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The cheapest way to fill your prescription

Enter your medication. We show every legitimate savings path ranked by real cost, from the Walmart $4 list to compounded telehealth, using researched price ranges. Ranked by price, never by who pays us a commission.

No data stored Commission-blind ranking Researched price ranges

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Savings paths for

How we rank: paths are ordered by real cost, cheapest first. Some links (marked) are affiliate links that help fund RxGrab at no extra cost to you. We never move a cheaper option down or a costlier one up because of a commission. Ranges are researched estimates, not quotes: confirm the current price before you fill.

Ways to save even more

How This Tool Works

The Prescription Savings Finder does not fabricate a per-pharmacy price for your specific drug. Instead, it maps your medication to its category (common generic, GLP-1 weight-loss, ADHD, or brand-name) and shows every legitimate savings path for that category, ranked cheapest first, using researched price ranges drawn from RxGrab's own pricing guides and public programs. For a common generic, that means the Walmart $4 list, Costco (no membership required), Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs, free discount cards like GoodRx and SingleCare, and the expensive retail-cash default. For a GLP-1 drug like Ozempic or Wegovy, it means compounded semaglutide through telehealth, the manufacturer savings card, and the full-price brand pen. Ranges are estimates to guide your choice, not quotes: always confirm the exact current price with the pharmacy or provider before you fill.

Example: a GLP-1 patient paying cash

Someone prescribed Ozempic with no insurance sees three ranked paths. The branded pen at retail cash runs roughly $935 to $1,050 a month. The manufacturer savings card only helps meaningfully if they have commercial insurance, so for a cash-pay patient it is not the answer. The cheapest legitimate route is compounded semaglutide through a telehealth provider, typically $150 to $400 a month with the visit and medication bundled. The tool routes them to RxGrab's telehealth comparison so they can weigh providers like Hims, Eden, and Henry Meds, with a clear note that compounding availability shifts with FDA shortage status and should be reconfirmed. That is a concrete decision, not vague advice to "shop around."

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these real prices?

They are researched price ranges, not live quotes. Each range comes from RxGrab's own pricing guides and public program rules (for example, the Walmart $4 list is a nationally standardized program, and Cost Plus Drugs publishes its cost-plus-15%-plus-fees formula). Actual prices vary by pharmacy, location, dosage, and current program terms. Use the ranges to pick the right path, then confirm the exact price with the pharmacy or provider before filling.

Do you rank paths by who pays you a commission?

No. Paths are ordered strictly by real cost, cheapest first. Some outbound links are affiliate links that help fund the site at no extra cost to you, and those are the same links whether or not they earn us anything. We never move a cheaper option down or a costlier one up because of a commission. That rule is the whole point of RxGrab.

Why is compounded semaglutide so much cheaper than brand Ozempic?

Compounded semaglutide is made by compounding pharmacies rather than the brand manufacturer, and telehealth providers bundle it with the required medical visit. That can bring the monthly cost from $900 or more down to the $150 to $400 range for cash-pay patients. Important caveat: compounding is tied to FDA drug-shortage status, which changes, so availability and legality can shift. Always use a licensed provider and reconfirm the current offering.

Which medications does the tool cover?

It maps the most-searched drugs across four categories: common generics (blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, mental health, thyroid, and more), GLP-1 weight-loss drugs (semaglutide and tirzepatide), ADHD medication, and brand-name drugs without a generic. If your drug is not recognized, the tool asks you to pick its category so it can still show you the right savings paths rather than guessing.

Disclaimer: RxGrab shows researched price ranges to help you compare savings paths, not live quotes for your specific pharmacy. Actual prices vary by location, pharmacy, dosage, and program terms and change over time. This is drug-pricing information for educational purposes only and is not medical advice; consult your pharmacist or physician about your medication. Compounded-medication availability depends on FDA shortage status and applicable law. Always verify the current price and legality before filling. Some outbound links are affiliate links; RxGrab may earn a commission at no extra cost to you and never ranks options by commission.