Sexual Health Medications: Comparing Costs and Ways to Save
Sexual-health medications include treatments where several formerly expensive brands now have inexpensive generics, dramatically changing the cost picture. Some prevention-focused medications are also covered by many plans with no cost-sharing because of their public-health role.
The savings approach is to confirm generic availability — cash prices for the generic versions are often a fraction of the old brand price — and to compare pharmacies, since prices still vary. Where a preventive medication is covered at no cost, confirm that with your plan. Each medication below links to a page with current pricing.
Sexual Health medications (6)
Each medication links to its own page with live cash and discount prices. Prices vary by pharmacy, location, quantity, and eligibility.
- ApretudeSave 100%
Cabotegravir (extended-release injectable) · 600 mg/3 mL
Live prices on detail page
- ViagraSave 98%
Sildenafil · 100 mg
from $14.40
- CialisSave 97%
Tadalafil · 20 mg
from $18.00
- LevitraSave 95%
Vardenafil · 10 mg
from $28.00
- PropeciaSave 84%
Finasteride · 1 mg
from $12.40
- Stendra
Avanafil · 100 mg
Live prices on detail page
Frequently asked questions
Why do prices for the same medication vary so much between pharmacies?
Cash prices are set by each pharmacy, not by a single national list, so the same drug and quantity can cost very different amounts across the street from each other. Discount-card prices, manufacturer arrangements, and a pharmacy's own contracts all move the final number. Comparing a few pharmacies before you fill is the simplest way to avoid overpaying.
Have generics made these medications cheaper?
Yes — several sexual-health medications that were once costly brands now have generic versions that cost far less. Confirm whether a generic exists for what you're prescribed and compare pharmacy prices. Which medication is right for you is a clinical decision.
Could a generic version lower my cost?
When an FDA-approved generic exists, it usually costs far less than the brand while containing the same active ingredient. Whether a generic is appropriate for you is a clinical decision — ask your doctor or pharmacist. This page is about cost comparison only, not which medication you should take.
Related savings guides
- Generic vs Brand-Name Medications: Cost Differences Explained
How generic and brand-name medications differ in cost and FDA approval, with data on typical savings and what to ask your pharmacist.
- How to Save on Prescriptions Without Insurance
Options for lowering prescription costs when you're uninsured, including cash prices, discount cards, generics, and patient assistance programs.
- Why Prescription Prices Vary Between Pharmacies
Learn why the same medication can cost different amounts at different pharmacies, and how acquisition costs, PBMs, and markups play a role.
This page is for cost and savings education only. It is not medical advice and makes no claims about which medication is right for you or how well any drug works. Talk to your doctor or pharmacist about your specific medications and coverage. Prices vary by pharmacy, location, quantity, and eligibility.
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