This is a local guide to getting Ozempic in Toronto, Ontario. I cover where to fill your prescription, ODB coverage, telehealth options available to Torontonians, and how the generic semaglutide launch in May 2026 will change prices at the counter. All figures reflect April 2026 quotes from local pharmacies.
For the full provincial view, read /ozempic/ontario/. For national pricing, see /ozempic/cheapest/ and /ozempic/costco/.
How to Get Ozempic in Toronto
Torontonians have three realistic paths to an Ozempic prescription:
- Your family doctor or walk-in clinic. Toronto has hundreds of walk-in clinics and family practices that prescribe Ozempic for type 2 diabetes. A first appointment is usually the cheapest path because there’s no telehealth fee.
- A Canadian telehealth service. If you don’t have a family doctor or want to skip wait times, a telehealth provider like Felix Health or Maple can issue a prescription after a quick online assessment.
- A local endocrinologist or obesity-medicine specialist. Toronto has the largest concentration of endocrinologists and obesity medicine physicians in Canada. Wait times for a non-urgent endocrinology referral in downtown Toronto are typically 8 to 16 weeks as of April 2026.
Because you have Ozempic-filling pharmacies in every Toronto neighbourhood, in-person pickup is almost always faster than mail-order for your first pen. Mail-order makes sense once you are stable on a dose.
Where to Fill Your Ozempic Prescription in Toronto
Toronto has pharmacies in every neighbourhood filling Ozempic, but prices vary by $60 to $100 for the same prefilled pen depending on where you go [1]. Here’s the shortlist.
Costco Pharmacy Locations
Costco is consistently the cheapest in-person option in Toronto at $250 to $260 per month for the 1.0 mg dose. You do not need a Costco membership to use Costco’s pharmacy in Canada [2]. The pharmacy windows are staffed directly, so you can walk in and fill without entering the warehouse. Toronto-area Costco warehouses: Downsview (King’s Highway 401); Etobicoke (Queensway); Scarborough (Warden); North York (Billy Bishop / Weston); Vaughan Interchange Way.
Chain Pharmacies and Independents
| Pharmacy | 1.0 mg Price (April 2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Costco (Toronto) | $250 to $260 | Lowest in-person price; no membership needed |
| Walmart | $270 to $290 | Wide coverage; often the runner-up |
| Shoppers Drug Mart | $310 to $345 | Every neighbourhood; PC Optimum points |
| Rexall | $305 to $340 | Higher default markup; watch for promos |
| Independent pharmacies | Varies | Some in downtown Toronto and North York price-match Costco |
Neighbourhoods With the Most Pharmacy Density
downtown Toronto, North York, Etobicoke, Scarborough, East York all have multiple Ozempic-filling pharmacies within walking distance. If you live in a newer suburb, the nearest Costco or Walmart is usually the best combination of price and availability.
Online Ozempic Providers Serving Toronto
Telehealth is often the fastest path to Ozempic in Toronto, especially if you don’t have a family doctor. Here are the six Canadian 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+ | $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 Toronto as of April 2026.
Mail-Order Delivery Timing to Toronto
If you order Ozempic through a Canadian telehealth service, expect 1 to 3 business days inside the GTA and within 2 to 5 business days to Mississauga, Markham and Oakville. Refrigeration during transit is standard. Your first shipment usually arrives faster than subsequent refills.
ODB Coverage for Toronto Residents
Ontario Drug Benefit covers Ozempic as a Limited Use benefit for type 2 diabetes [3]. To qualify, your prescriber submits a coverage request documenting the diagnosis and prior antidiabetic drug trials. Weight-management use is not covered under any provincial plan in Canada.
For the full provincial rules including income-based subprograms and deductibles, read the full guide at /ozempic/ontario/.
Medical Expense Tax Credit for Toronto Residents
Out-of-pocket spending on Ozempic counts as an eligible medical expense for the federal Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC) [4]. For the 2026 tax year, the threshold is the lesser of $2,834 or 3% of net income. Ontario also has a provincial tax-credit component that stacks on top of the federal METC. Keep every pharmacy receipt in a folder for tax time.
Generic Semaglutide Now Available in Toronto
Novo Nordisk’s Canadian data exclusivity on semaglutide expired on January 4, 2026 [5]. 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 Torontonians, that means:
- Out-of-pocket pen prices in local pharmacies should drop sharply once generics reach the shelf.
- ODB will review the generic listing for formulary inclusion, potentially at lower copay than brand Ozempic.
- Your telehealth provider or pharmacist can switch you from Ozempic to the generic 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
Which pharmacy in Toronto has the cheapest Ozempic?
Costco Pharmacy. Across Toronto, Costco prices the 1.0 mg Ozempic pen around $250 to $260 per month. Walmart runs a close second. You do not need a Costco membership to use the pharmacy in Canada.
Since the May 2026 generic launch, the cheapest way to get the Ozempic molecule in Toronto 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.
Can I get Ozempic delivered to Toronto?
Yes. Canadian telehealth services including Felix Health, Maple, Jill Health, DooU and Raven mail-order Ozempic in refrigerated packaging. Expect 1 to 3 business days inside the GTA and within 2 to 5 business days to Mississauga, Markham and Oakville.
Does ODB cover Ozempic in Toronto?
ODB covers Ozempic as a Limited Use benefit for type 2 diabetes. Your prescriber submits a coverage request. Weight-management use is not covered. For full details, read /ozempic/ontario/.
Can I use Ozempic for weight loss in Toronto?
Off-label weight-management use is legal and common in Canada, but ODB will not reimburse Ozempic for weight loss. Wegovy is the on-label weight-management GLP-1, though provincial coverage for Wegovy is similarly limited.
Are Toronto endocrinology referrals fast?
Toronto has the largest concentration of endocrinologists and obesity medicine physicians in Canada. Wait times for a non-urgent endocrinology referral in downtown Toronto are typically 8 to 16 weeks as of April 2026.
Is generic semaglutide sold in local pharmacies?
Generic semaglutide (Apo-Semaglutide from Apotex, Dr. Reddy's generic) is now available at major pharmacies in Toronto — Costco, Walmart, Shoppers Drug Mart, Rexall and independents — since the May 2026 launch. Expect a roughly 60 percent price drop from brand Ozempic.
What should I bring to my first pharmacy visit in Toronto?
Your provincial health card, your prescription (paper or electronic), any private insurance card and a list of any current medications. If you have a ODB coverage approval letter, bring that too.
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
- Ontario Drug Benefit: Official Program Information: Full provincial plan guide for Ontario including enrolment, deductibles and copays.
- Costco Canada: Pharmacy Services: Costco Canada pharmacy does not require a membership under Canadian regulation.
- Health Canada: Drug Product Database for Ozempic (semaglutide): Official Canadian listing of approved Ozempic products and product monograph.
- 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.