Wegovy 1mg Clicks
Use it only for the full 1 mg dose as intended. If you have leftover liquid after pressing the button, the pen is defective—do not reuse.
Attempting to count clicks on an official pen to get a lower dose (like 0.5 mg) is not recommended and can be:
The "1mg clicks" likely refers to the dosing mechanism of the Wegovy pen. The Wegovy pen is designed to help patients self-administer the correct dose. It comes in different concentrations and doses (0.25mg, 0.5mg, 1mg, 1.7mg, 2.4mg), and each dose has a specific number of clicks on the pen to ensure accuracy. wegovy 1mg clicks
Patients often seek click charts when they have a higher-strength pen (such as a 1mg or 2.4mg pen) but wish to take a smaller dose.
If your doctor has prescribed the 1 mg maintenance dose, you should ideally be using the Purple Wegovy pen . Use it only for the full 1 mg dose as intended
Assuming you are using the 1 mg pen correctly, here is what users and clinical data report:
The primary drivers are saving money—as all pen strengths often cost the same—and "microdosing" to more gradually increase the dose beyond the standard 4-week escalation schedule. The Wegovy pen is designed to help patients
Click counting is only possible with the multi-dose FlexTouch pen, common in the UK and Europe. In the US, Wegovy is typically supplied in single-use injectors that do not have a dial or clicks to count.
Some patients or healthcare providers may discuss "clicks" in the context of splitting a higher-dose pen to achieve a 1 mg dose (for example, using a 2.4 mg pen to inject a partial dose). This is generally discouraged and potentially unsafe for several reasons:
