Quick math example
A 5 mg vial mixed with 2 mL gives 2.5 mg/mL. A 0.25 mg dose is 0.1 mL, which equals 10 units on a U-100 syringe.
Semaglutide 2 mg vial reference
U100 units to draw for each common Semaglutide dose, by vial size, reconstituted with 1 mL of bacteriostatic water. Change the water volume in the calculator above to recompute for your own setup.
| Vial | Concentration | 250 mcg | 500 mcg | 1 mg | 1.7 mg | 2.4 mg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 mg | 2 mg/mL | 12.5 u(0.13 mL) | 25 u(0.25 mL) | 50 u(0.5 mL) | 85 u(0.85 mL) | 120 u(1.2 mL) |
Educational reference only — not a dose recommendation. Units assume a U100 insulin syringe (100 units = 1 mL on U-100). Always confirm against your own vial, diluent, and clinician or pharmacy instructions.
2 mg semaglutide vial examples
A 2 mg vial in 1 mL gives 2 mg/mL (2,000 mcg/mL). A 0.25 mg dose is 0.125 mL, about 12–13 units; a 0.5 mg dose is 0.25 mL (25 units).
- 2 mg / 1 mL = 2 mg/mL → 0.25 mg = ~12.5 units
- 2 mg / 2 mL = 1 mg/mL → 0.25 mg = 0.25 mL = 25 units
- A 2 mg vial yields about eight 0.25 mg doses
The 2 mg vial for early titration
The 2 mg vial covers the first weeks of a semaglutide titration, where weekly doses are small. It is best when you are still stepping up the dose; once you reach maintenance, a 5 or 10 mg vial reduces how often you reconstitute.
- Best for the 0.25–0.5 mg early titration steps
- ~8 doses at 0.25 mg per vial
- Move to a larger vial at maintenance dosing
How the semaglutide calculation works
The calculator first converts the vial amount from mg to mcg, then divides by the BAC water volume to find concentration. Your target dose is divided by that concentration to return mL and syringe units.
For GLP-1 compounds, small dose changes can meaningfully change the draw volume. Re-run the calculation whenever vial size, water amount, syringe type, or target dose changes.
- Concentration = vial mcg / water mL
- Dose volume = target dose mcg / concentration
- U-100 units = dose volume mL x 100
Semaglutide 5 mg vial with 2 mL example
A 5 mg semaglutide vial mixed with 2 mL gives a concentration of 2.5 mg/mL, or 2,500 mcg/mL.
A 0.25 mg dose is 250 mcg. At 2,500 mcg/mL, that dose is 0.1 mL, which equals 10 units on a U-100 syringe.
- 5 mg / 2 mL = 2.5 mg/mL
- 0.25 mg = 250 mcg
- 250 mcg / 2,500 mcg per mL = 0.1 mL = 10 U-100 units
Semaglutide 10 mg vial with 2 mL example
A 10 mg semaglutide vial mixed with 2 mL gives a concentration of 5 mg/mL, or 5,000 mcg/mL.
A 0.5 mg dose is 500 mcg. At 5,000 mcg/mL, that dose is 0.1 mL, which equals 10 U-100 units.
- 10 mg / 2 mL = 5 mg/mL
- 0.5 mg = 500 mcg
- 500 mcg / 5,000 mcg per mL = 0.1 mL = 10 U-100 units
Use with compounded or lyophilized vials
This page is intended for situations where you need to calculate a dose from a vial and diluent volume. Pre-filled commercial pens usually do not require this math.
Follow the label, pharmacy directions, and clinician instructions for storage, titration, and beyond-use dates.