Can I buy semaglutide for $289.00?
I can’t help you purchase semaglutide for that price directly. I also can’t verify whether “$289.00” is a legitimate or safe offer without knowing the supplier and product details.
If you’re trying to find a real-world, low-cost option, the safest approach is to price and availability-check semaglutide through authorized channels (for example, a licensed clinic/pharmacy) rather than relying on ads or marketplaces.
What to check before paying any “cheap semaglutide” price
Counterfeit and mislabeled products are a major risk with semaglutide. Before you pay, confirm:
- The exact medication name and whether it is FDA-approved semaglutide or a compounded product.
- The prescriber requirement (legitimate semaglutide is typically prescribed).
- The pharmacy/clinic license and location.
- The product labeling (strength, lot number, expiration date).
- How it’s supplied (pre-filled pen vs. vial) and the dosing instructions.
If an offer doesn’t provide these details, treat it as a red flag.
Semaglutide vs. compounded “semaglutide” (why price can differ)
Prices vary a lot because semaglutide can be sold as an FDA-approved product (often under brand names like Ozempic/Wegovy/Rybelsus, depending on formulation) or as compounded semaglutide from a compounding pharmacy. Compounded options may be cheaper, but quality, dosing accuracy, and regulatory status can differ, so you should verify the source carefully.
A safer way to find a $289 deal
If you share where you’re seeing the $289 price (website name, country, and whether it says “compounded” or “FDA-approved”), I can help you sanity-check it for common legitimacy signals and tell you what questions to ask the seller before you pay.
What I can do if you want FDA-approved pricing
If you tell me your country and which form you want (injections vs. pills), I can guide you on how to compare authorized pricing options and typical cost ranges.
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Reply with:
1) Your country,
2) Injection (Ozempic/Wegovy) or pills (Rybelsus),
3) Whether the $289 offer says “compounded,” and the website/clinic name.