Let’s be honest: the rise of GLP-1 drugs has been…a lot.
On one hand, medications like Ozempic and Mounjaro have completely changed diabetes management. For people with type 1 and type 2, these medications have truly made life better by improving A1Cs, quieting food noise, and supporting weight loss goals, all while offering the long-term benefits for heart and kidney health.
On the other hand, they’re expensive, hard to get, and add to the injection routine. So when pill-form GLP-1s like Foundayo started making headlines, it felt like a big deal.
No needles.
No refrigeration.
Just a pill.
But as always in diabetes management: nothing is that simple.
First, What’s Actually Different?
GLP-1 drugs all do the same core thing: mimic hormones that help regulate blood sugar, appetite, and digestion.
But how they get into your body matters.
Shots (Ozempic, Mounjaro)
- Weekly injection
- Absorbed directly into bloodstream
- Lower dose needed because it skips digestion
Pills (Foundayo, oral semaglutide)
- Taken daily
- Must survive your digestive system
- Require higher doses to work effectively
That one difference — digestion vs. direct injection — is why everything else (cost, side effects, effectiveness) starts to diverge.
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The Pros of GLP-1 Pills (And Why People Are Excited)
1. No injections (obviously)
This is huge.
A lot of people delay or avoid GLP-1 therapy because they don’t want:
- Needles
- Injection training
- The mental load of “starting injectables”
Pills obviously lower that barrier.
And for people already juggling insulin, CGMs, and everything else?
One less injection might matter.
2. Easier for real life (travel, storage, routines)
Injectables often:
- Need refrigeration
- Come with pens, needles, disposal issues
Pills, on the other hand:
- Toss in your bag
- No cold chain
- No sharps container
- Just take it quickly right before bed
That’s not just convenience. That makes it easier to stick with it.
3. Potentially cheaper upfront
Some pill options are entering the market at lower starting prices: around $149/month vs. about $199+ for injections without insurance.
But don’t get too excited yet — we’ll come back to this.
4. Newer formulations may be more flexible
Older oral GLP-1s had annoying rules:
- Take on empty stomach
- Wait to eat
- Timing matters
Newer options like Foundayo are being designed to work without those restrictions, which is a big quality-of-life upgrade and easier to take properly.
The Cons of GLP-1 Pills
1. They may be slightly less effective
Let’s not sugarcoat it. Injectables still tend to win on real outcomes:
- about 14.9% weight loss with injections vs. 13.6% with pills in some comparisons
And for diabetes specifically, that can translate to:
- Slightly better A1C reductions
- More consistent results
Why? Because injections bypass digestion entirely. Trying to digest a medication is never gonna be more effective than an injection.
But at the end of the day, the pills still have a big impact. It’s just slightly less kaboom than the injectable version.
Another thing to note: you can’t really adjust the dosage when it’s pill form. (Personally, I hack the Ozempic pen to microdose my medication. I wouldn’t be able to do that with a pill.)
2. You have to take them every single day
This might come down to your personality: would you rather try to remember a weekly injection or a daily pill?
What if you miss it?
- Miss a daily pill: You feel it right away.
- Miss a weekly shot: You’ve got more buffer for a day or two.
For people already managing:
- insulin
- metformin
- statins
- blood pressure meds
Adding another daily medication could feel overwhelming. But what’s easier for you: a daily pill or a weekly injection?
3. GI side effects can be worse
GLP-1s already come with:
- nausea
- vomiting
- diarrhea
But pills may hit your gut harder because they pass through your digestive system first. This means injections might be gentler.
4. “Cheaper” doesn’t mean affordable
Yes, pills can start cheaper. But let’s zoom out:
- GLP-1 drugs are costing anywhere from $150 to $1000 a month, depending on your access
- Many insurance plans still don’t cover them consistently
And even with insurance coverage: These drugs are still not considered cost-effective at current prices by health economists
So the real issue isn’t pill vs. shot.
It’s access. Period. This hasn’t changed, and the pill form doesn’t make a difference.
5. Long-term data is still catching up
Injectables like Ozempic and Mounjaro:
- Have years of real-world data
- Proven cardiovascular benefits
Newer pills:
- Promising
- But still building long-term safety and outcome data
- Easy to assume the benefits would be similar, but we don’t have that data
That matters — especially in diabetes, where we’re thinking in decades of life with T1D or T2D.
So…Which One Is “Better” for Diabetes?
Here’s the honest answer:
👉 Shots are still the most powerful option overall.
👉 Pills are the most accessible and easiest to start.
And the “best” choice depends on the person sitting in front of you.
The Bottom Line
Choose a GLP-1 based on:
- What you’ll actually take consistently
- What your insurance will cover
- How your body responds
Not what’s trending.
Because in diabetes management, the “best” medication is the one that:
👉 you can access
👉 you can afford
👉 and you can stick with long-term
Learn More About Ozempic & Type 1 Diabetes
- How Does Ozempic Work?
- We Take Ozempic & Mounjaro with Type 1 Diabetes
- 5 Other Hormones Affected by T1D and T2D
- 5 Mistakes Newbies Make While Taking GLP-1s
- Before You Start Taking GLP-1
- Managing GLP-1 Side Effects
- Using GLP-1s to Treat Addiction
- My First Year on Ozempic with T1D
- My First Month on Ozempic with T1D
- Yes, I Microdose Ozempic with T1D
- We Both Microdose Ozempic with T1D
- Endocrinologist Insights on Ozempic with T1D
- Getting Ozempic with T1D

Ginger Vieira has lived with type 1 diabetes since 1999 along with a few other chronic illnesses! She is the Cofounder of the Diabetes Nerd Network and the Diabetes Nerd Marketing agency. Ginger has authored hundreds of articles and several books, including Exercise with Type 1 Diabetes, Pregnancy with Type 1 Diabetes, Dealing with Diabetes Burnout, and Stop Overeating During Lows. Over her 20-year career (so far) in diabetes, she’s produced hundreds of articles and videos about life with diabetes. Her background includes a Bachelor of Science in professional writing and certifications in coaching, personal training, powerlifting, and Ashtanga yoga. Find Ginger’s YOUTUBE, PODCAST, INSTAGRAM, and LINKEDIN.
