Semaglutide and tirzepatide are the two most effective weight loss medications currently available. In 2026, both are available in India with very different cost profiles after the semaglutide patent expiry. This comprehensive comparison covers mechanism, efficacy data from head to head trials, side effects, cost, and which patients should consider each option.
Quick summary for busy readers
| Feature | Semaglutide | Tirzepatide |
|---|---|---|
| Brand names in India | Ozempic, Wegovy, plus 40+ generics | Mounjaro |
| Mechanism | GLP-1 receptor agonist | Dual GIP and GLP-1 receptor agonist |
| Average weight loss (72 weeks) | 15 percent | 21 percent |
| Average HbA1c reduction | 1.5 to 2.0 percent | 1.9 to 2.4 percent |
| Monthly cost India (2026) | Rs. 1,290 to Rs. 16,400 | Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 15,000 |
| Patent expiry India | Expired March 2026 | Active, no generics yet |
| Administration | Weekly injection | Weekly injection |
Mechanism of action
Semaglutide
Semaglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist. Glucagon like peptide 1 is a natural hormone released by the gut after eating. Semaglutide mimics GLP-1 activity, which:
- Stimulates insulin release in response to meals (glucose dependent)
- Suppresses glucagon release from alpha cells
- Slows gastric emptying
- Increases satiety signaling in the brain
Tirzepatide
Tirzepatide is a dual GIP and GLP-1 receptor agonist. Glucose dependent Insulinotropic Polypeptide (GIP) is another incretin hormone. The addition of GIP activity provides complementary effects:
- All GLP-1 effects listed above
- Additional insulin sensitization through adipose tissue GIP signaling
- Enhanced effects on food intake regulation
- More potent effect on weight reduction
Efficacy data
Weight loss: SURMOUNT vs STEP trials
Direct head to head comparison came from the SURMOUNT 5 trial published in 2024, comparing maximum doses of both drugs over 72 weeks.
Results:
- Semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly: 13.7 percent average body weight loss
- Tirzepatide 15 mg weekly: 20.2 percent average body weight loss
- Weight loss 15 percent or more: 32 percent of semaglutide vs 57 percent of tirzepatide users
- Weight loss 20 percent or more: 15 percent of semaglutide vs 39 percent of tirzepatide users
Tirzepatide demonstrated superior weight loss by approximately 6 to 7 percentage points at equivalent exposure durations.
Diabetes (HbA1c): SURPASS vs SUSTAIN
Head to head comparison in SURPASS 2 trial (2021):
- Semaglutide 1.0 mg weekly: 1.9 percent HbA1c reduction
- Tirzepatide 5 mg weekly: 2.0 percent HbA1c reduction
- Tirzepatide 10 mg weekly: 2.2 percent HbA1c reduction
- Tirzepatide 15 mg weekly: 2.3 percent HbA1c reduction
Tirzepatide showed marginally greater HbA1c reduction at all doses, with clearly superior effect at higher doses.
Cardiovascular outcomes
Semaglutide has established cardiovascular outcomes data from SUSTAIN 6 showing significant cardiovascular risk reduction in high risk patients. Wegovy received FDA approval for cardiovascular risk reduction in 2024.
Tirzepatide cardiovascular outcomes trial (SURPASS CVOT) completed in 2024 and showed non inferiority to semaglutide, though this was not a head to head comparison for cardiovascular events.
Side effect comparison
Both medications share similar side effect profiles because of shared GLP-1 mechanism. Most side effects are dose dependent.
Common side effects (both drugs)
- Nausea: 20 to 40 percent during titration, mostly improves after week 4 to 6
- Vomiting: 10 to 20 percent
- Diarrhea: 15 to 25 percent
- Constipation: 10 to 15 percent
- Injection site reactions: 5 to 10 percent
- Fatigue and headache: 5 to 10 percent
Side effect differences
Tirzepatide may cause slightly more GI side effects at equivalent weight loss endpoints, though this is mitigated by slower titration schedules. Real world tolerability appears similar.
Serious side effects (both drugs)
- Pancreatitis: Rare but documented, discontinue immediately if symptoms occur
- Gallbladder disease: Slightly increased rate with significant weight loss
- Medullary thyroid carcinoma: Contraindicated with personal or family history
- Diabetic retinopathy: Can temporarily worsen with rapid glucose improvement
Cost comparison in India (April 2026)
Semaglutide options
- Cheapest generic (Natco Semanat vial): Rs. 1,290 per month at 0.25 mg
- Generic prefilled pen (Alkem Semasize): Rs. 1,800 per month
- Premium generic (Dr. Reddys Obeda): Rs. 4,200 per month
- Branded Ozempic (post April 2026 cuts): Rs. 5,660 to Rs. 9,100 per month depending on dose
- Branded Wegovy: Rs. 8,640 to Rs. 10,850 per month
Tirzepatide options
- Mounjaro (Eli Lilly): Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 15,000 per month depending on dose and region
- No generic available: Patent protection remains in place in India through approximately 2036
Cost effectiveness analysis
For a patient paying out of pocket, starting with generic semaglutide is clearly more cost effective. At Rs. 1,800 per month for Alkem Semasize pen, a 24 month course costs approximately Rs. 43,000. The equivalent 24 month course of Mounjaro at Rs. 10,000 per month costs Rs. 240,000, more than 5 times higher.
Which one should you choose?
Start with generic semaglutide if:
- Cost is a significant consideration (applies to most Indian patients)
- Weight loss target is 10 to 15 percent of body weight
- Diabetes management with weight loss benefit is the goal
- You prefer the more established safety database
- You are responsive to standard GLP-1 mechanism
Consider tirzepatide if:
- Weight loss target is 15 to 25 percent of body weight
- Cost is not a primary concern
- Failed adequate semaglutide trial (insufficient response at maximum tolerated dose)
- Severe obesity with significant metabolic complications
- Combined diabetes and obesity with difficult to control HbA1c
My clinical approach in 2026
In my practice, I now start most patients with generic semaglutide. After 3 to 6 months at maximum tolerated dose, if the response is inadequate (less than 5 percent weight loss or HbA1c still above target), I consider switching to tirzepatide.
The cost savings from starting with generic semaglutide are substantial (potentially Rs. 6,000 to Rs. 13,000 per month cheaper). Many patients achieve their targets on semaglutide alone and never need tirzepatide.
Stopping the drugs
Weight regain after discontinuation is a major concern with both drugs. Studies show 60 to 70 percent of weight loss is typically regained within 1 year of stopping semaglutide. Long term users are essentially committed to long term therapy for sustained weight loss.
Strategies to maintain weight after stopping include:
- Aggressive pre discontinuation lifestyle intervention
- Continued exercise and dietary structure
- Gradual taper rather than abrupt cessation
- Maintenance low dose therapy
- Switching to maintenance lifestyle program
Dose titration schedules
Semaglutide for diabetes (Ozempic type)
- Weeks 1 to 4: 0.25 mg weekly (starter)
- Weeks 5 to 8: 0.5 mg weekly
- Week 9 onwards: 1.0 mg weekly (may increase to 2.0 mg)
Semaglutide for obesity (Wegovy type)
- Month 1: 0.25 mg weekly
- Month 2: 0.5 mg weekly
- Month 3: 1.0 mg weekly
- Month 4: 1.7 mg weekly
- Month 5 onwards: 2.4 mg weekly (maintenance)
Tirzepatide
- Month 1: 2.5 mg weekly (starter)
- Month 2: 5 mg weekly
- Month 3: 7.5 mg weekly
- Month 4: 10 mg weekly
- Month 5 onwards: 10 to 15 mg weekly (maintenance)
Monitoring recommendations
For both drugs:
- Baseline HbA1c, fasting glucose, lipid profile, thyroid function
- Baseline body weight, waist circumference, blood pressure
- Reassessment at 12 weeks
- Annual comprehensive metabolic assessment
- Monitor for gallstone symptoms in patients losing significant weight
- Retinal examination in diabetics at baseline and yearly
Bottom line
Tirzepatide is somewhat more effective than semaglutide for weight loss (approximately 6 to 7 percent more weight loss at maximum doses) and marginally more effective for diabetes. However, generic semaglutide costs 5 to 10 times less. For most Indian patients in 2026, starting with generic semaglutide is the better value proposition, with tirzepatide reserved for patients who do not respond adequately or need more aggressive weight loss.
Both drugs are highly effective compared to anything available before 2020. Weight loss of 10 to 20 percent over 12 to 18 months is now achievable with medication, something that was previously only possible with bariatric surgery.