Mounjaro is the brand name for tirzepatide, Eli Lilly’s dual GLP-1 and GIP receptor agonist. In Canada it is approved for type 2 diabetes, and many Canadians also take it off-label for weight loss while waiting for broader Zepbound access. I’ve helped Canadian patients compare Mounjaro providers since 2024. This guide ranks six telehealth services, four major pharmacies and what Eli Lilly offers for patient support.

Method: I compared monthly cost for the 15 mg maintenance dose, provincial availability, how each provider handles private-insurance paperwork and whether they support the six-step titration. Pricing reflects Canadian quotes gathered in April 2026.

If you’re cross-shopping Mounjaro against semaglutide products, start with Mounjaro vs Ozempic. If price is your only concern, /mounjaro/cheapest/ goes deeper on pharmacy pricing.

Generic semaglutide (a different drug from Mounjaro) launched in Canada in May 2026 at ~$88/month at Costco. Mounjaro is tirzepatide and has no generic equivalent yet — Eli Lilly's patents extend through the mid-2030s. If your prescriber considers semaglutide clinically suitable for you (Ozempic-equivalent doses, type 2 diabetes), generic semaglutide is now significantly cheaper. → Read the full guide to generic semaglutide in Canada.

Best Mounjaro Providers at a Glance

The short version: Mounjaro is the most expensive GLP-1 you can buy in Canada, with sticker prices running roughly $700 to $830 per month at the 15 mg dose [1]. Provider choice matters more for cost than it does with semaglutide, because a $100-per-month pharmacy spread adds up to $1,200 a year. The six online providers below all dispense Mounjaro where clinically appropriate.

Top pick: MyRocky (operated by Rocky Health Inc.) is our highest-rated Canadian GLP-1 provider in 2026 (9.4/10). Per-pen pricing is roughly comparable across the major Canadian telehealth services - what MyRocky wins on is total value: the $99 one-time consult includes lab work and the first prescription, there are no recurring quarterly fees, free fast delivery is included, and it operates its own LegitScript-certified pharmacy in Mississauga. MyRocky also serves all 10 provinces (Felix and Hims do not operate in Quebec) and has been trusted by 350,000+ Canadians. Visit MyRocky or read our full MyRocky review.

ProviderMonthly Program CostConsultation FeeCoverageLearn More
MyRocky ⭐ Top Pick$300–$310$99 once (lab work included)All 10 provincesVisit MyRocky
Felix HealthBrand $250–$310 / Generic $149+ / Generic $149+$99 setup + $40 quarterlyAll provinces except QCVisit Felix
Maple$270–$320$69 per consultAll provincesVisit Maple
Hims CanadaGeneric semaglutide available — pricing on consultIncludedSelect provincesVisit Hims
Jill HealthPricing on assessmentIncluded in programMost provincesVisit Jill
DooUPricing on assessmentIncluded in programMost provincesVisit DooU
RavenPricing on assessmentIncluded in programMost provincesVisit Raven

Provider reviews: MyRocky (top pick), Felix, Maple, Hims Canada, Jill Health, DooU and Raven.

Quick calls:

  • Best overall for diabetes patients: Felix Health (lowest telehealth program price, handles PA submissions).
  • Best for weight-management use with coaching: Jill Health (dietitian and behaviour-change coach inside the 12-month program).
  • Best if you live in Quebec or New Brunswick: Maple.
  • Best in-person pharmacy: Costco (around $700 to $740 per month at 15 mg).

Online Telehealth Providers Compared

Mounjaro prescribing through Canadian telehealth is newer than Ozempic, but all six providers here now offer a tirzepatide pathway for patients who meet the clinical criteria. Coverage varies by province, so double-check eligibility at checkout.

Felix Health

Strongest value play. Felix (/reviews/felix-health/) uses an asynchronous intake: you fill out a clinical questionnaire, a Canadian physician reviews within 24 hours, and the prescription dispenses from a partnered pharmacy. First visit is free; follow-ups cost $40.

