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Find My GLP-1 Path

How Long Does GLP-1 Last After Opening?

Your answer depends on the exact pen, syringe, or vial in your hand. Below is the rule for every major GLP-1 — plus a free calculator that turns it into your personal “throw it out by” date.

By The RX Index Editorial TeamWho we are and how we check our work

Published: · Last reviewed:

Last verified against current U.S. prescribing information and Instructions for Use: July 14, 2026

Educational information, not medical advice. Always follow the Instructions for Use that came with your specific product, and ask your pharmacist or prescriber about your situation.

Affiliate disclosure: The RX Index may earn a commission if you use some of the links on this page. It never changes our evidence standards, the label rules we report, or what the calculator tells you. We put the facts first and label the links.

You opened your GLP-1. Maybe you just took your first shot. Maybe you found an older pen in the back of the fridge and can't remember when you started it. Either way, you're stuck on the question everyone gets stuck on: how long does GLP-1 last after opening — and is this one still safe to use?

Here's the honest, fast answer. It depends on what you're holding.

  • A multi-dose pen or vial (one device you use for several weeks): a clock starts the first time you use it. Ozempic pens last 56 days after first use. Multi-dose Mounjaro and Zepbound — a KwikPen or a multi-dose vial — get discarded at whichever comes first: 30 days after first use, 30 total days out of the fridge, or 4 weekly doses. Saxenda and Victoza last 30 days. Then you toss it, even if there's medicine left.
  • A single-dose pen, syringe, or vial (Ozempic prefilled syringes; single-dose Wegovy; single-dose Mounjaro and Zepbound; Trulicity): there's no “after opening” clock at all. You use it once and throw the whole thing away.
  • A pill (Rybelsus, Ozempic tablets, Wegovy tablets, Foundayo): no after-opening countdown. Go by the printed expiration date and keep them in their original bottle.
  • Compounded (mixed for you by a pharmacy instead of made by the drug company): follow the Beyond-Use Date — the discard date your pharmacy prints on the vial — plus any separate “discard after first puncture” note. There's no single class-wide rule.
GLP-1 injection pens and a medication vial arranged next to a calendar with a discard date circled

And one hard stop that has nothing to do with dates: if your medicine is supposed to be a clear liquid and it turns cloudy, changes color, or has bits floating in it — don't use it. (One exception: Bydureon BCise is meant to look cloudy after mixing. We'll flag it below.) And never use any injectable GLP-1 that has frozen — throw it out.

So why do you keep seeing “28 days” in one place, “30 days” in another, and “56 days” somewhere else? Because those numbers answer different questions — and only one of them is about your device. Let's find yours. It takes about a minute.

Your quick answer, by what you have

Quick after-opening answer for each type of GLP-1 product
What's in your handThe short answer
A multi-dose brand pen (Ozempic pen, Saxenda, Victoza)30 or 56 days after first use — find your exact drug below.
A multi-dose Mounjaro or Zepbound (KwikPen or vial)Whichever comes first: 30 days after first use, 30 total days out of the fridge, or 4 weekly doses.
A single-dose pen, syringe, or vialUse it once and throw it away. The “days” you saw usually apply before you use it, not after.
A pill bottleNo after-opening clock. Use by the printed expiration; keep them in the original bottle.
A compounded vialFollow the Beyond-Use Date (and any “discard after first puncture” note) on your label.

Don't want to read a chart and do the math? We built a tool for that: pick your exact drug and device, enter the date you first used it, and get your personal throw-it-out-by date. No email, no account.

Check my discard date →

The one honest thing we have to say first

There is no single “GLP-1 after opening” number that's true for everyone. We wish there were. It would make this page a lot shorter.

But that missing single number is exactly why this page exists — because the wrong number is worse than no number. A generic “28 days” can make you toss a pen that was good for 56, wasting real money. Or it can leave you using a pen weeks after you should've stopped. Once you know your exact device, the right answer takes ten seconds. So we're going to get you to the right one.

We're The RX Index, an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers. We don't make or sell these medications. We read the current U.S. labels and show you exactly what we checked — but the carton and Instructions for Use that came with your product are always the final word.

Check your discard date (free calculator)

Answer in one line: Enter your exact drug, your device, and the date you first used it (or, for single-dose pens, the date it left the fridge), and this tool returns the specific date you should stop using it, based only on the time-and-temperature rules on the current label.

Discard-By Date Calculator

Free, no email, no account. Your answers stay on your device — nothing you enter here is sent, stored, or added to any link. Rules last verified July 14, 2026.

Not sure? Count the doses: a single-dose device holds one shot; a multi-dose pen or vial holds several.

4. Temperature history

The calculator asks a few short questions, because the honest answer needs them:

  1. Which drug? (Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, Zepbound, and so on — or “compounded.”)
  2. Which device? (Single-dose pen · multi-dose pen · single-dose vial · multi-dose vial · KwikPen · prefilled syringe · pill bottle.) It won't give you a date until it knows this, because the device changes everything.
  3. The date that matters. For a multi-dose pen, that's your first shot. For a single-dose pen, it's the day it left the fridge. For a compounded vial, it's the first needle puncture — and you can enter the Beyond-Use Date from your label.
  4. Temperature history. Always in the fridge? Left out for a while? Hot car? Might have frozen? Not sure?
  5. How many doses you've taken (this matters for the multi-dose Mounjaro and Zepbound devices).

