If you have ever held a compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide vial and stared at a label that says "5mg/mL" or "10mg/mL" without knowing what to do with that number, you are not alone. It is one of the most common points of confusion in the GLP-1 community โ€” and one of the most consequential, because that number directly determines how many units you draw into your syringe.

This guide explains concentration in plain language, shows you exactly how to use it, and walks through common examples so you can dose confidently every time.

What mg/mL Actually Means

mg/mL stands for milligrams per milliliter. It tells you how much active medication is dissolved in each milliliter of liquid in your vial.

The medication is the same regardless of concentration. What changes is how many units you need to draw to get your prescribed dose. This is the critical point that trips people up when switching pharmacies.

โš  Why This Matters If you calculate your units using the wrong concentration โ€” for example, you use 5mg/mL math but your new vial is 10mg/mL โ€” you will inject twice your intended dose. Doubling a GLP-1 dose can cause severe nausea, vomiting, and serious side effects. Always verify the concentration printed on your current vial before every injection.

The Formula: How to Calculate Your Units

GLP-1 injections use U-100 insulin syringes, which come in 30, 50, and 100 unit sizes. All measure in the same units โ€” 100 units equals 1 mL โ€” so the math is the same regardless of syringe size. The formula to convert your prescribed dose (in mg) to the number of units you draw is:

Units = (Dose mg รท Concentration mg/mL) ร— 100
Works for any U-100 insulin syringe (30, 50, or 100 unit)

Worked Examples

DrugDoseConcentrationUnits to DrawVolume
Sema0.25 mg5 mg/mL5 units0.05 mL
Sema1 mg5 mg/mL20 units0.20 mL
Sema1 mg10 mg/mL10 units0.10 mL
Sema1 mg2.5 mg/mL40 units0.40 mL
Tirz2.5 mg10 mg/mL25 units0.25 mL
Tirz5 mg10 mg/mL50 units0.50 mL
Tirz5 mg16.6 mg/mL30 units0.30 mL

Notice that a 1mg dose of semaglutide requires 20 units from a 5mg/mL vial, but only 10 units from a 10mg/mL vial. The dose โ€” and the clinical effect โ€” is identical. The syringe reading is different because the liquid is more concentrated.

Why Compounding Pharmacies Use Different Concentrations

There is no single standard concentration for compounded GLP-1 medications. Each pharmacy designs its formulation around its vial sizes, titration schedules, and patient protocols. Here is why you see so much variation:

Common semaglutide concentrations from major compounding pharmacies: 2.5, 4, 5, and 10 mg/mL. Common tirzepatide concentrations: 5, 8, 10, 15, 16.6, and 17 mg/mL.

๐Ÿ’ก Concentration vs. Strength A higher mg/mL number does not mean the medication is "stronger" or more effective. It simply means the same dose occupies less volume. A 1mg dose from a 10mg/mL vial and a 1mg dose from a 5mg/mL vial are clinically identical.

How to Read Your Vial Label

Every compounded vial should have a label printed by the pharmacy. Here is what to look for:

If your label shows "10mg/2mL" but does not explicitly say "5mg/mL," divide the total mg by total mL to get the concentration: 10 รท 2 = 5mg/mL.

โœ… Quick Check Before Every Injection
๐Ÿ’ŠDrug name โ€” matches what you were prescribed
๐Ÿ”ขConcentration โ€” matches your vial label (especially on a new refill)
๐Ÿ“…Beyond-use date โ€” vial is still within its expiration window

What Happens When You Switch Pharmacies

Pharmacy switches are one of the most common reasons people inject the wrong dose. If you were at Empower on a 10mg/mL tirzepatide vial and switch to a pharmacy using 5mg/mL, and you draw the same number of units โ€” you will get half your intended dose. The opposite error results in a double dose.

The rule is simple: whenever you get a new vial โ€” whether it is a refill, a pharmacy switch, or a different product tier โ€” recalculate your units from scratch using the concentration on the new label. Do not assume it matches your previous vial.

For a step-by-step guide specifically on pharmacy switches, see: Switching GLP-1 Pharmacies Mid-Titration โ†’

Calculate Your Exact Units in Seconds

Enter your dose and concentration into the free DoseCompa calculator. Select your pharmacy for automatic concentration lookup, or enter your vial's mg/mL manually.

Open the Calculator โ†’

Frequently Asked Questions

What does mg/mL mean on a semaglutide or tirzepatide vial?
mg/mL stands for milligrams per milliliter โ€” the amount of active medication in each mL of liquid. A 5mg/mL vial contains 5mg of semaglutide per mL. A 10mg/mL vial contains 10mg per mL and is twice as concentrated, so you draw half the volume for the same dose.
How do I calculate units from mg/mL?
Formula: Units = (Dose in mg รท Concentration in mg/mL) ร— 100. Example: 1mg dose at 5mg/mL = (1 รท 5) ร— 100 = 20 units. Always use a U-100 insulin syringe.
Is a higher concentration (more mg/mL) stronger or better?
No. The clinical effect of your dose depends on how many milligrams you inject, not the concentration of the vial. Higher concentration means you draw a smaller volume for the same dose โ€” nothing more.
Why do different compounding pharmacies use different concentrations?
Each pharmacy sets its own formulation based on vial size, titration protocol, and any added compounds (glycine, B12, etc.). There is no regulatory standard for compounded GLP-1 concentrations, so they vary significantly across pharmacies.
What if my new vial has a different concentration than my previous one?
Recalculate your units using the new concentration before injecting. Do not use the same number of units from your old vial. Drawing the same units from a higher-concentration vial means a higher dose; from a lower-concentration vial means a lower dose.

Sources

  1. Wilding JPH, et al. Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity. N Engl J Med. 2021;384(11):989-1002.
  2. Jastreboff AM, et al. Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity. N Engl J Med. 2022;387(3):205-216.
  3. FDA. Human Drug Compounding: Questions and Answers. Updated 2024.
  4. USP <797> Pharmaceutical Compounding - Sterile Preparations. United States Pharmacopeia.