The U.S. healthcare system generates billions of dollars in unused, sealed diabetic supplies every year. Insurance auto-refill programs, medication transitions, and the rapid adoption of GLP-1 therapies have created a structural surplus that pharmacies refuse to accept and regulators have no framework to redirect.
A growing segment of the healthcare secondary market, diabetic supply buyback platforms, now connects that surplus to the 38.4 million Americans managing diabetes on tight budgets.

The Structural Problem: Why Unused Diabetic Supplies Accumulate at Scale
Diabetic supply surplus results from system-level design flaws in how insurance, prescriptions, and medication transitions interact.
Auto-Refill Programs Ship Faster Than Patients Consume
Most insurance plans mandate 90-day auto-refill cycles for chronic condition supplies. These programs ship on fixed schedules regardless of actual patient consumption. When a patient reduces testing frequency, switches to a continuous glucose monitor, or changes insulin types, the surplus compounds. Pharmacies cannot legally accept returns on dispensed products, creating a dead-end for sealed, unexpired inventory.
The GLP-1 Transition Created Unprecedented Insulin Surplus
The rapid adoption of GLP-1 receptor agonists between 2022 and 2025, including Ozempic, Mounjaro, Wegovy, and Trulicity, shifted millions of Type 2 diabetes patients away from traditional insulin therapy.
According to IQVIA data, GLP-1 prescriptions grew over 300% during that period. Each patient transition left behind weeks or months of unused insulin pens, test strips, and pen needles that the healthcare system has no mechanism to recapture.
End-of-Life and Caregiver Surplus Adds Volume
After a patient passes away or enters long-term care, families frequently discover months of accumulated diabetic supplies, sealed CGM sensors, insulin cartridges, lancets, and testing kits. Insurance already paid for these products. Without a return channel, most are discarded.
The Demand Side: Diabetes Affordability Remains a National Crisis
The supply surplus exists alongside a severe affordability gap that affects millions of Americans with diabetes.
Insulin and Testing Supply Costs Without Insurance
The ADA estimates annual U.S. diabetes-related healthcare costs at $412 billion. Yale School of Medicine research documented insulin price increases exceeding 300% over two decades. A single box of brand-name test strips costs $30 to $150 at retail. One in four insulin users reports rationing doses due to cost, per ADA survey data.
Policy Improvements Cover Medicare but Miss Working-Age Adults
The Inflation Reduction Act capped Medicare insulin copays at $35 per month starting in 2023. Medicare-negotiated drug prices take effect in 2026. These changes benefit seniors, but roughly 22 million working-age adults with diabetes remain exposed to high out-of-pocket costs, particularly those on high-deductible plans, between jobs, or uninsured.
How Buyback Platforms Bridge the Surplus-to-Need Gap
Diabetic supply buyback services operate as a secondary market connecting surplus holders with cost-sensitive buyers.
The Three-Step Buyback Process
The operational model follows a standardized workflow. Sellers submit product details, brand, type, quantity, and expiration date, through an online platform. The company provides a prepaid shipping label.
After receiving and verifying that supplies are factory-sealed with adequate shelf life remaining (typically 7+ months), the company issues payment via PayPal or check within 1 to 2 business days.
What Products Move Through the Buyback Channel
The most commonly traded products include sealed diabetic test strips, Dexcom G6 and G7 sensors, FreeStyle Libre sensors, insulin pens (Humalog, Novolog, Lantus), pen needles, and insulin pump supplies including Omnipod pods. All products must be unexpired and in original sealed packaging.
Market Growth Driven by GLP-1 Adoption
Diabetics Trust, a nationwide buyback service operating across all 50 states, reports that insulin pen submissions increased over 40% in the past 18 months, a trend directly correlated with GLP-1 adoption rates. The company processes thousands of shipments monthly from sellers across the U.S., with more than half of transactions originating from caregivers or family members managing surplus after medication changes.
Regulatory Landscape and Market Outlook
The diabetic supply buyback market operates within a regulatory framework that varies by product type and state.
Over-the-Counter vs. Prescription Product Regulations
Diabetic test strips, lancets, and pen needles are classified as over-the-counter products in most states, making their resale straightforward. Insulin and certain CGM components carry prescription-level regulatory considerations that vary by jurisdiction. No federal framework specifically governs the resale of sealed, consumer-held diabetic supplies.
The Case for Formalized Redistribution Infrastructure
Several states have enacted drug repository programs for unused medication redistribution, but coverage remains limited and inconsistent. The ADA and patient advocacy organizations have called for expanded frameworks, particularly for high-cost diabetes technology like CGM sensors and insulin pump supplies, where individual units reach $300 to $500 at retail. As diabetes prevalence continues to rise and medication transitions accelerate, the buyback market is positioned to grow as a practical bridge between healthcare waste and patient access.