Then it gives you one of four straight answers:

  • Within the labeled window — here's your discard-by date.
  • Window ending soon — discard on this date, and plan your next dose or refill.
  • Past the window — don't use it. Contact the pharmacy or manufacturer about a replacement.
  • Can't tell from this — if it froze, got too hot, or the history is unknown, the tool won't guess. It tells you to call the pharmacy that filled it.

One thing the calculator does not do: it checks the time-and-temperature window only. It can't confirm the medicine is still sterile, still full-strength, the right concentration, or otherwise right for you. If anything looks or feels off, that's a call to your pharmacist — not a math problem.

First, figure out which of four things you have

Answer in one line: Every product on this page follows one of four handling paths — an FDA-approved single-dose injection, an FDA-approved multi-dose injection, an oral tablet, or a compounded product. A compounded product can itself come as a multi-dose vial or a single-dose syringe, so the pharmacy's label and the container both matter.

Almost every wrong answer online comes from mixing these up. So let's keep it simple.

Single-dose injection. One device, one shot, then the whole thing goes in the sharps bin. This is where most Wegovy lives, along with Ozempic prefilled syringes, single-dose Mounjaro and Zepbound pens and vials, and Trulicity. For these, “how long does it last after opening” is the wrong question — because you don't keep it. The “days” number you see for these is usually how long it can sit out of the fridge before you use it. (More on that trap below.)

Multi-dose injection. One pen or vial holds several weeks of medicine, so you keep it and use it again. Ozempic multi-dose pens are the classic example. Saxenda and Victoza are multi-dose too. So are the Mounjaro and Zepbound KwikPens and multi-dose vials. For these, a countdown starts the first time you use the device.

Oral tablet. No fridge, no injection clock. Rybelsus, Ozempic tablets, Wegovy tablets, and Foundayo go by the printed expiration date, and you keep them in the original bottle.

Compounded. This is medicine a licensed compounder prepares to order, instead of a sealed product supplied under an FDA-approved manufacturer label. It usually comes in a vial, but it can also come as a prefilled single-dose syringe. Either way, it does not carry a manufacturer's storage rule. Instead, the pharmacy prints a Beyond-Use Date (BUD) — the date you should stop using it — and sometimes a separate “discard after first puncture” or single-use instruction. Those are the numbers that count.

Quick way to tell single from multi: how many doses does the device hold? A single-dose pen or syringe holds one. Ozempic multi-dose pens and the KwikPens hold several. A compounded vial holds many — which is exactly why the “there's still medicine left!” feeling hits so hard. Hang on for that section.

So how long does GLP-1 last after opening? (the full chart)

Answer in one line: Multi-dose brand pens run 30 to 56 days after first use depending on the drug; single-dose pens, syringes, and vials are used once and discarded; tablets go by their printed expiration; and compounded products follow the pharmacy's Beyond-Use Date. The table gives the exact rule and source for every major GLP-1.

This is the part to bookmark. It's pulled straight from the manufacturers' current U.S. prescribing information and Instructions for Use, and it was last verified on July 14, 2026.

After-opening discard rule and source for every major GLP-1 product and device
Your GLP-1 (and form)Single or multi-dose?How long after openingSource
Ozempic multi-dose pen (semaglutide)Multi-dose56 days after first use, then discard even if medicine remainsNovo Nordisk Ozempic PI
Ozempic single-dose prefilled syringe (semaglutide)Single-doseUse once, discard. Before use, may sit at 46–86°F for up to 28 daysNovo Nordisk Ozempic PI
Wegovy single-dose pen, HD pen, or prefilled syringe (semaglutide)Single-doseUse once, discard. Before the cap comes off, up to 28 days at 46–86°FNovo Nordisk Wegovy PI
Wegovy FlexTouch multi-dose pen (semaglutide)Multi-dose (four weekly 2.4-mg doses)Discard 56 days after first useNovo Nordisk Wegovy PI
Mounjaro single-dose pen or vial (tirzepatide)Single-doseUse once, discard. Up to 21 total days out of the fridge before useEli Lilly Mounjaro PI
Mounjaro multi-dose vial or KwikPen (tirzepatide)Multi-doseWhichever is first: 30 days after first use · 30 total days at room temperature · 4 weekly dosesEli Lilly Mounjaro PI
Zepbound single-dose pen or vial (tirzepatide)Single-doseUse once, discard. Up to 21 total days out of the fridge before useEli Lilly Zepbound PI
Zepbound multi-dose vial or KwikPen (tirzepatide)Multi-doseWhichever is first: 30 days after first use · 30 total days at room temperature · 4 weekly dosesEli Lilly Zepbound PI
Trulicity pen (dulaglutide)Single-doseUse once, discard. Up to 14 total days out of the fridge before useEli Lilly Trulicity PI
Saxenda pen (liraglutide)Multi-dose30 days after first use, then discardNovo Nordisk Saxenda PI
Victoza pen (liraglutide)Multi-dose30 days after first use, then discardNovo Nordisk Victoza PI
Byetta pen (exenatide)Multi-dose30 days after first use — and keep it cooler than the rest, no warmer than 77°FPrescribing info (older product — confirm on your label)
Bydureon BCise (exenatide, extended-release)Single-doseUse once, discard. Up to 4 weeks out of the fridge before use. Note: after mixing it's supposed to look cloudy white — that's normal for this onePrescribing info (older product — confirm on your label)
Rybelsus and Ozempic tablets; Wegovy tablets; Foundayo (pills) (oral semaglutide / orforglipron)TabletsNo after-opening clock. Keep in the original bottle, use by the printed expiration, keep dry, replace the capNovo Nordisk / Eli Lilly
Compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide (vial or prefilled syringe) (compounded — no FDA label)Compounded — no FDA labelFollow your pharmacy's Beyond-Use Date plus any separate “discard after first puncture” or single-use note. No universal rulePharmacy label (not FDA-verified)

