Medicaid GLP-1 coverage by state: the 2026 tracker
What we evaluated: state Medicaid coverage of GLP-1 medications for obesity, against the primary tracker (KFF) and dated state bulletins
Date verified: January 2026 (KFF); state actions through April 2026
Direct answer: 13 state Medicaid fee-for-service programmes cover GLP-1s for obesity as of January 2026 — down from 16 after California, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and South Carolina all eliminated coverage on January 1, 2026. Massachusetts is scheduled to end coverage on July 1, 2026. North Carolina reinstated coverage in December 2025 and Tennessee reversed its exclusion in August 2025
Necessary qualification: you will see other sites claim 36 or 38 states. Those counts include managed-care plans, diabetes-only coverage, or 'Saxenda only' treated as equivalent to full coverage. Even where obesity coverage is excluded, four federal rules still give you a path — read those first
Method: every figure is a total ongoing monthly cost (medication + any required membership), derived by plan total ÷ plan months. See our pricing-verification methodology.
Every dated state action we can source
These are the only state Medicaid changes for which we hold a dated, citable bulletin. Four states cut coverage on a single day — 1 January 2026 — taking the national total from 16 to 13. We do not fill in the other states with a guess.
| State | Effective | What happened | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tennessee | August 1, 2025 | TennCare reversed its long-standing exclusion on August 1, 2025 | TennCare pharmacy bulletin |
| North Carolina | December 12, 2025 | North Carolina REINSTATED coverage on December 12, 2025 | NC Medicaid PDL, January 2026 |
| California | January 1, 2026 | Medi-Cal ELIMINATED weight-loss GLP-1 coverage on January 1, 2026 | Medi-Cal Rx Contract Drugs List; KFF, January 2026 |
| Pennsylvania | January 1, 2026 | Pennsylvania eliminated adult obesity GLP-1 coverage on January 1, 2026 | PA DHS; KFF, January 2026 |
| New Hampshire | January 1, 2026 | New Hampshire eliminated obesity GLP-1 coverage on January 1, 2026 | KFF, January 2026 |
| South Carolina | January 1, 2026 | South Carolina eliminated obesity GLP-1 coverage on January 1, 2026 | KFF, January 2026 |
| Michigan | January 2026 | Michigan sharply restricted coverage in January 2026 | MDHHS provider notification L 25-73 |
| Massachusetts | March 12, 2026 | MassHealth is scheduled to END weight-loss GLP-1 coverage on July 1, 2026 | MassHealth Pharmacy Facts 271, March 12, 2026 |
Four federal rules that apply in every state
These are the most useful facts on this page, and they are true regardless of what your state decided. If your state has excluded obesity coverage, read these before concluding you have no path.
Why published 50-state tables contradict each other
The discrepancy comes from counting different things: fee-for-service programmes versus managed-care plans; diabetes coverage versus obesity coverage; and 'covers Saxenda only, with BMI 35+ and multiple comorbidities' being counted identically to 'covers Wegovy and Zepbound'.
We follow KFF, the primary tracker, which counts fee-for-service obesity coverage: 13 states as of January 2026 — down from 16 after California, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and South Carolina all cut coverage on January 1. Where we hold a dated state bulletin we cite it. Where we do not, we say so rather than filling the cell with a guess.
If you have no coverage: what cash actually costs now
An FDA-approved, quality-verified, manufacturer-supplied medication at $149, against a compounded market that mostly runs $169-$399. The catch is dose escalation — Foundayo rises to $199, then $299, then $349 as you titrate, and at the top doses it has its own 45-day refill rule (it drops back to $299 if you refill in time). But for a starting patient, or anyone maintaining on a lower dose, the brand oral pill is now among the cheapest legitimate options in the entire category — and almost no comparison site has caught up.
The assumption that losing Medicaid coverage means paying $1,300 a month is out of date. Brand Zepbound is $299–$449 through LillyDirect. Brand Wegovy is $349 through NovoCare, and the oral Wegovy tablet is $149. Foundayo, Lilly's FDA-approved oral GLP-1, starts at $149. See the full pricing database.
All 50 states
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Frequently asked questions
How many states cover GLP-1s for weight loss under Medicaid?
13, as of January 2026, per KFF — down from 16 after California, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and South Carolina all eliminated coverage on January 1. You will see other numbers (36, 38) on other sites; those count managed-care plans, diabetes coverage, or 'Saxenda only' the same as full coverage.
My state doesn't cover it. Do I really have no options?
Probably not. Four federal rules still apply. Type 2 diabetes coverage is federally required everywhere. If you are under 21, EPSDT law protects you even where adults are excluded. Zepbound is separately approved for sleep apnea, and Wegovy for cardiovascular risk and MASH — different diagnosis codes that survive an obesity cut. And cash-pay is now far cheaper than most people think: the FDA-approved Foundayo oral pill is $149/month.
Which states changed most recently?
Massachusetts is scheduled to END weight-loss coverage on July 1, 2026 — if you are covered there, verify your renewal timeline. California, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and South Carolina all cut on January 1, 2026. Michigan sharply restricted. North Carolina reinstated on December 12, 2025, and Tennessee reversed its exclusion in August 2025.
Why do 50-state Medicaid tables disagree with each other?
Because they count different things — fee-for-service versus managed care, obesity versus diabetes, and 'covers Saxenda with BMI 35+ and multiple comorbidities' counted identically to 'covers Wegovy and Zepbound'. We follow KFF and cite dated state bulletins, and where we have neither we say so.
Sources
- KFF — "Medicaid Coverage of and Spending on GLP-1s", January 2026. The primary tracker; the source of the 13-state count.
- Medi-Cal Rx Contract Drugs List — California, effective January 1, 2026.
- MDHHS provider notification L 25-73 — Michigan restriction.
- MassHealth Pharmacy Facts 271, March 12, 2026 — scheduled July 1, 2026 change.
- NC Medicaid Preferred Drug List, January 2026 — reinstatement of GLP-1 weight-management class.
- TennCare pharmacy bulletin — August 1, 2025 coverage expansion.
- Federal EPSDT requirements; FDA approvals for Zepbound (OSA, December 2024) and Wegovy (CV risk, March 2024; MASH, August 2025).
- Our source hierarchy. We do not treat an affiliate comparison site as evidence.