GLP-1 medications in South Carolina (2026)
Coverage, telehealth, compounding, and platform availability
South Carolina Medicaid and insurance coverage
South Carolina Medicaid coverage for GLP-1 weight-loss medications varies by plan and indication. Diabetes coverage is generally available with prior authorization; weight-loss-only coverage is more restrictive. Confirm via your specific plan's formulary or member services.
Commercial insurance coverage of GLP-1s in South Carolina typically requires prior authorization. Most plans cover Ozempic and Mounjaro for documented type 2 diabetes (the easier coverage path). Wegovy and Zepbound for weight loss require BMI documentation, often ≥30 with comorbidity. Use our insurance coverage tool to check your specific plan.
Telehealth prescribing in South Carolina
South Carolina permits interstate telehealth prescribing with state-licensed clinicians. Most major US telehealth platforms operate in South Carolina.
Top US telehealth platforms with active South Carolina availability: Ro Body, Hims Weight Loss, Sequence (Weight Watchers). Each handles insurance and prescribing differently — see our platform comparisons for details on which fits South Carolina patients best.
Compounding pharmacy status (2026)
South Carolina Board of Pharmacy is following FDA April 2026 enforcement guidance restricting large-scale compounded semaglutide. Individualized 503A compounding for documented clinical need may still be permitted.
The national context: FDA proposed permanently ending 503B bulk compounding of semaglutide and tirzepatide on April 30, 2026, with a public comment period through June 29. Most state pharmacy boards are aligning enforcement. Patients currently on compounded GLP-1s in South Carolina should plan transition to branded direct-pay or insurance-covered options. See our guide on the compounding shutdown.
GLP-1 in South Carolina — frequently asked
Does South Carolina Medicaid cover Wegovy or Zepbound for weight loss?+
Varies by plan. South Carolina Medicaid coverage for GLP-1 weight-loss medications varies by plan and indication. Diabetes coverage is generally available with prior authorization; weight-loss-only coverage is more restrictive. Confirm via your specific plan's formulary or member services. Confirm coverage with your specific plan's formulary before assuming approval. For commercial insurance in South Carolina, coverage typically requires prior authorization with BMI documentation.
Can I get Wegovy or Ozempic via telehealth in South Carolina?+
Permitted. South Carolina permits interstate telehealth prescribing with state-licensed clinicians. Most major US telehealth platforms operate in South Carolina. Most major US telehealth platforms — including Ro Body, Hims Weight Loss, Sequence (Weight Watchers) — operate in South Carolina with state-licensed clinicians.
Is compounded semaglutide still legal in South Carolina?+
Winding down. South Carolina Board of Pharmacy is following FDA April 2026 enforcement guidance restricting large-scale compounded semaglutide. Individualized 503A compounding for documented clinical need may still be permitted. The FDA proposed permanently ending 503B bulk compounding of semaglutide and tirzepatide on April 30, 2026. State boards of pharmacy implement enforcement at varying paces.
Which telehealth platforms operate in South Carolina?+
Major platforms with broad South Carolina availability include Ro Body, Hims Weight Loss, Sequence (Weight Watchers). Coverage by program varies — some prescribe branded Wegovy and Zepbound only, others bundle telehealth with compounded preparations where still permitted.
What's the cheapest way to get Wegovy in South Carolina?+
Three main paths: (1) insurance with prior authorization if your plan covers Wegovy (likely $0-$25 copay), (2) NovoCare manufacturer self-pay at $499/month for eligible cash patients, (3) telehealth programs that may bundle branded Wegovy with clinical visits. Direct-to-consumer manufacturer programs typically beat retail pharmacy prices.