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Eligibility

Weight-loss treatment eligibility is not decided by BMI alone. It can depend on your health history, current medicines, pregnancy or breastfeeding status, weight-related conditions, previous treatment experience and whether you are looking at NHS access or a private provider assessment.

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Eligibility guide

Start with BMI, then check the health questions around it

BMI is often the first number used in weight-management guidance, but it is only a starting point. A clinician or pharmacist still needs to look at whether a medicine is suitable, what other health conditions are present and whether NHS or private access is being considered.

Eligibility checklist and calculator cards on a clean desk.

BMI and access checker

Check which questions may matter next

This tool estimates BMI and highlights common NHS and private-provider assessment questions. It does not decide eligibility, prescribe treatment or replace advice from a qualified healthcare professional.







Weight-related health conditions that may affect NHS assessment





What eligibility usually means

It is more than a yes-or-no BMI check

BMI and health conditions

BMI can affect which treatment options are discussed, but weight-related conditions and personal health history often change the assessment.

Medicine safety

Current medicines, pregnancy or breastfeeding, side-effect history and certain health conditions can affect whether a medicine is suitable.

Access pathway

NHS access, specialist services, GP referral and private-provider assessment can all work differently.

NHS access

Current NHS weight-loss medicine thresholds to understand

NHS access can vary by medicine, local service and rollout stage. The figures below are a guide to questions that may come up, not a guarantee of access.

Medicine or setting Common NHS eligibility starting point Important extra context
Tirzepatide (Mounjaro) Initial primary-care rollout: BMI 40+ or 37.5+ using adjusted thresholds, plus at least four of five listed weight-related conditions. NHS England describes a phased rollout, with highest clinical need first and local services managing access.
Semaglutide (Wegovy) BMI 35+ or 32.5+ using adjusted thresholds with weight-related health problems. BMI 30 to 34.9, or 27.5 to 32.4 adjusted, may depend on specialist-service criteria. NHS England says Wegovy is prescribed through specialist weight-management services.
Orlistat BMI 30+, or BMI 28+ with weight-related conditions. NHS information says treatment should sit alongside diet, exercise or lifestyle changes and clinical or pharmacy advice.
Private provider assessment Private services may ask similar BMI and health questions, but their process is separate from NHS access rules. A displayed price does not confirm approval, suitability, stock or supply.
Private providers

What online providers may ask before treatment is considered

Height, weight and BMI

Expect questions about your current measurements and sometimes evidence such as photos or previous treatment records.

Medical history

Providers may ask about diabetes, blood pressure, sleep apnoea, cholesterol, heart disease, digestion, mental health and other conditions.

Medicines and safety

Current prescriptions, allergies, pregnancy or breastfeeding, contraception, previous side effects and surgery plans can all matter.

Follow-up needs

Some people need more support around dose changes, side effects, delivery, restarts or longer-term care.

Common misunderstandings

What eligibility tools cannot do

It cannot approve treatment

A calculator can estimate BMI, but only a qualified clinician or pharmacist can assess suitability.

It cannot predict local NHS access

Integrated care boards and specialist services can apply local processes, capacity limits and phased rollout plans.

It should not replace advice

If you are unsure, have symptoms, take medicines or have a complex health history, speak to a qualified healthcare professional.

Next steps

Where to go after checking eligibility questions

NHS vs private

Compare access, referral and assessment differences before choosing a provider page.

Providers

Browse provider pages once you know which treatment or access question matters most.

Sources checked

Current guidance used for this page

This page was reviewed against NHS England, NHS and local ICB guidance available on 15 May 2026. Eligibility details can change, so always check the linked official source and speak to an appropriate professional.

BMI context

BMI bands are a guide, not a decision

BMI is one of the numbers used in many weight-management pathways, but it does not describe health history, medicines, side effects, pregnancy or breastfeeding, previous treatment or whether a specific provider can assess you safely.

Below 25
Usually below the obesity threshold used in many medicine criteria.
25 to 29.9
May still matter when wider health risks are being discussed.
30 to 34.9
Often where private and NHS questions start to become more detailed.
35+
Often brings additional questions about health conditions and support needs.
Private provider questions

Private providers usually need more than height and weight

Previous treatment

They may ask what you used before, the dose, side effects, gaps in treatment and whether you are switching or restarting.

Current medicines

Prescriptions, allergies and medicine interactions can affect whether a route is suitable or needs extra review.

Mental and physical health

Health history can affect assessment, support and whether a provider needs more information before continuing.

Pregnancy and feeding

Pregnancy, planning pregnancy or breastfeeding should be raised before any treatment decision is made.

Privacy note: the checker on this page runs in your browser. It is designed to show general questions to discuss with a clinician or pharmacist, not to store your answers or provide a diagnosis. See the privacy policy.