GLP-1 & dosing

GLP-1 Titration Schedule Planner

Titration is the gradual dose escalation most people follow when starting a GLP-1. Start from an editable reference template, set your start date, and get a dated step-by-step schedule you can mirror against your prescriber's plan.

Loads a common escalation pattern. Edit every step below.

The date you begin the first step.

Steps (editable)

1
mg
wk
2
mg
wk
3
mg
wk
4
mg
wk
5
mg
wk

Your schedule

20 weeks total
StepDoseStartsEnds
10.25 mg4 wkJune 19, 2026July 16, 2026
20.5 mg4 wkJuly 17, 2026August 13, 2026
31 mg4 wkAugust 14, 2026September 10, 2026
41.7 mg4 wkSeptember 11, 2026October 8, 2026
52.4 mg4 wkOctober 9, 2026November 5, 2026

How this works

The planner walks your steps from the start date. Each step lasts its number of weeks (weeks x 7 days), and the next step begins the day after the previous one ends. Change any dose or duration and the dated table updates instantly.

The prefilled templates mirror common manufacturer escalation patterns: semaglutide at 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 1.7, then 2.4 mg, and tirzepatide at 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, then 15 mg, each held for four weeks. These are an editable starting point, nothing more.

This is a general reference only. Your prescriber sets your actual schedule. Many people hold a dose longer for tolerability or escalate on a different cadence. Edit the steps to match whatever your clinician gives you, then use the medication level visualizer to picture how the dose builds between steps.

Frequently asked questions

Where does the default schedule come from?

The prefilled steps mirror the common manufacturer escalation pattern (for example semaglutide 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 1.7, 2.4 mg, four weeks each). It is an editable reference template, not a recommendation for you.

Can I change the steps?

Yes. Every step, dose, and number of weeks is editable, and you can add or remove steps. The dated table updates instantly so you can mirror whatever schedule your prescriber gives you.

Does this decide my titration for me?

No. Titration speed depends on tolerability and your clinician's judgement. Many people stay on a dose longer or move faster. Use this to visualise a plan, then follow the schedule your prescriber sets.

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