| You fill at Walgreens | Walgreens Rx Savings Finder | Searches your medication and shows available third-party discount card prices that can be used at Walgreens for eligible prescriptions. |
| You want to compare several pharmacies | GoodRx, SingleCare, RxSaver, WellRx, Optum Perks | These tools let you search a medication and compare coupon prices at participating pharmacies near you. |
| You do not have insurance | GoodRx, SingleCare, WellRx, Cost Plus Drugs | Cash prices can vary widely. A coupon tool or transparent-price pharmacy may be much lower than retail price. |
| Your insurance copay is high | Compare your copay against coupon prices | A coupon price may be lower than your insurance copay, but it usually will not count toward your deductible or out-of-pocket maximum. |
| You take several common generic medications | Amazon RxPass or pharmacy membership programs | A flat monthly membership may be worthwhile if your medications are included and you use it regularly. |
| You need a brand-name medication | Manufacturer savings cards or patient assistance programs | Drug makers may offer copay cards or free medication programs for eligible patients. |
| You have cancer-related medication costs | CancerCare, PAN Foundation, HealthWell Foundation, Patient Advocate Foundation | Some nonprofit programs help eligible patients with copays, premiums, deductibles, or treatment-related expenses. |
| You need insulin or diabetes medication help | ADA resources, manufacturer programs, Medicare insulin benefits | Insulin manufacturers and diabetes organizations provide cost help, savings cards, and patient assistance options. |
| You have Medicare and limited income | Medicare Extra Help, SHIP counseling, state assistance programs | Extra Help can lower Part D premiums, deductibles, and copays for people who qualify. |