This is a molecule-level guide to semaglutide in Montreal. Rather than focusing on a single brand, I cover how to choose between Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus and the newly launched generic, when Montrealers can now get generic semaglutide at local pharmacies, why compounded semaglutide is not legal in Canada, and which telehealth services operate in the city. Pricing reflects April 2026 quotes.

If you already know which brand you need, jump to the Ozempic in Montreal guide for diabetes-focused pharmacy pricing or the Wegovy in Montreal guide for weight-management insurance details. For the full provincial view, read our semaglutide in Quebec hub.

What Semaglutide Means for Montrealers

Semaglutide is the active pharmaceutical ingredient in three Health Canada-approved brand products plus the newly launched generic [1]:

  • Ozempic (injectable, 0.25 to 2.0 mg weekly). On-label for type 2 diabetes. Widely prescribed off-label for weight loss. Cash price $250 to $375 per month in Montreal.
  • Wegovy (injectable, 0.25 to 2.4 mg weekly). On-label for chronic weight management (BMI 30+, or 27+ with comorbidity). Cash price $540 to $570 per month.
  • Rybelsus (oral tablet, 3, 7 or 14 mg daily). On-label for type 2 diabetes. The oral option. Cash price roughly $250 to $300 per month.
  • Generic semaglutide (injectable, launched May 2026 for diabetes). Manufactured by Apotex (Apo-Semaglutide) and Dr. Reddy's, with Sandoz, Teva Canada and others still under Health Canada review. Cash pharmacy price $88 to $120 per month for diabetes doses; $150 to $250 per month for the future 2.4 mg weight-management dose (Wegovy-equivalent), expected in late 2026 or early 2027 pending Health Canada approval.

Semaglutide Products Available in Montreal

Every major pharmacy chain in Montreal stocks all three brand semaglutide products as of April 2026 [2]. The table below summarizes how each compares for Montrealers.

ProductFormIndicationTypical Monthly Cost (April 2026)Public Plan Status
OzempicInjectable (0.25 to 2.0 mg)Type 2 diabetes (off-label for weight loss)$250 to $375RAMQ exception medication
WegovyInjectable (0.25 to 2.4 mg)Chronic weight management$540 to $570Not covered
RybelsusOral tablet (3, 7 or 14 mg)Type 2 diabetes$250 to $300RAMQ exception medication
Generic semaglutideInjectable (various)Diabetes first, weight management later$88 to $120Under formulary review (2026–2027)

Felix Health and Hims Canada do not operate in Quebec. For Montrealers, Maple is the strongest telehealth option because it offers French-language consults and handles RAMQ exception-medication paperwork. CHUM and McGill University Health Centre are the primary endocrinology referral hubs.

Choosing Your Semaglutide Product in Montreal

Here’s a quick decision framework for Montrealers. Your prescribing clinician makes the final call.

If you have type 2 diabetes

Ozempic is the default because RAMQ lists it as a exception medication benefit, your co-pay is typically the cheapest of the three brand options, and the weekly injection is convenient. Rybelsus is useful if you prefer an oral tablet or have a needle aversion. See the Ozempic in Montreal guide for pharmacy-by-pharmacy pricing.

If you have obesity and a BMI of 30 or higher

Wegovy is the Health Canada-approved product for chronic weight management. RAMQ does not cover Wegovy, so your best path to a lower monthly cost is private insurance with prior authorization. See the Wegovy in Montreal guide for BMI eligibility and prior-auth paperwork.

If you want the cheapest legal option

Consider generic semaglutide. It launched in Canadian pharmacies in May 2026 at about $88 to $120 per month for the diabetes dose [3]. Generic semaglutide (Apo-Semaglutide from Apotex, Dr. Reddy's generic) is now the cheapest cash option in Montreal at roughly $88 to $99 per month at Costco Pharmacy, well below brand Ozempic at $250 to $310. Montreal-area Costco warehouses: Saint-Hubert (Boulevard Taschereau); Anjou (Boulevard Wilfrid-Hamel); Boucherville (de Montarville); Laval (Boulevard Le Corbusier).

Generic Semaglutide Launch in Montreal

Novo Nordisk’s Canadian data exclusivity on semaglutide expired on January 4, 2026 [4]. 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. Both shipped to Canadian pharmacies for type 2 diabetes (Ozempic-equivalent) on May 20, 2026. A generic 2.4 mg weight-management dose (Wegovy-equivalent) will likely follow by late 2026 or early 2027, with generic cash prices expected to ease further as more manufacturers launch and several provinces review the generic for public-plan coverage [3].

Montreal pharmacies should see generic semaglutide in May 2026 via the Jean Coutu, Familiprix, Uniprix and Pharmaprix networks. Groupe Jean Coutu and McMahon handle Quebec distribution, so the launch sequencing may differ slightly from English Canada.

For the national timeline and manufacturer detail, read our generic semaglutide guide.

