This is a practical guide to getting Ozempic in Saskatchewan. I cover Saskatchewan Drug Plan coverage criteria, what to expect at the pharmacy counter, the best online providers for Saskatchewan residents, and how the generic semaglutide launch in May 2026 will change your options. Pricing reflects April 2026 quotes.
If you’re new to Ozempic, start at /ozempic/ for the full overview. If you already have a prescription and want the lowest price, read /ozempic/cheapest/. If you want to compare online providers for Saskatchewan residents, go to /ozempic/best/.
How to Get Ozempic in Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan residents have three realistic paths to an Ozempic prescription:
- Your family doctor or nurse practitioner. If you already see one regularly, ask about Ozempic at your next appointment. This is the cheapest path because there’s no telehealth consult fee.
- A Canadian telehealth service. Maple, Jill Health, DooU and Raven run clinical assessments online and issue a prescription if you qualify.
- A local endocrinologist or diabetes clinic. If your type 2 diabetes is complex or your A1C is poorly controlled, a referral may give you faster access to intensive support.
Once you have a prescription, you fill it at any licensed Canadian pharmacy. Saskatchewan requires a dual-therapy trial (metformin plus a sulfonylurea) before approving EDS, which is a stricter bar than most provinces. Build time into your clinical plan for that documentation.
Ozempic Coverage Under Saskatchewan Drug Plan
Saskatchewan Drug Plan (administered by eHealth Saskatchewan) covers Ozempic as a Exception Drug Status (EDS) benefit for eligible patients [1]. Here are the rules that matter:
Who Qualifies for Coverage
Your prescriber submits an EDS request attesting to type 2 diabetes and an inadequate response to dual therapy with metformin and a sulfonylurea, combined with diet and exercise. Weight-management use is not covered.
What You Pay if Approved
Saskatchewan Drug Plan is income-based. Families pay a six-month deductible; after that Saskatchewan Pharmaceutical Information Program pays 65 to 100 percent of covered costs depending on the subprogram (Family Health Benefits, Special Support, Seniors’ Drug Plan, etc.).
What’s Changed Recently
Saskatchewan moved Ozempic to EDS status in 2019 and has not loosened the criteria since. The province briefly restricted new EDS approvals during the 2023 and 2024 Canada-wide supply shortages. [2]
Saskatchewan’s Special Support Program can cap annual out-of-pocket drug costs based on income and family size. Apply online if your EDS claim is denied or if you are uninsured. See /ozempic/coverage/ for the nationwide view of provincial drug plans.
Best Online Providers for Saskatchewan residents
Telehealth is often the fastest path to Ozempic in Saskatchewan, especially if you don’t have a family doctor. Here are the six Canadian online providers I compared.
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.
| Provider | Monthly Program Cost | Consultation Fee | Coverage | Learn More |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MyRocky ⭐ Top Pick | $300–$310 | $99 once (lab work included) | All 10 provinces | Visit MyRocky |
| Felix Health | Brand $250–$310 / Generic $149+ / Generic $149+ | $99 setup + $40 quarterly | All provinces except QC | Visit Felix |
| Maple | $270–$320 | $69 per consult | All provinces | Visit Maple |
| Hims Canada | Generic semaglutide available — pricing on consult | Included | Select provinces | Visit Hims |
| Jill Health | Pricing on assessment | Included in program | Most provinces | Visit Jill |
| DooU | Pricing on assessment | Included in program | Most provinces | Visit DooU |
| Raven | Pricing on assessment | Included in program | Most provinces | Visit Raven |
Provider reviews: MyRocky (top pick), Felix, Maple, Hims Canada, Jill Health, DooU and Raven.
All six telehealth services on this list accept new patients from Saskatchewan as of April 2026.
For a full scenario-by-scenario breakdown across all provinces, read /ozempic/best/.
Pharmacy Options and Pricing in Saskatchewan
Ozempic sticker price in Saskatchewan typically runs $250 to $375 per month for the 1.0 mg dose, depending on the pharmacy [3]. Here’s how the major chains compare.
| Pharmacy | 1.0 mg Price (April 2026) | Membership Required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Costco | $250 to $265 | No (for pharmacy use) | Lowest in-person price in most cities |
| Walmart | $270 to $295 | No | Wide network across the province |
| Shoppers Drug Mart | $310 to $345 | No | Most locations; PC Optimum points |
| Rexall | $305 to $340 | No | Higher default markup; watch for promos |
| Independent pharmacies | $270 to $360 | No | Varies; some price-match Costco |
You do not need a Costco membership to use Costco’s pharmacy in Canada [4]. See /ozempic/costco/ for provincial pricing detail.
Major Saskatchewan Cities With Ozempic-Filling Pharmacies
Saskatoon, Regina, Prince Albert, Moose Jaw, Swift Current all have multiple licensed pharmacies filling Ozempic. If you live in a rural area, your local independent pharmacy or a mail-order dispense from a telehealth provider is typically the easiest route.
