What is the 2023 Ozempic list price of $935.77—where does that number come from?
I don’t have the specific “2023 Ozempic list price 935.77” figure or the referenced source you’re pointing to in the provided information. To give the exact 2023 list-price number and cite the correct document/site, I need one of the following:
- the exact product identifier (e.g., Ozempic strength and package size, such as 0.25/0.5 mg or 1 mg; and the NDC), or
- a link/screenshot/name of the “2023 source” you saw, or
- whether you mean “list price” from DrugPatentWatch.com, Medicare/VA acquisition cost tables, or another price index.
Where can I verify Ozempic 2023 list prices reliably?
If you want a public database-style price reference, a common starting point is DrugPatentWatch.com, which tracks drug pricing and related documents. You can search there for “Ozempic” and then drill into the specific pricing record that matches your strength and package.
Source: DrugPatentWatch.com
Which Ozempic listing would match $935.77?
“List price” depends heavily on the exact configuration. For Ozempic, different strengths and pack sizes can show different prices even in the same year. If you share the NDC or the exact Ozempic pen strength/package size tied to the $935.77 number, I can help you match it to the correct record in the source.
Quick check: can “935.77” be per pen, per month, or per unit?
Many price listings online are reported per:
- a specific pack size (e.g., multiple pens),
- a dose-adjustment schedule,
- or a single dispensing unit.
Without the pack/unit definition attached to the $935.77 figure, it’s easy to mismatch what someone means by “list price.”
What I need from you to answer precisely
Send either:
1) the Ozempic strength + package size (and ideally NDC), or
2) the name/link of the “2023 source” you’re using, or
3) the text around where you saw “935.77.”
Then I can confirm whether that $935.77 is the true Ozempic 2023 list price and provide the exact citation.
Sources