Talk to a Doctor OnlineTalk to a Doctor Weight Loss TreatmentWeight Loss online ED TreatmentED Meds online
Rx.com

What to Do If Insurance Won’t Cover Your Prescription

Educational content
This guide is for educational purposes only and isn’t medical advice. Medication choices and pricing vary by pharmacy, location, and insurance. If you have questions about what’s right for you, talk to a licensed clinician.

If insurance won’t cover your medication, you still have options. This guide walks through the most common reasons coverage fails and the practical steps that often fix it.

Step 1: Find out why it wasn’t covered

Common reasons include:

  • The drug isn’t on the plan’s formulary
  • It requires prior authorization (PA)
  • It’s a non-preferred brand when a generic exists
  • Step therapy is required (try alternatives first)
  • Quantity limits apply
  • You’re in a deductible phase and costs are higher than expected

Ask the pharmacy: “What rejection code did you get?”

Ask your insurer: “What’s required for coverage?”

Step 2: Ask about a covered alternative

If the exact medication isn’t covered, ask your clinician:

  • “What’s the closest covered alternative?”
  • “Is there a generic?”
  • “Is a different dosage or form covered?”

Sometimes switching to a preferred alternative solves the issue immediately.

Step 3: Prior authorization (PA) — what it is

A prior authorization is paperwork your clinician submits to show medical necessity. It’s common for higher-cost medications.

What usually helps a PA succeed:

  • Your diagnosis and medical history (as applicable)
  • Prior treatments tried
  • Documentation of why alternatives aren’t appropriate

Step 4: Step therapy — how to navigate it

Step therapy means the plan requires trying one or more preferred medications first.

If you’ve already tried them, ask your clinician to document:

  • What you tried
  • Dates and outcomes
  • Side effects or reasons it didn’t work

Step 5: Use a cash price strategy while you wait

PAs and appeals can take time. While waiting, you can:

  • Compare pharmacy prices
  • Use a discount card cash price if it’s lower
  • Ask about a short-term supply

Step 6: Appeal if needed

If coverage is denied, you can appeal. Ask your insurer:

  • Where to submit the appeal
  • How long it takes
  • What documentation is required

Bottom line

The fastest path is usually:

  1. Confirm the reason for denial
  2. Ask about a covered alternative
  3. Pursue a PA if appropriate
  4. Use a cash price strategy while you wait

Ways to save on your prescription

  • Check pharmacy prices: Prices can vary widely by location and pharmacy.
  • Use a free RX.com discount card: See potential savings at checkout (no subscription required).
  • Track prices with RxWatch: Get updates when prices change for medications you care about.
See a Doctor Online See a Doctor from $35 Weight Loss Treatment Weight Loss online ED Treatment ED Meds online