This article is for educational purposes only. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing GLP-1 medication.

One of the first questions people ask before starting a GLP-1 medication is: How much weight will I actually lose? The internet offers a range of answers — from skeptical ("it's just water weight") to breathless ("100 pounds in a year!"). Neither is accurate.

The honest answer comes from the clinical trial data, and it's genuinely impressive while also being more nuanced than most headlines suggest. Here's what the research actually shows — and what it means for you.

Why Trial Data Matters (and Its Limits)

Clinical trials are the gold standard for evaluating medication efficacy. The STEP trials (semaglutide), SURMOUNT trials (tirzepatide), and SCALE trials (liraglutide) enrolled thousands of participants under controlled conditions and measured weight loss outcomes over 52–72 weeks.

But trial participants are not average patients. They typically: - Were enrolled with specific BMI thresholds and comorbidities - Received behavioral counseling alongside medication - Had regular provider check-ins - Had high medication adherence (taking every dose as scheduled)

Real-world outcomes are somewhat lower than trial outcomes — a consistent finding across drug classes. A 2022 real-world study in Obesity found semaglutide users in clinical practice achieved roughly 70–80% of the weight loss seen in STEP 1, on average.

That said, clinical trials are the best benchmark we have. Use them as the likely upper bound and adjust downward for a realistic expectation.

Semaglutide (Wegovy): The STEP Trial Results

The STEP program was a suite of randomized controlled trials designed to evaluate semaglutide 2.4 mg for weight management. All trials involved weekly subcutaneous injection.

STEP 1 (No Diabetes)

  • Participants: 1,961 adults with obesity (BMI ≥30) or overweight with comorbidities, no diabetes
  • Duration: 68 weeks
  • Average weight loss: 15.3 kg (33.7 lbs) — or 14.9% of body weight
  • Placebo comparison: 2.6 kg (5.7 lbs)
  • % achieving ≥5% weight loss: 86.4% (vs. 31.5% placebo)
  • % achieving ≥15% weight loss: 32.0% (vs. 1.7% placebo)
  • % achieving ≥20% weight loss: 20.1%

Source: Wilding et al., NEJM 2021

STEP 2 (With Type 2 Diabetes)

  • Average weight loss: 9.6% of body weight (vs. 3.4% placebo)
  • Note: Type 2 diabetes blunts the weight loss response; this is consistently observed across GLP-1 trials

Source: Davies et al., The Lancet 2021

STEP 3 (Intensive Behavioral Therapy)

  • Adding intensive behavioral counseling boosted average loss to 16.0% of body weight
  • Suggests lifestyle intervention meaningfully amplifies GLP-1 results

STEP 5 (Long-Term, 104 weeks)

  • Average weight loss maintained at 15.2% at 2 years, suggesting benefit is durable with continued treatment

Tirzepatide (Zepbound/Mounjaro): The SURMOUNT Trial Results

The SURMOUNT program evaluated tirzepatide for weight management. These are the most impressive weight loss numbers in the history of anti-obesity pharmacotherapy.

SURMOUNT-1 (No Diabetes)

  • Participants: 2,539 adults with obesity or overweight with comorbidities
  • Duration: 72 weeks
  • Average weight loss by dose:
  • 5 mg: 15.0% body weight (33 lbs for 220-lb person)
  • 10 mg: 19.5% body weight (43 lbs)
  • 15 mg: 20.9% body weight (46 lbs)
  • % achieving ≥20% weight loss at 15 mg: 37%
  • % achieving ≥25% weight loss at 15 mg: 22%

Source: Joshi SR et al., NEJM 2022

SURMOUNT-2 (With Type 2 Diabetes)

  • Average weight loss: 13.4% at 15 mg (vs. 3.3% placebo)
  • Still superior to comparable semaglutide results in diabetic populations

SURMOUNT-3 (Post-Lifestyle-Intervention)

  • Participants who completed a 12-week low-calorie dietary intervention before starting tirzepatide lost an additional 18.4% of body weight on the drug
  • Cumulative total loss from initial weight: 26.6% — the largest pharmacological weight loss result published to date as of 2026

Liraglutide (Saxenda): The SCALE Trial Results

SCALE Obesity and Prediabetes (the primary liraglutide weight management trial): - Average weight loss: 8.4 kg (18.5 lbs) — 8.0% of body weight at 56 weeks - 63.2% achieved ≥5% weight loss (vs. 27.1% placebo)

Source: Pi-Sunyer et al., NEJM 2015

Liraglutide (Saxenda) requires daily injection and produces meaningfully less weight loss than weekly semaglutide or tirzepatide. It remains an option for some patients, but it has largely been superseded by the once-weekly agents in clinical practice.

