Brides-to-be have a long pre-wedding to-do list. From lehenga fittings and finalising the photographer, to skincare treatments, brides are swamped with appointments. But there’s a new addition to this already exhausting list — the weekly Mounjaro injection. Yes, Mounjaro injections are the latest bridal obsession, so much so that these women are being called ‘Mounjaro brides’. Why are so many women turning to Mounjaro right before their wedding? The answer is scary and sad.
The injection that crashed the shaadi season
Mounjaro is a GLP-1 receptor agonist, a class of drugs originally developed to manage Type 2 diabetes. It works by mimicking hormones that regulate appetite and blood sugar, suppressing hunger and slowing digestion, leading to rapid weight loss.
Drugs like Ozempic became cultural phenomena almost overnight — embraced by Hollywood, debated on social media, and prescribed at an unprecedented scale. India, it turns out, is having its own reckoning with this drug class. But with a uniquely desi twist: the country’s wedding industry has got its hands on it.
Mounjaro and rival drug Wegovy were officially launched in India in 2025. The market’s response was staggering. Mounjaro sales doubled in the months following launch, making it the highest-selling drug of its kind in the world’s most populous nation.
“Over 20 per cent of our queries are from brides”

Dr Rajat Goel, a bariatric surgeon at Hindivine Healthcare in New Delhi, told Reuters, “Over the last few months, over 20 per cent of the queries we’ve received for obesity injections are from to-be brides, who also openly give us a timeline on how soon they are getting married.“
Read that again. One in five people walking through the doors of a bariatric clinic in Delhi is not there because of a long-term health concern. They’re there because they have a wedding in three months and they want to fit into a lehenga.
The clinics have been quick to oblige. Delhi’s Klarity Skin Clinic went so far as to launch a branded “Mounjaro Bride” package, a bundled offering of guided nutrition, injections, and fitness coaching, marketed specifically to soon-to-be brides. Other clinics have also woven weight-loss injections into their pre-wedding “transformation packages”, slipping them alongside skin treatments and hairstyle makeovers, like a manicure. The product has found its market. And the market has a very specific deadline.
Why do Mounjaro brides exist in India?
To understand the intensity of the Mounjaro brides trend, India Today did an investigation where a journalist posed as a prospective client with a June 2026 wedding, and contacted two clinics in Delhi NCR and one in Mumbai. The responses were immediate, and the language was telling.
“Bahut der kar li,” one receptionist told them. “But don’t worry, our doctors will find a fix.” The “treatment”, they advised, ideally should have begun three months before the wedding, but even a month could yield “positive” results.
Let that sink in. We are now talking about medical interventions being scheduled around wedding calendars, not health needs. And before you judge the women who decide in favour of this shot, many of them are not choosing it of their own free will.
Priya, a tech worker from Bengaluru in search of a match, told Reuters, “I’ve had men, and their families, reject my proposal because of my weight. I was told I was fat.” She lost over 12 kilograms — first on oral semaglutide, then switching to injectable Mounjaro. Her search for a groom, at the time of reporting, was still ongoing.
This is not a cautionary tale about vanity. This is a portrait of a social system that places an extraordinary burden on women’s bodies, and of a pharmaceutical industry that has found a way to monetise that burden.
The medical reality we are ignoring

Here is the part that tends to get buried beneath the before-and-after photographs: Mounjaro is a prescription medication, not a cosmetic product. It is approved for adults who are clinically obese or overweight with a weight-related medical condition like diabetes, hypertension, or sleep apnoea. It is not, by any medical or regulatory standard, a “bridal package” ingredient.
The drug comes with a list of potential side effects: nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, pancreatitis, and, in rare cases, thyroid tumours. And the worst part is that the weight lost during the course of the injections frequently returns once the drug is discontinued. Most of these brides, tellingly, stopped their injections shortly after the wedding.
Responsible doctors are, to their credit, attempting to hold the line. Dr Swati Pradhan in Mumbai told Reuters she prescribed the drug only to a few brides who were medically eligible and showed signs of other health conditions. She said she always insists on lifestyle changes alongside the medication.
But for every careful doctor, there are many more clinics with Mounjaro bridal packages in India and a growing grey market of cheaper Indian-manufactured versions of these drugs flooding in as key patents expire. Regulation, to put it mildly, is struggling to keep up.
What the “Mounjaro brides” trend is really exposing
To understand this trend fully, you have to understand what Indian weddings have become in the social media era. The wedding album is no longer a private collection of memories. It is a public performance for the consumption of hundreds, sometimes thousands, of followers. The bride is its centrepiece. The pressure to look a certain way is not just familial or cultural anymore. It is algorithmic.
What makes this trend genuinely sinister is the speed with which it is growing. Women are accepting it because society makes them feel worse about their bodies than the side effects ever could.
Strip away the clinical branding, the wellness-speak, the before-and-after posts, and what you are left with is a country that has decided, collectively and without much protest, that a woman’s body is a project to be fixed for a wedding.
India’s wedding culture has always been extraordinary — the colour, the chaos, the joy, the sheer magnificent excess of it all. But this time, we have gone too far. The Mounjaro brides trend in India tells us less about brides than it does about us and what we expect of women, what we demand of their bodies, and how quickly an industry will move to profit from that expectation.
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