PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063755
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063755
According to Mordor Intelligence, the oral proteins and peptides market size was valued at USD 10.83 billion in 2025 and is estimated to grow from USD 12.31 billion in 2026 to reach USD 25.35 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 15.54% during the forecast period (2026-2031).

This report is Segmented by Molecule Class (Peptides, Proteins & Enzymes), Drug Class (GLP-1 RAs, GC-C Agonists, Somatostatin RAs, Pancreatic Enzymes, Vasopressin Analogs), Indication (T2D, Obesity, IBS-C, CIC, EPI, Acromegaly, Others), and Geography (North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, MEA, South America). Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Eli Lilly's Foundayo (orforglipron) won FDA approval in April 2026, and Novo Nordisk's 25 mg oral semaglutide tablet reached U.S. pharmacies in January 2026, creating the first obesity-labeled peptide tablets to hit commercial scale. The Medicare GLP-1 Bridge demonstration, effective July 2026, reimburses both products at a USD 245 net monthly price with a USD 50 out-of-pocket cost, underscoring payer readiness to fund oral peptides that improve persistence. A 78,297-patient U.S. claims analysis found that oral semaglutide achieved 65.1% high adherence at 12 months versus 38.8% for injectables. However, an Italian observational study showed that 18-month persistence fell to 46.0% owing to gastrointestinal intolerance. The data suggest the oral proteins and peptides market will benefit when second-generation tablets reduce fasting windows and nausea rates.
High refill adherence correlates with lower disease activity across multiple chronic illnesses, and ease of administration drives that adherence. Real-world studies in inflammatory bowel disease linked 80% medication possession to a 70% fall in active-disease odds. Emerging oral peptides must therefore balance convenience with tolerability; strict "water-only" fasting rules and dose-related dyspepsia threaten persistence. Phase 2 and Phase 3 assets such as Structure Therapeutics' GSBR-1290 and Hansoh Pharma's HS-10535 aim to cut fasting windows below 10 minutes and reduce emetogenicity, suggesting future crowd-out pressure on weekly injectables.
Classic oral peptides rarely exceed 1% absorption, forcing 10-100X injectable doses and inflating both cost and gastrointestinal side-effects. Oral semaglutide requires 14 mg to match a 1 mg injection and still posts 50-60% coefficient-of-variation in exposure. Variability undermines the oral proteins and peptides market size economics.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Peptides held 78.31% of the oral proteins and peptides market in 2025 thanks to entrenched GLP-1 and GC-C franchises. The oral proteins and peptides market size for proteins and enzymes is projected to expand at 16.32% CAGR as ingestible injectors sidestep gut-wall barriers. Ironwood's LINZESS peptide reported USD 272.5 million Q1 2026 revenue, up 97% year over year, illustrating peptide resilience. In parallel, RaniPill achieved 84% bioavailability for ustekinumab biosimilar, validating protein delivery viability. The segment's long-run upside hinges on scaling device manufacturing and proving repeat-dose intestinal safety.
Second-generation enzyme formulations also reinforce protein upside. Updated CREON and Pertzye labels now cite coefficients of fat absorption above 83%, providing clear efficacy endpoints that justify premium reimbursement. Still, proteins face steep cost-of-goods when classical oral formulations demand gram-level API loads, keeping device platforms central to growth.
North America retained 45.75% of 2025 revenue, bolstered by payer initiatives like the Medicare GLP-1 Bridge and clear FDA peptide guidance. The region also hosts most ingestible-device clinical sites, positioning it to capture early protein-delivery upside. Yet real-world adherence gaps driven by gastrointestinal side-effects cap long-term share gains.
Europe benefits from centralized health-technology assessments that welcome oral options when they lower nurse-administered costs. EMA alignment on peptide bioequivalence lowers filing risk, encouraging biosimilar entrants that could compress price points.
Asia-Pacific is projected to record a 16.12% CAGR to 2031, supported by China's regulatory openness to incretin innovation and Japan's modality-specific PMDA guidance. Local manufacturing pacts, such as AstraZeneca's USD 1.2 billion CSPC agreement, aim to regionalize supply chains, cutting tariffs and shipping cost for high-dose tablets.
South America and the Middle East & Africa remain nascent, constrained by reimbursement hurdles and limited cold-chain infrastructure. Nonetheless, rising obesity prevalence and tele-pharmacy adoption point toward future opportunities once cheaper generic peptides arrive.