Where Felix shines:

  • Lowest telehealth program pricing across the six services I reviewed.
  • Handles prior-authorization paperwork for private insurance.
  • Active in Ontario, British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, PEI and Newfoundland.

Where Felix falls short:

  • Not available in Quebec or New Brunswick.
  • No bundled dietitian or coaching support.

Maple

Best for live, nationwide care. Maple (/reviews/maple/) connects you with a Canadian doctor by text or video within 15 minutes. You pay $69 per consult. Prescriptions go to your pharmacy of choice.

Where Maple shines:

  • All ten provinces including Quebec and New Brunswick.
  • Live visits around the clock.
  • Often included in employer benefits plans.

Where Maple falls short:

  • Consult fees stack up during Mounjaro’s six-step titration.
  • Medication cost is separate. You pay the pharmacy directly.

Hims Canada

Best for bundled monthly pricing. Hims Canada (/reviews/hims/) wraps the assessment, prescription, medication and monitoring into one monthly charge. The patient app handles dose reminders and side-effect tracking.

Where Hims shines:

  • Predictable billing, no surprise consult fees during titration.
  • Strong mobile app for first-time tirzepatide users.

Where Hims falls short:

  • Not yet active in every province. Check eligibility at checkout.
  • Pricing hidden until you complete the assessment.

Jill Health

Best for off-label weight management. Jill Health (/reviews/jill-health/) runs a structured 12-month GLP-1 and dual-agonist program with registered dietitians, nurse check-ins and behaviour coaching. For Mounjaro used off-label for weight loss, the clinical touchpoints pay off during the six-step titration.

Where Jill shines:

  • Dietitian sessions included in the subscription.
  • Frequent check-ins reduce side-effect drop-offs.
  • Behaviour-change coaching addresses the non-medication side of weight loss.

Where Jill falls short:

  • 12-month commitment is longer than month-to-month alternatives.
  • Higher total cost than Felix if you only want a prescription and refills.

DooU

Solid middle-ground. DooU (/reviews/doou/) bundles assessment, prescription and pharmacy dispensing. Smaller Canadian team than Felix or Maple, which shows up in faster one-on-one clinician messaging.

Where DooU shines:

  • Clinician messaging replies within a business day.
  • Available in most provinces.

Where DooU falls short:

  • Less brand recognition, so some pharmacies may not be familiar with them on refill calls.

Raven

Newer entrant with a clean intake. Raven (/reviews/raven/) launched its GLP-1 program in 2025 and added tirzepatide shortly after. Pricing is program-based, quoted after the clinical assessment.

Where Raven shines:

  • Clear informed-consent documentation for tirzepatide.
  • Responsive in-app messaging with the clinical team.

Where Raven falls short:

  • Limited published patient-outcome data given the recent launch.

Best Pharmacy Options for Filling a Mounjaro Prescription

Mounjaro is where pharmacy choice hits your wallet hardest. Sticker price in Canada runs $700 to $830 per month at the 15 mg maintenance dose, and the spread between chains is about $100 per month [1]. Here’s how the major pharmacies compare for the 15 mg KwikPen.

Pharmacy15 mg Price (April 2026)Membership Required?Notes
Costco$700 to $740No (for pharmacy use)Lowest in-person price in most provinces
Walmart$720 to $770NoWide national network
Shoppers Drug Mart$750 to $800NoMost convenient; PC Optimum points
Rexall$770 to $830NoHighest default markup; occasional promos
Independent pharmacies$720 to $810NoVaries; some will price-match Costco

Costco Pharmacy

Costco is the cheapest in-person pharmacy for Mounjaro in most Canadian cities. A Costco membership is not required to use the pharmacy under Canadian law [2]. Expect around $700 to $740 for a 15 mg monthly supply. Deep-dive at /mounjaro/costco/.

Walmart Pharmacy

Walmart runs second on price for the 15 mg dose. Staff handle Mounjaro’s prior-auth paperwork comfortably because of their volume. No membership required.

