Health  | 

Hims & Hers Drops Plans for Copycat Wegovy Drug

Telehealth company faced legal threats over plans to undercut bigger rival's price
Posted Feb 6, 2026 5:41 AM CST
Updated Feb 8, 2026 7:54 AM CST
Rival's Cheaper GLP-1 Pill Rattles Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly
This photo shows Novo Nordisk headquarters in Bagsvaerd, Denmark, on Feb. 5, 2025.   (Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix via AP, file)
UPDATE Feb 8, 2026 7:54 AM CST

Hims & Hers won't be rolling out a knockoff version of the new Wegovy weight-loss pill after all. The telehealth company dropped its plans Saturday after the FDA threatened to limit access to the active ingredients for copycat GLP-1 drugs, reports the AP. The company also faced legal threats from Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk over the "compounded" version.

Feb 6, 2026 5:41 AM CST

In a direct challenge to the booming obesity-drug business, telehealth company Hims & Hers has rolled out what it says is the cheapest GLP-1 weight-loss pill in the US—and it's already rattling Wall Street and one of the industry's biggest players. The online platform is offering compounded oral semaglutide for $49 for the first month and $99 a month afterward for those who commit to a five-month plan, undercutting Novo Nordisk's new Wegovy pill by about $100 a month, reports Reuters. Novo priced its pill at $149 initially and $199 after that; Eli Lilly is expected to debut its own oral obesity drug later this year.

"Whether a patient needs a specific dosage adjustment or prefers a compounded semaglutide pill over an injection, our platform now supports a deeper level of personalization," Hims' Dr. Craig Primack says in a release, per the AP. Investors quickly reacted: Novo's shares slid 8.6% and Lilly's fell 6% after the Hims announcement and Novo's warning of "unprecedented" pricing pressure on its weight-loss portfolio. Novo is vowing a legal and regulatory fight. The Danish drugmaker argues that Hims' large-scale compounding of semaglutide is unlawful and says its own pill uses proprietary technology to improve absorption.

The clash highlights a fast-expanding gray zone in the weight-loss market. US rules allow compounders to produce versions of branded drugs, often with small tweaks in dosage or regimen, particularly when there are shortages. Hims has already been selling compounded injectable GLP-1 drugs and previously drew an FDA warning for marketing its semaglutide as having the "same active ingredient" as Ozempic and Wegovy. Analysts say the new pill could open the door to a full-blown price battle if compounders can reliably supply oral GLP-1s at scale—potentially including Lilly's upcoming pill—while testing how far companies like Hims can push the regulatory boundaries before courts or the FDA push back.

Read These Next
Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X