Two rules for every injectable in this chart:

  1. Stay inside its labeled temperature range. Most cap at 86°F. A few older shots are stricter — Byetta tops out at 77°F. Compounded products follow their own label, so don't assume 86°F applies to yours.
  2. Never frozen. If it froze — even for a little while, even if it looks perfectly clear after it thaws — throw it out.

Found your drug? Get your actual date instead of counting it out yourself.

Find the rule for my exact pen →

Why does every website give a different number?

Answer in one line: Most conflicting answers mash together four different clocks — time after first use, time after first puncture, time out of the fridge before use, and single-dose disposal — and many older articles were written before newer devices like the Zepbound KwikPen, the Wegovy FlexTouch, and Ozempic single-dose syringes existed. The number you saw wasn't always wrong; it may just not be about your device.

Three things cause almost all the confusion.

“28 days” is not a GLP-1 rule. It's a general safety default for punctured multi-dose vials. Public health guidance from the CDC, based on the USP standard pharmacies follow, says: once you puncture a multi-dose vial, use it within 28 days unless the product says otherwise — and don't save leftovers from a single-dose vial at all. Plenty of GLP-1 pens do say otherwise. Ozempic multi-dose pens say 56 days. So “everything expires in 28 days” is a myth. It's a default discard period for one type of container, not a rule for the whole class.

The same brand can come in more than one device now. This trips up even good writers. Here's the current lay of the land:

Single-dose and multi-dose device forms for each GLP-1 brand
BrandSingle-dose formMulti-dose form
OzempicPrefilled syringeMulti-dose pen
WegovySingle-dose pen, HD pen, or syringeFlexTouch pen
MounjaroSingle-dose pen or vialMulti-dose vial or KwikPen
ZepboundSingle-dose pen or vialMulti-dose vial or KwikPen

If an article says flatly “Wegovy lasts 28 days,” it's answering for only one version. The real question is: do you have a device you use once, or a device you use for a month?

People keep asking because it feels wasteful — and that's fair. Spend a few minutes in any GLP-1 forum and you'll see the same frustration on repeat, especially from folks using compounded vials: the label says discard after 28 days, but there's clearly a lot of medicine left, and tossing it feels like pouring money down the drain. That instinct is completely reasonable. But — and this is the part that matters — the amount of liquid you can see doesn't tell you whether the medicine is still strong or still sterile. We'll come back to that, because it's the single most important idea on this page.

(We share what people ask as a window into the confusion — not as medical evidence. What controls your answer is your product's label, not a forum.)

What even counts as “opening” a GLP-1?

Answer in one line: “Opening” isn't one event across GLP-1 products. A multi-dose pen usually starts its clock at first use, a multi-dose vial usually starts at first needle puncture, and a single-dose device has no after-opening clock because it's discarded after one shot.

This sounds like a small detail. It's not. It's the difference between using your pen safely and guessing.

Multi-dose pen (Ozempic, Saxenda, Victoza, KwikPens): the clock starts at first use — your first injection from that device. In normal use, mark the date of that first shot. (If you primed or prepared the pen but never actually injected, check the Instructions for Use rather than assuming the clock didn't start.) And here's a common trap: putting the pen back in the fridge does not reset that clock. Refrigerating an in-use Ozempic pen at week two doesn't buy you a fresh 56 days. The countdown keeps running.

Multi-dose vial (compounded, or a brand multi-dose vial): the practical starting point is usually the first puncture — the first time a needle goes in. That's when the sterile seal is broken and the discard window your pharmacy set starts to matter.

Single-dose pen, syringe, or vial (most Wegovy, Ozempic syringes, single-dose Mounjaro/Zepbound, Trulicity): there's no ongoing “opened” period. It's built for one shot, then the sharps bin. If you're looking at a single-dose device wondering how many more days you can stretch it, the answer is zero — it was one dose. (CDC is blunt about single-dose vials specifically: don't save what's left for later, even for yourself.)