Shoppers Drug Mart

Shoppers wins on convenience and loses on price. Prices run $50 to $80 above Costco for the same 15 mg KwikPen. The offset: PC Optimum points on pharmacy purchases, which convert to groceries at any Loblaw-owned chain.

Rexall

Rexall has the highest default markup among the major chains for Mounjaro, sometimes crossing $830. Rexall Be Well membership offers modest savings. Watch for quarterly promos if you’re already a Rexall customer, otherwise Costco or Walmart will beat them on price.

Eli Lilly Canada Patient Support

Eli Lilly Canada runs a patient support program called Lilly PatientOne that covers Mounjaro and other Lilly medications [3]. Unlike Novo Nordisk’s programs, there is no consumer-facing savings card in Canada. Support is delivered through your prescriber and Lilly’s patient coordinator team.

  • Reimbursement navigation: Lilly’s team helps coordinate private-insurance paperwork and flags provincial coverage where it exists.
  • Compassionate-use access for patients who meet financial-hardship criteria.
  • Injection-training support materials for first-time pen users.
  • Dose-reminder and refill-tracking tools via the patient portal.

Enrolment is free and coordinated through your prescriber. Pair it with any telehealth service above for the strongest combined support. See /mounjaro/savings-card/ for the complete run-down on Lilly’s patient programs.

Which Mounjaro Provider Is Best for Your Situation?

Different Canadians end up with different providers. Insurance coverage, province, existing family-doctor access and how much titration support you want all change the answer. Here’s a scenario-based map:

Your SituationBest ProviderWhy
Type 2 diabetes, private insurance, outside QuebecFelix HealthLowest program cost; handles PA submissions
Live in Quebec or New BrunswickMapleOnly major telehealth service active in both provinces
Using Mounjaro off-label for weight lossJill HealthBuilt-in dietitian and coaching; strongest titration support
Already have a prescribing family doctorCostco pharmacyLowest dispensing price; no consult fee
Want predictable bundled billingHims CanadaAll-in monthly charge plus polished patient app
Missed a dose and need same-day careMapleLive video or text visit within 15 minutes
Cash-pay, price is the top factorFelix + CostcoCheapest combo for most provinces

Caveat: Mounjaro for weight management is always off-label in Canada. If your main goal is weight loss and Zepbound is available in your province, ask your provider whether on-label Zepbound is a better fit. Insurance coverage differs substantially between the two, and pharmacy substitution rules do not treat them as interchangeable.

Mounjaro, Zepbound and Generic Tirzepatide

Three questions come up on every Mounjaro consult I’ve watched: should I switch to Zepbound, is there a generic available now, and should I wait for something cheaper? Quick answers:

Zepbound

Zepbound is tirzepatide dosed and approved for weight management. It uses the same active ingredient and doses as Mounjaro (2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, 15 mg weekly). Health Canada approved Zepbound for chronic weight management in adults with BMI ≥30 (or ≥27 with a weight-related comorbidity). Where Zepbound is available, it tends to have better private-insurance coverage for weight-loss use than Mounjaro off-label.

Generic Tirzepatide

Tirzepatide is covered by multiple Eli Lilly patents that run well into the 2030s [4]. No Canadian generic is expected before 2030 at the earliest. If you’re trying to decide whether to wait, the honest answer is don’t. Tirzepatide is not the semaglutide story.

Generic Semaglutide

If Mounjaro’s cost is the blocker, generic semaglutide is now a meaningfully cheaper alternative — available in Canadian pharmacies since May 2026 at roughly $88 to $150 per month. Semaglutide is a different molecule with different effectiveness and side-effect profiles, so switching isn’t one-to-one. Read generic semaglutide in Canada for the full timeline.

