
GLP-1 medications have moved quickly from medical treatment into everyday conversation.
Originally prescribed for type 2 diabetes, drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy are now widely discussed as weight-loss solutions and lifestyle upgrades. Social media is filled with before-and-after photos, influencers share personal routines, and ads promise fast access without long waits or complicated medical steps.
And that’s where the risk begins.
As popularity and demand for GLP-1 medications have grown, so has a parallel market of fake pharmacies, misleading ads, and offers that sound easier, cheaper, or faster than going through a doctor. Many of these scams look professional and reassuring alternatives, especially to people dealing with high costs, limited availability, or frustration after being turned away elsewhere.
Most GLP-1 scams start with a routine online search. You’re looking for a pharmacy that carries Ozempic and land on a website offering it at a much lower price than usual. You might find the site through a search result, a sponsored ad, or even a social media post shared by someone you trust.
The website makes the process sound simple, emphasizing savings, convenience, and fast access, often comparing online prices to the cost of going through a doctor. Payment is requested through a digital wallet app such as Cash App or Zelle, and in many cases no prescription is required.
Once the payment is sent, the medication never arrives. Instead, people receive automated customer service replies, vague explanations, or repeated claims that the order is “being processed” or “on the way.” Refund requests are ignored or denied.
There is never any medication to ship. The delays, extra messages, and follow-ups are part of the scam. And because payment is made through digital wallet apps, the money is usually impossible to recover once it’s sent.
They may include videos or images of doctors, health experts, or celebrities appearing to recommend a product or alternative treatment. Some use AI-generated voices or manipulated footage to make the endorsement seem real.
BBB Scam Tracker reports: One consumer clicked on a video promoting a so-called “pink salt trick” for weight loss. The video appeared to feature Oprah Winfrey alongside a doctor endorsing a product called Lipo Max as a safer alternative to GLP-1 injections. Believing the endorsement was genuine, the consumer spent more than $300 on the product. Later, they suspected the video had been AI-generated. When they tried to request a refund, the support email address no longer worked.
Related: Scammers exploit worldwide shortage of Ozempic to defraud consumers
Some GLP-1 scams reach people directly, without any searching at all.
Consumers report receiving messages or calls claiming that a GLP-1 prescription has been approved, an order is delayed or needs confirmation, or payment details must be updated urgently. Links typically lead to fake websites, while phone calls rely on pressure and a sense of urgency.
BBB Scam Tracker reports: A consumer received a text message from someone identifying themselves as “Laura from WellnessCare,” claiming that a doctor had cleared their GLP-1 prescription and that treatment could begin immediately. The consumer became suspicious, blocked the number, and later worried the message may have been connected to Medicaid-related fraud.
Related: Resolution to get fit this year? How to Spot a Weight-Loss Scam
One of the most common GLP-1 scams involves fake pharmacy websites.
These sites may advertise discounted GLP-1 medications, promise easy access, or skip prescription requirements altogether. Some add brief online “consultations” to appear legitimate. In reality, the businesses are often unlicensed, the products unverified, and shipments unreliable or nonexistent.
BBB Scam Tracker reports: A consumer searching for a lower price than their doctor’s office found an online ad for a GLP-1 injection. After paying a small membership fee and entering credit card details, they began seeing repeated charge attempts of $670. Despite contacting the company multiple times to cancel, the charges continued, leaving the consumer concerned that future payments would eventually go through.
Related: Is Dr. AI Taking Over Dr. Google? How to Stay Safe When Chatting With AI About Your Health
In these cases, scammers claim the medication has already been shipped.
Victims are then told there’s a delivery problem — such as customs delays, insurance requirements, or labeling issues — that requires additional payment. Tracking numbers may be fake or lead nowhere. Each update comes with a new request for money, until communication stops entirely.
BBB Scam Tracker reports: A consumer paid $279 for GLP-1 medication, only to be told the FedEx package was misdelivered. Attempts to resolve the issue with both the seller and the shipping company went nowhere, leaving the consumer without the medication or a refund.
Related: Watch Out for These Health Scams
Some scams present themselves as safer or more affordable alternatives to branded GLP-1 drugs, using labels like “compounded,” “research-grade,” “clinically similar,” or “FDA-style approved.” These terms are often used loosely or incorrectly, and the actual ingredients, dosage, and safety of the product can be difficult — or impossible — to verify. Beyond the financial risk, this can pose real health concerns.
Other schemes are data harvesting disguised as health screening. They offer “eligibility checks,” BMI assessments, or personalized GLP-1 plans, asking for sensitive details such as age, weight, health history, email address, or phone number. That data can later be sold, reused in phishing campaigns, or combined with other leaked information to target you with more scams or steal your digital identity.
Related: Has Your Health Information Been Exposed? Take These Critical Next Steps
If you’re unsure whether a message is legitimate, Bitdefender Scamio can help you assess suspicious emails, messages, or links by explaining whether something looks like a scam — and why.
Before clicking on any link, you can also check it with Bitdefender Link Checker , which scans URLs to see whether they’re associated with phishing or fraud.
And if you want to make sure you and your family are safer online, Bitdefender Premium Security helps watch for scam attempts across emails, texts, chats, and websites. It works quietly in the background, warning you in real time when something looks suspicious — so you have a chance to stop it before it turns into a financial or digital identity theft.
Source: bbb.org
No, Ozempic is a prescription-only medication and cannot be legally sold without a valid prescription from a licensed healthcare professional. Any website or seller offering Ozempic without requiring a prescription is a major red flag and often linked to scams or counterfeit products.
The most common GLP-1 scams involve fake online pharmacies and misleading ads offering discounted medication without a prescription. Many of these offers never deliver any product.
Red flags include unusually low prices, no prescription requirement, pressure to pay quickly, requests to pay via digital wallet apps, and endorsements that seem too good to be true.
Yes, but only through licensed pharmacies and telehealth providers that require a valid prescription and follow local regulations.
Stop further payments, contact your bank or card provider immediately, and report the scam to local consumer protection authorities.
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Cristina Popov is a Denmark-based content creator and small business owner who has been writing for Bitdefender since 2017, making cybersecurity feel more human and less overwhelming.
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