Pill bottles (Rybelsus, Ozempic tablets, Wegovy tablets, Foundayo): no “28 days after you open the bottle” clock. You go by the printed expiration, keep the tablets in their original bottle, keep them dry, and close the cap.

How long do Ozempic and Wegovy last after opening?

Answer in one line: Ozempic multi-dose pens last 56 days after your first injection, while Ozempic single-dose syringes are used once (with a 28-day pre-use room-temperature allowance). Most Wegovy is single-dose — you use it once and discard it — but a multi-dose Wegovy FlexTouch pen also exists and is discarded 56 days after first use.

Both are semaglutide, but they don't all behave the same way in your fridge.

Ozempic multi-dose pen — 56 days after first use. Once you take your first dose, per Novo Nordisk's prescribing information you can keep the pen in the fridge or at room temperature (up to 86°F) and use it for 56 days. After that, toss it — even if there's still medicine in the window. Keep the cap on between doses, and take the needle off after each shot. (Heads-up on doses: a starter pen delivers four 0.25-mg doses plus two 0.5-mg doses, and later pens hold four doses of your prescribed strength — so “four doses per pen” isn't universal.)

Ozempic single-dose prefilled syringe — use once. The current Ozempic label also includes single-dose prefilled syringes (0.25, 0.5, and 1 mg). These are one-and-done: use it, then discard it. Before use, an unused syringe can sit at 46–86°F for up to 28 days if needed.

Wegovy (single-dose) — use once, then discard. This is what most Wegovy users have: one pen per weekly dose. Novo Nordisk's own instructions say each single-dose pen is for one-time use. So the honest answer to “how long does my opened Wegovy last” is: you don't keep it — you use it and throw it away. The 28-day number you'll see is different. It's how long an unused pen (or single-dose syringe, or the HD pen) can sit out of the fridge — between 46°F and 86°F, in its carton — before you remove the cap. It's a before-use allowance, not a keep-using-it window.

Wegovy FlexTouch (multi-dose) — 56 days after first use. There's also a multi-dose Wegovy pen (the FlexTouch) that holds four weekly 2.4-mg doses in one device. If yours is a pen you use across a month rather than one-and-done, discard it 56 days after your first dose, kept in the fridge or at room temperature. This is the exact spot where a generic “Wegovy = 28 days” answer sends people wrong.

The bottom line for semaglutide: name the device before you trust a number. An Ozempic multi-dose pen is 56 days. An Ozempic syringe is one shot. Wegovy comes both ways — single-dose (use once) and a multi-dose FlexTouch (56 days). Ozempic's 56-day multi-dose window is tied with the Wegovy FlexTouch for the longest in-use window in this guide.

How long do Mounjaro and Zepbound last after opening?

Answer in one line: Single-dose Mounjaro and Zepbound pens and vials are used once and discarded, with up to 21 total days out of the fridge allowed before use. Their multi-dose vials and KwikPens follow a “whichever comes first” rule: 30 days after first use, 30 total days at room temperature, or 4 weekly doses.

Both are tirzepatide, and both come in two very different formats.

Single-dose Mounjaro or Zepbound (pen or vial): one shot, then discard. An unused single-dose device can sit at room temperature (up to 86°F) for up to a total of 21 days before you use it; once that cumulative total hits 21 days, discard it. There's no ongoing after-opening window, because there's only one dose.

Multi-dose Mounjaro or Zepbound (vial or KwikPen): here's where it takes a little tracking, so we made it visual. Discard when the first of these three things happens:

30 days

have passed since your first use

30 total days

at room temperature have added up (fridge-to-counter moves are fine — the room-temperature days just can't total more than 30)

4 doses

weekly doses have been taken

Whichever hits first wins. In real life, that usually means you finish four weekly shots and discard the device even if a little medicine is left. The current U.S. label includes both a four-dose Zepbound KwikPen and a four-dose Zepbound multi-dose vial, so if you started on the single-dose autoinjector and switched to a KwikPen or vial, you're now on this “30 / 30 / 4” rule, not one-and-done.

Quick gut check: if your Mounjaro or Zepbound is a device you use for one week and throw away, it's single-dose. If it's a KwikPen or a vial you draw from across a month, it's the 30 / 30 / 4 rule.

What about Trulicity, Saxenda, Victoza, and the older shots?

Answer in one line: Trulicity is single-dose (used once, with a 14-day pre-use room-temperature allowance). Saxenda and Victoza are multi-dose pens discarded 30 days after first use. Byetta is a multi-dose pen with a stricter 77°F ceiling, and Bydureon BCise is single-dose and is supposed to look cloudy after mixing.

These get searched less, but if one of them is what you have, here's your number.

Trulicity (dulaglutide) — single-dose. One pen, one shot, discard. An unused pen can stay at room temperature for up to a total of 14 days before use — the shortest room-temperature duration in this group, so it's the one to be most mindful about leaving out.

Saxenda (liraglutide) — 30 days after first use. This is a daily multi-dose pen, so you'll use it more often than the weekly shots. Once you start it, use it within 30 days, kept in the fridge or at room temperature (up to 86°F).