Compounded Semaglutide: Not a Legal Option in Montreal

Health Canada prohibits the compounding of semaglutide by community pharmacies [5]. Any website or clinic advertising "compounded semaglutide" in Montreal is operating outside Canadian drug-safety regulation. Product purity, sterility and potency cannot be verified. Serious adverse events have been reported in the U.S. from compounded GLP-1 use.

  • Compounded semaglutide has not been reviewed by Health Canada for safety, quality or efficacy.
  • Provincial colleges of pharmacists in Quebec prohibit licensed pharmacies from dispensing compounded semaglutide.
  • Health Canada issued public warnings against compounded weight-loss drugs in 2023 and 2024.

If you encounter a telehealth service offering "compounded semaglutide" in Montreal, it is either (a) not operating legally in Canada or (b) referring you to an unregulated U.S. source. Stick with Health Canada-approved Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus or the now-available generic.

Telehealth vs In-Person Semaglutide in Montreal

Both paths are widely available to Montrealers. Here’s how the six Canadian telehealth services compare.

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$99 setup + $40 quarterlyAll provinces except QCVisit Felix
Maple$270–$320$69 per consultAll provincesVisit Maple
Hims CanadaGeneric $149 all-inIncludedSelect 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.

Coverage gap: Felix Health, Hims Canada are not available in Montreal as of April 2026 because they do not operate in Quebec. Montrealers should focus on the remaining options above.

Cost of Semaglutide in Montreal

Your monthly cost depends on which product you take and where you fill it. Quick overview for Montreal:

  • Ozempic 1.0 mg: $250 to $375 per month brand cash; Costco is cheapest at about $250 to $265.
  • Wegovy 2.4 mg: $540 to $570 per month brand cash; Costco is cheapest at $490 to $520.
  • Rybelsus 14 mg: $250 to $300 per month brand cash; similar to Ozempic pricing.
  • Generic semaglutide (now available for diabetes): $88 to $120 per month depending on indication and dose.

For in-depth pharmacy-by-pharmacy pricing, see the brand-specific city pages: Ozempic in Montreal and Wegovy in Montreal. For national pricing comparison, see our semaglutide cost guide.

Clinical Evidence Behind Semaglutide

Semaglutide has the strongest randomized-trial evidence base of any GLP-1 receptor agonist. Key studies Montrealers should know about:

  • SUSTAIN-6 (2016). Injectable semaglutide (Ozempic) reduced major adverse cardiovascular events in adults with type 2 diabetes and established cardiovascular disease [6].
  • STEP 1 (2021). Semaglutide 2.4 mg (Wegovy) produced a mean weight loss of roughly 14.9 percent over 68 weeks in adults with obesity, vs 2.4 percent on placebo [7].
  • SELECT (2023). Semaglutide 2.4 mg reduced major adverse cardiovascular events by 20 percent in adults with overweight or obesity and established cardiovascular disease, without type 2 diabetes [8].

FAQ

Which semaglutide product is the cheapest in Montreal right now?

For type 2 diabetes, Ozempic at Costco pharmacy runs about $250 to $265 per month in Montreal. For weight management, Wegovy at Costco runs $490 to $520 per month. Generic semaglutide already undercuts both, available since May 2026.

Is semaglutide the same as Ozempic in Montreal?

Semaglutide is the active ingredient. Ozempic is a Health Canada-approved brand of injectable semaglutide for type 2 diabetes. Wegovy is the higher-dose brand for chronic weight management. Rybelsus is the oral tablet. All three are sold across Montreal.

Is generic semaglutide available at Montreal pharmacies?

Yes. Apotex's Apo-Semaglutide Injection and Dr. Reddy's generic launched in Canadian pharmacies in May 2026 and are now reaching Montreal pharmacy shelves. Costco Pharmacy in Montreal is the lowest cash price at roughly $88 to $99 per month; Walmart and No Frills run $95 to $110; Shoppers Drug Mart, Rexall and London Drugs run $100 to $120. Felix Health and Hims Canada both offer it through telehealth at $149 per month all-in.

Can I buy compounded semaglutide in Montreal?

No. Health Canada and the Quebec college of pharmacists prohibit compounded semaglutide. Any service offering it in Montreal is operating outside Canadian drug-safety regulation. Stick with Health Canada-approved Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus or the now-available generic.

Does RAMQ cover any semaglutide product for Montrealers?

RAMQ lists Ozempic and Rybelsus as exception medication benefits for type 2 diabetes. Wegovy for weight management is never covered by RAMQ. Full provincial rules live on our Semaglutide in Quebec page.

Can telehealth services prescribe semaglutide in Montreal?

Yes in most cases. Montrealers can access Ozempic, Wegovy and Rybelsus through Canadian telehealth services after an online assessment. Felix Health and Hims Canada do not operate in Quebec; Maple and Jill Health are the strongest alternatives.

Which pharmacy chain in Montreal will get generic semaglutide first?

Montreal pharmacies should see generic semaglutide in May 2026 via the Jean Coutu, Familiprix, Uniprix and Pharmaprix networks. Groupe Jean Coutu and McMahon handle Quebec distribution, so the launch sequencing may differ slightly from English Canada.

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.

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