How Prescription Discounts Work
Prescription prices can vary widely from one pharmacy to another—even for the same medication. Our free service helps you compare pharmacy prices and find a prescription discount code you can use immediately, often saving more than insurance copays.
Why Prescription Prices Are Different at Every Pharmacy
There is no single set price for prescription medications. Pharmacies negotiate different rates with manufacturers, wholesalers, and discount networks. Because of this, the same medication can cost significantly more or less depending on where you fill it.
Prescription discount codes give you access to pre-negotiated cash prices that are not always available through insurance.
How We Find the Lowest Prescription Prices Near You
When you submit your medication details, we search multiple pharmacy discount networks and pricing sources to find the lowest available price in your area.
HOW IT WORKS
Enter your medication name, dosage, quantity, and ZIP code so we can search prices near you.
We compare pharmacy prices across multiple discount networks to find the best available option.
Your discount code is sent instantly via SMS or email, ready to use at the pharmacy.
How to Use Your Discount at the Pharmacy
1. Show the discount code on your phone or email
2. The pharmacist enters the code into their system
3. You pay the discounted cash price
No insurance cards, paperwork, or waiting required.
Prescription Discounts vs Insurance
In many cases, prescription discount codes cost less than insurance copays, especially for generic medications. You can ask the pharmacist to check both your insurance and the discount code and use whichever option is cheaper.
Discounts cannot be combined with insurance, but you are free to choose the better price.
Who Can Use Prescription Discounts
Prescription discounts are available to everyone, including:
1. People without insurance
2. People with high copays
3. People whose medication is not covered
There are no eligibility requirements or sign-ups required.