Victoza (liraglutide) — 30 days after first use. Same 30-day window as Saxenda once you open it.

Byetta (exenatide) — 30 days, and stricter on heat. After first use, Byetta follows a 30-day window, and its ceiling is lower than the newer shots: no warmer than 77°F. If you have an older exenatide product, confirm the exact rule on your own label.

Bydureon BCise (exenatide, extended-release) — single-dose, and cloudy is normal. This one is used once, with up to 4 weeks out of the fridge before use. The important thing to know: after you mix it, Bydureon BCise is supposed to look cloudy, opaque white to off-white. For this specific product, cloudy doesn't mean bad — follow its Instructions for Use.

If your medication isn't in this list at all, that's your cue to read the Instructions for Use in the box, or call the pharmacy that filled it. Don't borrow another drug's rule.

How long do GLP-1 pills last after opening?

Answer in one line: Oral GLP-1 medications — Rybelsus, Ozempic tablets, Wegovy tablets, and Foundayo — don't carry a separate “28 days after you open the bottle” countdown. Follow the printed expiration date and keep the tablets in their original, closed bottle, protected from moisture (and, for Foundayo, from light in its original carton).

Pills are the easy ones. No fridge, no injection clock.

Store oral GLP-1 tablets at room temperature, keep them in the original bottle they came in (the bottle helps protect them from moisture), and close the cap after each use. Foundayo also calls for keeping it in its original light-protective carton. There's no “use within X days of opening the bottle” — you simply use them by the expiration date on the label. Keep the tablets in the original bottle until use; don't move them into a pill organizer or another container, since that can let moisture in.

How long does compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide last after opening?

Answer in one line: There is no universal after-opening date for compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide. The dispensing pharmacy's label controls it — the Beyond-Use Date plus any separate “discard after first puncture” or single-use instruction — and when both apply, the earlier date wins. When the label is missing or unclear, call that pharmacy before using the vial.

This is the section a lot of people actually came for, because compounded vials are where the “there's so much left!” frustration lives. So let's be careful and clear.

First, what “compounded” means: it's semaglutide or tirzepatide prepared to order by a licensed compounder, rather than a sealed product supplied under an FDA-approved manufacturer label. Compounded drugs are not FDA-approved. The FDA does not review them for safety, effectiveness, or quality before they're sold, and their strength and instructions can vary. That's not a scare tactic — it's just why you can't take Ozempic's 56-day rule and stamp it on a compounded vial. Different product, different rules. (If you're weighing the two paths, our compounded vs name-brand guide walks through the differences.)

The number that counts is your pharmacy's label. A Beyond-Use Date (BUD) is the discard date your compounder assigns and prints on your vial. It's different from a manufacturer's expiration date. Don't apply a blanket 28-day rule, and don't borrow a number from a forum — your vial's BUD, and any separate post-puncture instruction, is your answer.

Why you might see two dates. Many compounders add a shorter “use within X days of first puncture” instruction on top of the overall BUD. The reason is sterility, not strength: puncturing the vial breaks the sterile seal. So you can end up with two dates — a longer BUD and a shorter after-puncture window — and the earlier one wins.

What to read on your pharmacy label (photograph it if it helps):

  • Your name and your prescriber
  • The pharmacy's name and phone number
  • The drug and its concentration in mg/mL
  • Total volume in the vial
  • Storage temperature
  • The Beyond-Use Date
  • Any “discard after first puncture” or single-use instruction
  • A lot or prescription number

If the label only gives a BUD, call the pharmacy and ask one question: “Does this vial also have a discard window after the first puncture, and does that replace the printed BUD or run inside it?” That single question clears up most of the confusion.

If two labels or inserts disagree, don't pick the more generous one. Photograph both and call the pharmacy that dispensed it.

If the label is missing, damaged, or something feels off — the FDA flags missing use instructions, broken packaging, and questionable pharmacy details as warning signs — pause and contact the pharmacy before you inject anything.

We know the frustrating part is watching medicine go in the sharps bin. But no honest page can tell you to stretch a compounded vial past its labeled date just because other people online say they do, or because there's liquid left. Borrowing a longer window from a different product would give you false confidence about strength and sterility you can't actually check.

Does GLP-1 need to stay in the fridge after opening?

Answer in one line: Some multi-dose GLP-1 pens can stay in the fridge or sit at room temperature (within their labeled range) after first use, while single-dose devices are discarded after one shot. Refrigerating an opened pen does not extend or restart its labeled 30- or 56-day window.

Two things people really want to know here.

Can you keep it out of the fridge once it's open? For most multi-dose brand pens — Ozempic, Saxenda, Victoza, the KwikPens — yes, within their labeled window and as long as it stays inside the product's temperature range (86°F for most). A lot of people prefer room temperature because a cold shot can sting. Just keep the pen in a stable spot, out of direct sun, away from radiators and hot cars.

Does putting it back in the fridge buy you more time? No. This is the myth worth repeating: refrigerating an in-use pen does not reset the clock. Your Ozempic pen doesn't get a fresh 56 days because you chilled it again. Once the countdown starts at first use, it runs wherever you store it.