Generic Semaglutide at In-Person Canadian Pharmacies

Cash retail prices for generic semaglutide at Canadian pharmacies are now coming in below the telehealth alternatives, based on early Canadian consumer reports. Costco Pharmacy is the lowest reliable option at roughly $88 to $99 per month (confirmed pickups: $88.88 GTA, $88 Ontario, $99 Laval, $91 Medicine Hat). Walmart and Loblaws No Frills typically come in around $95 to $110 per month. Shoppers Drug Mart, Rexall and London Drugs are running roughly $100 to $120 per month (one Halifax-area Shoppers fill reported $113 for the 0.25mg starter dose). Apotex's Apo-Semaglutide Injection began shipping to Canadian pharmacies on May 20, 2026, with Dr. Reddy's generic also launching in May 2026.

That makes in-person pharmacies — especially Costco — meaningfully cheaper than telehealth providers for generic semaglutide. Felix Health and Hims Canada both list $149 per month all-in for the same generic Apo-Semaglutide on their public pricing pages. For most Canadians with a valid prescription, walking it into a local pharmacy is now the cheapest reliable path.

Pricing context: per the Globe and Mail, Apotex's published wholesale price is $78.14 for a four-week supply — roughly one-third of brand-name Ozempic's $240.48 wholesale price. Retail estimates above reflect that wholesale plus each chain's standard dispensing fee and markup. See also coverage from CBC News on the Canadian launch. Note: This generic launch is for semaglutide (Ozempic-equivalent), not tirzepatide. Generic Mounjaro is still years away — Eli Lilly's patents on tirzepatide extend through 2036+. Under the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance framework, the maximum public drug plan price for generic semaglutide is approximately $114 per four-week supply with two manufacturers approved, dropping to roughly $80 once a third manufacturer launches.

FAQ

Which Mounjaro provider handles insurance paperwork for me?

Felix Health and Jill Health submit prior-authorization paperwork on your behalf for private insurance. Maple, Hims Canada, DooU and Raven typically provide the forms for you to submit yourself. If your insurer requires a PA, the time savings from Felix or Jill are worth it.

Can I get Mounjaro without a family doctor?

Yes. All six telehealth providers in this article prescribe Mounjaro after a clinical assessment. You do not need an existing family-doctor relationship. A Canadian physician licensed in your province reviews your case.

Is Mounjaro covered by provincial drug plans?

Provincial coverage for Mounjaro varies by province and by indication. Ontario’s ODB, BC PharmaCare, Alberta Blue Cross and Quebec RAMQ list tirzepatide for type 2 diabetes under special-authorization criteria. Weight-management use is rarely covered. Private insurance is usually the more reliable path. Read /mounjaro/coverage/ for province-by-province detail.

Does provider choice matter during Mounjaro titration?

Yes. Mounjaro titrates through six dose steps (2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5 and 15 mg weekly) over about six months. Side-effect support during the first three months makes a real difference to whether you reach your target dose. Jill Health and Hims Canada provide the strongest built-in titration support; Felix handles it with messaging-based follow-ups.

Is Mounjaro safer or more effective than Ozempic?

In the SURPASS-2 head-to-head trial, tirzepatide 15 mg outperformed semaglutide 1.0 mg on both A1C reduction and weight loss in type 2 diabetes [5]. The side-effect profiles are broadly similar and dose-dependent. For a full comparison see /mounjaro-vs-ozempic/.

Should I wait for generic tirzepatide instead of starting Mounjaro now?

No. Tirzepatide patents extend into the 2030s. If cost is the barrier, consider generic semaglutide when it launches in May 2026 as a different-molecule alternative, but there is no near-term generic tirzepatide.

Is it safe to order Mounjaro from a Canadian telehealth provider?

Yes, as long as the provider uses Canadian-licensed prescribers and dispenses through a licensed Canadian pharmacy. All six services in this article meet that standard. Avoid any service that ships Mounjaro without a Canadian prescription or asks you to upload a U.S. prescription.

This article is informational and is not a substitute for medical advice from your prescribing clinician. Always confirm pricing directly with the provider or pharmacy before enrolling.

Sources