapproximately 7 days (allows once-weekly dosing)

Effectiveness

Trulicity: A1c reduction of ~1.0–1.5% and weight loss of 2–4 kg at higher doses.

Ozempic: A1c reductions of 1.5-1.8% and weight loss averaging 4-6 kg in SUSTAIN trials. Reduced major adverse cardiovascular events in SUSTAIN-6.

In head-to-head comparisons (where they exist), the higher-dose newer agents tend to outperform older ones — sometimes meaningfully. Reference trials: REWIND (Gerstein 2019, Lancet) — 12% relative reduction in major cardiovascular events over 5 for Trulicity; SUSTAIN-6 (Marso 2016, NEJM) — 26% relative reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events for Ozempic.

Side Effects

The two compounds have overlapping side-effect profiles. Common to both:

  • nausea
  • diarrhea
  • vomiting
  • decreased appetite
  • constipation
  • abdominal pain

Important risks worth knowing for both:

  • pancreatitis
  • thyroid C-cell tumors (boxed warning)
  • gallbladder disease
  • diabetic retinopathy worsening

Cost

Trulicity: ~$987/month list; commercial savings card available. Ozempic: $950-$1,000/month without insurance.

Insurance coverage and manufacturer programs change the relative cost picture significantly. See our individual cost guides for Trulicity cost and Ozempic cost for the latest numbers.

Which Is Right for You?

The practical decision usually comes down to four factors:

  1. What's covered by your insurance? Often the deciding factor
  2. What does your prescriber have experience with? Familiarity reduces dosing errors
  3. How comfortable are you with injections (or oral dosing if applicable)?
  4. What's your tolerance for side effects?

If you and your clinician end up split between Trulicity and Ozempic, either is a defensible choice in most cases.

Switching Between Them

Switching from Trulicity to Ozempic (or the reverse) is usually straightforward but should be done with clinician guidance — particularly to align dose escalation and avoid GI side effects from re-titration.

Bottom Line

Both Trulicity and its alternative are defensible choices. The right pick comes from your specific situation — insurance, prescriber, tolerance — not from the molecule alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources

This page is informational only and is not a personalized recommendation. The right choice depends on your individual situation.

Last updated: 2026-05-04 · For informational purposes only. Consult a healthcare provider.