For the single-dose and cumulative-time products (single-dose Mounjaro/Zepbound, Trulicity, and the multi-dose Mounjaro/Zepbound devices), track your total time out of the fridge, since that time adds up and counts against you.

Where in the fridge? Original carton, middle shelf, away from the very back wall and the cooling vents (that's where things accidentally freeze), and not touching an ice pack. A cheap fridge thermometer settles a lot of arguments — aim for 36°F to 46°F.

Can you still use a GLP-1 after 28 days if there's medicine left?

Answer in one line: Sometimes yes — but only when your specific product allows a longer window, like Ozempic's 56 days. You should not stretch a 28-day pharmacy instruction just because another brand lasts longer, or because liquid remains, since the amount you can see doesn't prove the medicine is still strong or sterile.

This is the emotional core of the whole topic, so let's hit it straight.

When 28 days is NOT your limit: if you have an Ozempic multi-dose pen (56 days), or a Saxenda/Victoza pen (30 days), the “28-day” number simply isn't yours. Use your product's actual window.

When 28 days IS the limit: if your compounded pharmacy label says discard 28 days after first puncture, that's your rule — even if the vial looks half full. It's set for sterility, and another product's longer window doesn't apply to your vial.

Why the leftover medicine doesn't change the date. Three different things get tangled here, and separating them clears it up:

  • How much is left — that's just volume. It tells you nothing about whether the medicine works.
  • Whether it's still strong — past the labeled date, no one can promise it's still full-strength.
  • Whether it's still sterile — once a needle has punctured a vial, keeping it past its window raises the risk.

The liquid in the window answers only the first one. The date on the label is doing the other two jobs — and you can't judge either by looking. That's why “but there's so much left” isn't a reason to keep using it past the labeled date.

If you're regularly finishing your window with a lot of medicine left, that's worth a conversation with your prescriber or pharmacy about concentration and dose — not a reason to guess on your own.

What if it was left out, got hot, froze, or arrived warm?

Answer in one line: A short time at room temperature may still fall inside your product's allowance, but freezing, excessive heat, warm shipments, and unknown storage histories call for caution. The FDA specifically recommends not using injectable GLP-1 medication that arrives warm or without proper refrigeration until the issue is sorted out.

Run through these before you inject.

Left out overnight. Usually fine — if you know the product, it stayed inside its temperature range, and you're still within its labeled window (remember, an in-use Ozempic pen is rated for 56 days out). Check your specific number rather than assuming.

Left in a hot car or a summer mailbox. This is the danger one. A parked car can pass 130°F on a warm day — far above any of these products' limits. If your pen got hotter than its ceiling (86°F for most, 77°F for a few), don't guess a “safe number of minutes” — call the pharmacy that filled it.

Froze, or touched a frozen ice pack. Discard it. Every injectable GLP-1 label says not to use the medicine if it's been frozen, and thawing doesn't undo the damage. It can look perfectly clear and still be ruined. This is the freeze rule again, and it's absolute.

Arrived warm in the mail. Don't inject. Instead: (1) photograph the shipping box, (2) photograph the medicine and the cooling packs, (3) note the delivery and open times, and (4) call the pharmacy or manufacturer. The FDA's guidance backs you up: product that arrives warm or under-refrigerated may not be usable.

Fridge lost power. Use the calculator only if you know how warm it got and for how long. If either is unknown, the honest answer is “can't tell — call the pharmacy,” not a guess.

You have no idea what happened to it. “Unknown” doesn't become “safe” because the liquid looks normal. When you can't reconstruct the history, that's a pharmacist call.

How can you tell if your GLP-1 has gone bad?

Answer in one line: For products meant to be clear, cloudiness, unexpected color, floating particles, cracks, or leaks are reasons to stop and contact the pharmacy. A normal-looking solution does not prove the medicine is still potent, sterile, or safely stored — appearance can't tell you those things.

Look before every dose. For the products that are supposed to be clear solutions (Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, Zepbound, and most others), these are stop signs:

  • Cloudy when it should be clear
  • An off or unexpected color (most are clear and colorless; Zepbound and Mounjaro can be colorless to slightly yellow — know your normal)
  • Particles, flakes, or crystals
  • A cracked device, a leak, or a broken seal
  • A missing or unreadable label

The one exception: Bydureon BCise is an extended-release product that is supposed to look cloudy white after mixing. For that specific medicine, cloudy is normal — follow its own instructions.

Here's the hard truth, though: a clear, normal-looking pen does not prove it's good. Clear liquid can't tell you whether it froze, whether it overheated, whether it's past its window, or — for a compounded vial — whether the concentration is right. Appearance rules things out, not in.

And please don't judge potency by your appetite. A weaker week, a plateau, more “food noise” — those happen for lots of reasons and don't reliably mean your vial went bad. Do not bump your own dose to compensate. The FDA has reported real dosing errors with compounded semaglutide, including people confusing milligrams, milliliters, and “units,” partly because concentrations vary. If the medicine feels off, talk to your prescriber — don't improvise the math.

