GLP-1 medications in Nevada: Medicaid coverage, cost and access
What we evaluated: Nevada’s Medicaid position on GLP-1s for obesity, and what the treatment costs there
Date verified: January 2026 (KFF); state actions through April 2026
Direct answer: We hold no dated Nevada bulletin on weight-loss GLP-1 coverage, and we will not guess. Nationally, only 13 state fee-for-service programmes cover GLP-1s for obesity (KFF, January 2026), so the odds are against it — but four federal rules still give you a path regardless of what Nevada decided. Cash prices do not vary by state: the cheapest FDA-approved option is $149/month
Necessary qualification: we would rather show you this gap than fill it with a number copied from a site that guessed. Call the number on your Medicaid card and ask specifically about the weight-loss indication
Method: every figure is a total ongoing monthly cost (medication + any required membership), derived by plan total ÷ plan months. See our pricing-verification methodology.
Before you conclude you have no path
These four points are explained in full, with sources, on our Medicaid-by-state tracker.
Nevada in context
Among Nevada’s neighbouring states, Utah does cover GLP-1s for obesity under Medicaid. Nationally, 13 state Medicaid fee-for-service programmes covered GLP-1s for obesity as of January 2026 — down from 16 after California, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and South Carolina all cut coverage on 1 January. Massachusetts is scheduled to end coverage on 1 July 2026. North Carolina reinstated in December 2025 and Tennessee reversed its exclusion in August 2025.
Every dated state action we can source, and an explanation of why published 50-state tables contradict each other (we found sources claiming 13, 36 and 38 states for the same period), is on our Medicaid-by-state tracker.
What GLP-1 treatment costs in Nevada
Cash pricing does not vary by state, so rather than reprint the national tables here, we keep them in one place and keep them current: the full pricing database (92 offerings across 19 providers, sorted on total monthly cost).
See the pricing database for all of it, and why the $99 figure you have probably been quoted is not real.
Verifying a compounding pharmacy licensed in Nevada
If you use a compounded GLP-1, the pharmacy matters more than the brand on the telehealth website. Compounded medications are dispensed by state-licensed pharmacies, and the Nevada Board of Pharmacy publishes a licensee database you can search.
Ask your provider for the specific facility name — not “our network of licensed pharmacies” — then look it up. Also ask whether it is a 503A state-licensed pharmacy or a 503B FDA-registered outsourcing facility; these are different regulatory categories, and registration is per-facility, not per-company. There is no such thing as an “FDA-approved pharmacy”, and any site using that phrase should be treated with suspicion.
Our full pharmacy-evaluation checklist →
Frequently asked questions
Does Nevada Medicaid cover Wegovy or Zepbound for weight loss?
We hold no dated Nevada bulletin and will not guess. Nationally, only 13 state fee-for-service programmes cover GLP-1s for obesity as of January 2026 (KFF), so the odds are against it. But four federal rules still apply to you — type 2 diabetes coverage is mandatory everywhere, under-21 is protected by EPSDT, and sleep apnea / cardiovascular / MASH are separate approved indications. Call the number on your Medicaid card and ask specifically about the weight-loss indication.
What is the cheapest GLP-1 option in Nevada?
The same as everywhere else — cash pricing does not vary by state. The cheapest FDA-approved option is $149/month (Foundayo oral pill via LillyDirect, or the oral Wegovy tablet via NovoCare). The cheapest compounded totals are $110 and $133/month. See our pricing database.
Can I use a telehealth GLP-1 provider in Nevada?
Every provider we track states availability in Nevada, with two national exceptions worth knowing: Oak Longevity does not serve California, and bmiMD charges $379.99 in California and North Carolina versus $289 elsewhere. We have not independently audited state licensure for any provider.
Sources
- KFF — "Medicaid Coverage of and Spending on GLP-1s", January 2026. The 13-state count.
- Nevada Board of Pharmacy — licensee database, the primary source for verifying a pharmacy licence in Nevada.
- CDC — adult obesity prevalence by state.
- Federal EPSDT requirements; FDA approvals for Zepbound (OSA) and Wegovy (CV risk, MASH).
- Our Medicaid-by-state tracker and pricing database.