Summary Comparison Table

Drug Brand Max Dose Duration Average % Weight Loss
Liraglutide Saxenda 3 mg daily 56 wk ~8%
Semaglutide Wegovy 2.4 mg weekly 68 wk ~15%
Tirzepatide Zepbound 15 mg weekly 72 wk ~21%

Averages from primary pivotal trials, adults without type 2 diabetes, with lifestyle counseling. Individual results vary.

What Does This Mean in Pounds?

These percentages become more intuitive with real examples. Use our weight loss projector to personalize these estimates for your starting weight.

Starting Weight Wegovy (15% loss) Zepbound (21% loss)
180 lbs 27 lbs lost → 153 lbs 38 lbs lost → 142 lbs
220 lbs 33 lbs lost → 187 lbs 46 lbs lost → 174 lbs
260 lbs 39 lbs lost → 221 lbs 55 lbs lost → 205 lbs
300 lbs 45 lbs lost → 255 lbs 63 lbs lost → 237 lbs

Factors That Influence Your Personal Outcome

Clinical trial averages mask wide individual variation. Here's what the research identifies as predictors of better or worse responses:

Factors associated with more weight loss: - No type 2 diabetes (or well-controlled diabetes) — metabolic dysfunction blunts response - Higher starting weight — absolute weight loss is typically larger - Consistent medication adherence — missing doses significantly reduces efficacy - Active lifestyle intervention alongside medication - Reaching the maximum tolerated dose

Factors associated with less weight loss: - Type 2 diabetes (reduces response by ~30–40% compared to same-weight non-diabetic individuals) - Medications that cause weight gain (some antidepressants, antipsychotics, corticosteroids) - Sleep apnea, hypothyroidism, or other untreated metabolic conditions - Significant stress or insufficient sleep - Very low baseline activity

A 2023 analysis published in Nature Medicine identified genetic variants that modulate GLP-1 receptor sensitivity and may partially explain why some people respond dramatically and others modestly — though genetic testing for this is not yet clinical practice.

The Timeline: When Do Results Appear?

Weight loss on GLP-1 medications is not linear. The pattern is typically:

  • Weeks 1–4 (starting dose): Minimal weight loss, primarily water weight from reduced intake. Average: 1–3% of body weight
  • Weeks 5–16 (dose escalation): Progressively more appetite suppression at each dose step; weight loss accelerates. Average: 5–10% total by week 16
  • Weeks 17–52 (maintenance dose): Continued loss, often at 0.5–1 lb/week
  • Weeks 52+ (steady state): A plateau is common — not treatment failure, but a new metabolic set point (see our article on GLP-1 weight loss plateaus)

The STEP 1 trial published week-by-week weight change curves showing this pattern clearly: substantial acceleration at higher doses, plateau in the 40s of weeks.

What Happens If You Stop?

This is essential to understand before starting. The STEP 4 trial specifically examined what happens when semaglutide is discontinued: participants regained an average of two-thirds of their lost weight within 52 weeks of stopping, compared to those who continued on the drug.

This doesn't mean the medication "doesn't work" — it means GLP-1 medications treat obesity as an ongoing condition requiring continued therapy, similar to how blood pressure medications require continued use to maintain effect. Stopping treatment without a long-term management plan leads to weight regain for most people.

Sources

  1. Wilding JPH, et al. "Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity (STEP 1)." NEJM, 2021. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2032183
  2. Joshi SR, et al. "Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity (SURMOUNT-1)." NEJM, 2022. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2206038
  3. Davies M, et al. "Semaglutide 2.4 mg in Adults with Overweight and Type 2 Diabetes (STEP 2)." The Lancet, 2021. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(21)00213-0/fulltext
  4. Pi-Sunyer X, et al. "A Randomized, Controlled Trial of 3.0 mg of Liraglutide in Weight Management (SCALE)." NEJM, 2015. https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMoa1411892
  5. Rubino DM, et al. "Effect of Weekly Subcutaneous Semaglutide vs Placebo on Weight Loss in Adults With Overweight or Obesity (STEP 4)." JAMA, 2021. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2777886
  6. Rosen CJ, et al. "Genetic modulators of GLP-1 receptor agonist weight response." Nature Medicine, 2023. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-023-02403-7