How do you throw away an old GLP-1 pen, syringe, or vial?

Answer in one line: Put used needles, syringes, and needle-containing pen devices into an FDA-cleared sharps container (or a sturdy, sealable heavy-duty plastic container where local rules allow). Use a drug take-back option for leftover medicine when one is available, and never toss loose needles into household trash or recycling.

We've said “throw it out” a lot on this page, so here's how to actually do it safely.

  • Sharps (needles, syringes, pen devices with needles): drop them into an FDA-cleared sharps disposal container. You can often get one at a pharmacy or online. If you don't have one, a heavy-duty plastic container with a tight, puncture-resistant lid (like a laundry detergent jug) is a common backup where your area allows it — but check your local rules, because disposal laws vary by state and city.
  • Never put loose sharps in the regular trash or recycling.
  • Leftover medicine (like unused pills or an unopened pen you won't use): a drug take-back location or event is the safest way to get rid of it. Many pharmacies and police stations host them.
  • When a sharps container is about three-quarters full, seal it and dispose of it according to your local guidelines.

What to do right now: a 5-step check

Answer in one line: Read your carton, identify which of the four handling paths you have, find the controlling date, check the temperature and dose-count limits, and act on the earliest one. When the device, date, pharmacy instructions, or storage history are unknown, don't guess — call the pharmacy.

You've got everything you need. Here's the whole thing in five steps:

  1. Read the box and label. Don't go on memory or the provider's name — the label is the source of truth.
  2. Which path is it? Single-dose injection, multi-dose injection, tablet, or compounded (use the “how many doses” test).
  3. Find your controlling date. Printed expiration, first use, first puncture, day it left the fridge, or the pharmacy's Beyond-Use Date.
  4. Check temperature and doses. Inside the product's range? Never frozen? Within the 30 / 30 / 4 rule if it's a multi-dose tirzepatide device?
  5. Act on the earliest limit. Use it, mark the discard date on the pen, or discard and refill. If anything's unknown, call the pharmacy.

Skip the manual counting and let the tool apply all of this for you — about 30 seconds once you know your drug, device, and first-use date.

Get my label-backed discard date →

What we actually verified for this guide

Answer in one line: Each branded row was checked against the current U.S. prescribing information and Instructions for Use shown in the source column. Compounded-product dates are kept pharmacy-specific and are not generalized into a single number.

Because this is your health and your money, here's exactly what we did and didn't do. (Our editorial standards explain how we source every page.)

What we checked:

  • The current U.S. storage and handling language for each brand and device (including newer forms like Ozempic single-dose syringes, the Wegovy FlexTouch pen, and the Zepbound multi-dose vial and KwikPen)
  • Whether each is single-dose or multi-dose
  • What event starts the clock (first use, first puncture, or removal from the fridge)
  • Temperature ranges and the never-freeze rule
  • Dose-count limits (the 30 / 30 / 4 rule for multi-dose tirzepatide)
  • Current FDA guidance on compounded GLP-1s and warm shipments
  • The CDC/USP standard for multi-dose and single-dose vials

What we did not claim:

  • That one compounded-vial date fits every pharmacy (it doesn't)
  • That a normal-looking pen is automatically safe (it isn't)
  • That one brand's rule applies to another (never borrow rules)
  • That anything a forum says is proof of safety or strength

Our sources, in order of weight: (1) current FDA-approved labels and Instructions for Use, (2) FDA safety and compounding guidance, (3) CDC injection-safety guidance, (4) manufacturer support pages where the label needs plain-language clarification, and (5) patient forums — used only to understand the confusion, never as medical evidence.

One honest note: GLP-1 packaging is changing fast — recent updates added the Zepbound KwikPen, the Wegovy FlexTouch, and Ozempic single-dose syringes. If your device isn't covered here perfectly, go by your Instructions for Use, and the pharmacy that filled it can confirm your exact window.

Changelog — July 14, 2026: Built the four-path framework and calculator; separated after-first-use windows from pre-use room-temperature allowances; added Ozempic single-dose syringes, the Wegovy FlexTouch, and the Zepbound multi-dose vial; added the Bydureon BCise “cloudy is normal” exception; added a disposal section.

Frequently asked questions

Does every GLP-1 expire 28 days after opening?

No. “28 days” is a general safety default for punctured multi-dose vials, not a class-wide rule. Several brand pens allow longer — Ozempic multi-dose pens run 56 days after first use, Saxenda and Victoza run 30. Single-dose devices are used once, and compounded vials follow the pharmacy's Beyond-Use Date. Match the number to your device.

Does putting a GLP-1 back in the fridge reset the clock?

No. Once a multi-dose pen's countdown starts at first use, refrigerating it again does not create a fresh 30- or 56-day window. The clock keeps running wherever you store it.

How long does an Ozempic prefilled syringe last out of the fridge?

An unused Ozempic single-dose syringe can be kept at 46–86°F for up to 28 days before use. It's a single-dose product, so you use it once and discard it — there's no ongoing after-opening window.

