Compare prescription drug costs across different insurance tiers, pharmacies, and discount programs to find the cheapest option for your medication.
Prescription drug costs vary wildly depending on the pharmacy, your insurance formulary tier, and whether you use a discount card like GoodRx. It's not uncommon for the same drug to cost $10 at one pharmacy and $100 at another, or for a discount card to beat your insurance copay.
Insurance plans organize drugs into tiers (1–4+) with increasing copays: generic ($5–15), preferred brand ($30–60), non-preferred brand ($75–125), and specialty ($150–500+). But these tiers don't always reflect the cheapest option.
This calculator compares your annual prescription costs across up to 3 options — insurance copay, discount price, and cash price — to find the lowest total cost. These are educational estimates only, not actual drug prices. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Many people assume insurance always provides the lowest drug price, but that's often wrong. Discount programs, mail-order pharmacies, and generic alternatives can dramatically reduce costs. This calculator reveals the cheapest path. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions. Manual calculations are error-prone and time-consuming; this tool delivers verified results in seconds so you can focus on strategy.
Annual Cost (each option) = Monthly Cost × Number of Refills per Year Annual Savings = Highest Annual Cost − Lowest Annual Cost Best Option = option with lowest Annual Cost
Result: Discount card: $264/yr | Insurance: $540/yr | Cash: $1,020/yr
The discount card price ($22/month × 12 = $264) beats insurance copay ($45 × 12 = $540) by $276/year. This is common for mid-tier brand drugs where generic alternatives are priced competitively at discount pharmacies.
Drug pricing in the US is notoriously opaque. The same medication can have a list price, a negotiated rate, a PBM contract price, an insurance copay, and a discount card price — all different. Savings of $500-$2,000+ per year are common when patients comparison shop.
For patients with multiple prescriptions, a hybrid approach often works best: use insurance for high-tier drugs (to count toward the deductible/OOP max), discount cards for cheaper generics, and manufacturer programs for expensive brand medications. Reviewing your strategy at each refill can yield meaningful savings.
Most insurance plans offer mail-order pharmacy with 90-day supplies at 2–2.5× the monthly copay (instead of 3×). If you take maintenance medications, this saves 16–33% automatically. Some plans make mail order mandatory after the first retail fill.
Insurance copays are set amounts that may be higher than the pharmacy's cost for the drug. Discount cards negotiate directly with pharmacies for cash-pay rates. For inexpensive generics especially, the negotiated cash price can be well below insurance copay amounts.
Not necessarily. Using insurance counts toward your deductible and out-of-pocket maximum, which matters if you have high medical costs. The trade-off is paying more now (higher copay) to reach free coverage sooner. Calculate both scenarios for your situation.
Tier 1: generic ($5–15 copay), Tier 2: preferred brand ($30–60), Tier 3: non-preferred brand ($75–125), Tier 4: specialty ($200–500+). Some plans have 5–6 tiers. Drugs can move between tiers annually, so check each year during open enrollment.
Prices for the same drug at the same dose can vary 200–500% across pharmacies in the same town. Use GoodRx or RxSaver to compare prices at nearby pharmacies. Costco (no membership needed for pharmacy), Walmart ($4 generics), and Amazon Pharmacy often have the lowest prices.
Cost Plus Drugs sells generic medications at manufacturer cost plus a 15% markup, $5 pharmacist fee, and $5 shipping. Prices are often 50–90% cheaper than retail. The selection is limited to common generics, but the savings for included drugs can be dramatic.
You can't use both simultaneously for the same prescription, but you can choose which to use for each fill. Some pharmacies will check both and tell you which is cheaper. Note that discount card purchases won't count toward your insurance deductible.