Medical Expense Tax Credit for Ozempic Spending
Out-of-pocket costs for Ozempic count as eligible medical expenses for the federal Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC) [5]. For the 2026 tax year, the threshold is the lesser of $2,834 or 3% of net income. Keep every pharmacy receipt. Saskatchewan also has a provincial tax credit component that stacks on top of the federal METC.
Generic Semaglutide Now Available in Saskatchewan
Novo Nordisk’s Canadian data exclusivity on semaglutide expired on January 4, 2026 [6]. Health Canada has now authorized two generic manufacturers — Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (April 28, 2026) and Apotex Inc. (May 1, 2026). Additional applications from Sandoz, Teva Canada and other manufacturers remain under review. Industry timelines point to the first generic semaglutide reaching Canadian pharmacies in May 2026, priced around $100 to $150 per month.
For Saskatchewan residents, that means three things:
- Out-of-pocket cost for Ozempic alternatives drops sharply once generics reach pharmacy shelves.
- Saskatchewan Drug Plan may list the generic for coverage ahead of or alongside Ozempic once formulary review completes.
- Your telehealth provider or pharmacist can switch you from Ozempic to generic semaglutide once both are available, as long as your prescriber agrees.
Generic semaglutide is now also available in-person at Canadian pharmacies including Shoppers Drug Mart, Rexall, Costco, and Walmart, typically priced at $85 to $120 per month depending on the pharmacy — with Costco usually lowest. That makes the in-person retail route generally cheaper than telehealth providers like Felix Health, which charges $149 per month for the same generic.
FAQ
Is Ozempic covered by Saskatchewan Drug Plan?
Saskatchewan Drug Plan covers Ozempic as a Exception Drug Status (EDS) benefit for type 2 diabetes when specific clinical criteria are met. Weight-management use is not covered.
How do I submit a Saskatchewan Drug Plan coverage request?
Your prescriber submits the request on your behalf using the provincial eForm or fax form. Saskatchewan expects documentation of type 2 diabetes and prior antidiabetic drug trials. Approval is usually faster when submitted electronically.
Does Maple or Jill Health ship Ozempic to Saskatchewan?
Yes, Maple and Jill Health both prescribe and coordinate dispensing for Saskatchewan residents. Maple offers live video visits; Jill Health runs an asynchronous program with dietitian support included.
What’s the cheapest pharmacy in Saskatchewan for Ozempic?
Costco typically runs $250 to $265 for the 1.0 mg dose in Saskatchewan, about $50 to $80 below Shoppers Drug Mart or Rexall. You do not need a Costco membership to use the pharmacy.
Since the May 2026 generic launch, the cheapest way to get the Ozempic molecule in Saskatchewan is generic semaglutide (Apo-Semaglutide), roughly $88 to $99 per month at Costco Pharmacy, well below the brand price. Ask your pharmacist about substituting the generic. See our generic semaglutide guide.
Is generic semaglutide covered by my provincial plan?
Health Canada has approved Dr. Reddy's and Apotex (April–May 2026), and Saskatchewan Drug Plan is updating its formulary listings through June 2026 (typical timeline for new generic listings). When listed, generic semaglutide is expected to be covered at a substantially lower cost than brand Ozempic. Expect listing to follow the launch by a few months.
Can I use Ozempic for weight loss in Saskatchewan?
Off-label weight-management use is legal and common in Canada, but Saskatchewan Drug Plan will not cover Ozempic for weight loss. Wegovy is the on-label weight-management option, though provincial coverage for Wegovy is similarly limited.
Where can I track supply of Ozempic in Canada?
Health Canada’s Drug Shortages Canada website lists current supply status for Ozempic and other GLP-1 medications. As of April 2026 availability has largely normalized after the 2023 and 2024 shortages.
This article is informational and is not a substitute for medical advice from your prescribing clinician. Always confirm pricing directly with the pharmacy before filling.
Sources
- Saskatchewan Drug Plan (administered by eHealth Saskatchewan): Official Program Information: Provincial drug plan rules, eligibility and enrolment details for Saskatchewan.
- Saskatchewan Drug Plan Formulary: Semaglutide Listing: Check current formulary listing and coverage conditions for Ozempic in Saskatchewan.
- Health Canada: Drug Product Database for Ozempic (semaglutide): Official Canadian listing of approved Ozempic products, DINs and product monograph.
- Costco Canada: Pharmacy Services: Costco Canada pharmacy does not require a membership under Canadian regulation.
- Canada Revenue Agency: Medical Expense Tax Credit: 2026 tax-year METC threshold of $2,834 and eligible medical-expense rules.
- Patented Medicine Prices Review Board: Generic Drug Pipeline (2026): Industry reporting on generic semaglutide submissions under Health Canada review.
- SUSTAIN 6: Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Type 2 Diabetes (NEJM, 2016): Landmark cardiovascular outcomes trial for Ozempic.
- Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH): Semaglutide Reimbursement Review: CADTH reimbursement guidance used by provincial drug plans.
- Drug Shortages Canada: Health Canada-run site tracking current Ozempic and semaglutide supply status.