How long does the Wegovy FlexTouch pen last after first use?

The multi-dose Wegovy FlexTouch pen holds four weekly 2.4-mg doses and should be discarded 56 days after your first dose. That's different from single-dose Wegovy pens, which are used once.

How long does a Zepbound multi-dose vial last after opening?

The same rule as the Zepbound KwikPen: discard at whichever comes first — 30 days after first use, 30 total days at room temperature, or 4 weekly doses.

Can Mounjaro or Zepbound go back in the refrigerator after being out?

For the multi-dose vials and KwikPens, yes — you can move them between the fridge and room temperature, as long as your total room-temperature time stays within 30 days (and you haven't hit the other limits). Single-dose devices simply need to be used within their 21-day total room-temperature allowance and then discarded.

Do I count my first injection as day one?

For multi-dose pens, the discard window starts at first use, and your discard date is counted from there. The exact counting convention is in your product's instructions — or just enter your first-use date in the calculator and it does the math.

What if I forgot when I first used or punctured it?

Don't reverse-engineer a generous guess. Check your pharmacy shipping date, your calendar, a phone reminder, an injection log, your provider portal, or the date stamp on a photo. If you truly can't pin it down, call the pharmacy.

Can I use it past the printed expiration if I'm still inside the after-opening window?

No. Whichever date comes first controls — and a manufacturer's expiration date still matters after opening.

Is a Beyond-Use Date the same as an expiration date?

Not quite. A manufacturer expiration date applies to a sealed, FDA-approved product, and it still counts after you open it — the earlier of that date and any in-use window controls. A Beyond-Use Date is assigned by a compounder for a mixed-to-order product. Follow any separate post-puncture instruction too.

Why is Bydureon BCise supposed to look cloudy?

Bydureon BCise is an extended-release exenatide made of tiny microspheres, so after mixing it looks cloudy, opaque white to off-white — that's its normal appearance, not a sign it's gone bad. This is the exception to the “cloudy means toss it” rule, which applies to the clear-solution products.

Can I save the medicine left in a single-dose vial?

No. CDC guidance says not to keep leftover contents from a single-dose vial for later use, even for the same person.

Does clear liquid mean it's still good?

No. Clear liquid only means you didn't spot an obvious defect. It can't tell you whether the medicine froze, overheated, lost strength, or is past its window.

Does Ozempic expire 28 days after opening?

It depends on the form. The Ozempic multi-dose pen lasts 56 days after first use. Ozempic single-dose prefilled syringes are used once, with a 28-day room-temperature allowance before use.

Does Wegovy expire 28 days after opening?

It depends on your device. Single-dose Wegovy pens (and the HD pen and syringes) are used once, and their 28-day figure describes storage before use. The multi-dose Wegovy FlexTouch pen is discarded 56 days after first use.

How long do GLP-1 pills last after opening the bottle?

There's no separate after-opening countdown. Use them by the printed expiration date, keep them in the original closed bottle, and protect them from moisture.

Still figuring out your next move?

Heads up: some links below are affiliate links, which means we may earn a commission if you start with a provider — at no extra cost to you. It doesn't change what we recommend or what the labels say.

If you just learned your current pen or vial is past its window — or it froze, overheated, or arrived warm — you may need to replace a dose sooner than you planned. That's a normal thing to run into, and it doesn't mean you did anything wrong.

If you already know you want FDA-approved, brand-name medication, Ro is one option worth a look — it lists FDA-approved GLP-1s including Zepbound® (tirzepatide) and Foundayo™ (orforglipron), and offers insurance support plus a free coverage checker. Ro Body membership runs $39 for the first month, then $149/month, or as low as $74/month when you prepay for a year — the medication itself is billed separately. (Prices and what's in stock change, so check current pricing and availability on Ro's site before you commit.)

But if you're not sure what fits your budget, your insurance, or whether you want a pen, a vial, or a pill, don't guess on that either. That's exactly what our free tool is for — and if you want the full landscape first, our guide to the best GLP-1 online programs and our rundown of compounded GLP-1 alternatives cover it.

Still not sure which GLP-1 program is right for you?

Take our free 60-second matching quiz — compare FDA-approved and compounded options based on your budget, insurance, preferred format, and the kind of support you want.

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Written by The RX Index editorial team and checked against the current U.S. prescribing information and Instructions for Use listed below. The RX Index is an independent comparison resource for GLP-1 telehealth providers. This article is for general information and is not medical advice — always follow the Instructions for Use that came with your specific product, and ask your pharmacist or prescriber about your situation. Storage rules can change when labels are updated.

Sources: Novo Nordisk prescribing information and Instructions for Use (Ozempic, Wegovy, Saxenda, Victoza, Rybelsus); Eli Lilly prescribing information and Instructions for Use (Mounjaro, Zepbound, Trulicity, Foundayo, KwikPen); DailyMed (U.S. National Library of Medicine); U.S. Food and Drug Administration guidance on compounded GLP-1 products, on medications shipped without proper refrigeration, and on safe sharps disposal; CDC injection-safety guidance and the USP standard for multi-dose and single-dose vials.

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