Semaglutide Compare Semaglutide Compare
Editorial methodology

How we check weight-loss information

Before information appears on a page, we check where it came from, whether it can change and what visitors still need to confirm. Treatment facts, provider service details, prices, safety signals and commercial disclosure are kept separate so the comparison stays balanced.

Source checked No price-only rankings Clear caveats
Comparison notes and provider checks being reviewed
Comparison checks

Treatment, provider, cost and safety are checked separately

A treatment name on its own rarely tells enough. We separate medicine facts from provider service, cost basis and safety signals so readers can see which differences are clinical, practical, commercial or likely to change.

Treatment facts

Active ingredient, format, dose or pack wording, access type and treatment-specific safety questions.

Provider service

Assessment wording, responsible pharmacy, clinic or prescriber, delivery, follow-up, switching and restart information.

Cost basis

Price shown, dose or pack basis, delivery fees, offer terms, repeat costs and when the price was reviewed.

Safety signals

Provider identity, regulator or register signals, contact details, realistic claims and clear medical caveats.

Online provider checks and health comparison details
Changing details

Each changing detail needs a source, review date and caveat

Prices, offers, availability, eligibility wording and delivery details can change. When a detail may affect a decision, we look for where it came from, when it was reviewed and what it cannot prove on its own.

1

Source

Provider pages, official sources, public registers and specialist treatment research are labelled or described differently because they answer different questions.

2

Review date

Prices, delivery details, offers and eligibility wording need visible review dates where that information can change.

3

Caveat

A comparison can explain information and caveats, but suitability still depends on assessment by a regulated healthcare professional.

Sources

The source has to match the claim

A safety statement, a price, a provider identity check and an NHS access explanation are not the same kind of information. Each needs the right source and a clear caveat where details can change.

Official health information

NHS, regulator and public health sources support access, safety and eligibility explanations.

Provider websites

Provider pages show current wording for treatments, checks, delivery, prices, support and offer terms.

Public registers

Regulator and professional registers help verify the pharmacy, clinic, company or prescriber behind a service.

Specialist comparison data

Mounjaro and Wegovy research helps explain treatment-specific provider, dose and review details where extra depth is useful.

Prices

Headline prices need the details around them

A low price can be useful, but only if the basis is clear. Dose, pack size, delivery, consultation wording, offer terms, repeat costs, support and availability can all change the real comparison.

Shown on this site

Visible provider prices, treatment names, delivery wording, review dates, offer caveats and links to relevant provider or treatment pages.

Confirm with the provider

Current price, fees, availability, eligibility questions, delivery timing, support and whether the treatment is suitable for you.

Cost and treatment details being compared calmly
Editorial boundaries

Prescription medicine comparison needs a calmer standard

Suitability depends on clinical assessment, so provider differences should be explained without pressure, urgency or unsupported certainty.

Pressure language

We avoid wording that makes prescription treatment feel automatic, urgent or guaranteed.

Price-only winners

A low headline price is not enough to call a provider better than another.

Mixed signals

Sourced facts, editorial explanation and commercial relationships need to be easy to tell apart.

Unsupported claims

Weight-loss, safety and suitability claims need careful wording and appropriate source context.

Review and correction

Review dates and corrections keep comparisons honest

Pages change when information, sources or wording change. We update unclear wording, add caveats where they are missing and correct material issues when they are found.

Review dates

Changing information should show a review date where the date matters to the comparison.

Corrections

If a provider, reader or source highlights a material issue, we check the relevant page and update it where needed.

Changing details

Prices, offers, availability, eligibility wording, delivery and support can change after a page is reviewed.

Last reviewed: 2026-04-25 Reviewer: Editorial team

Important information

This website is an informational comparison hub. It does not prescribe, supply or sell prescription-only medicines. Suitability depends on a regulated clinical assessment.

Some links may be affiliate or commercial links. Commercial relationships must not change the way safety, eligibility, source checks or editorial context are presented.

Source check: Brand role, provider wording, public pricing and availability can change. Confirm current details directly with the provider before taking the next step.