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Cost of Insulin Per Month in the U.S.

Budget Seniors, June 8, 2026June 8, 2026
💉🩺
Insulin Prices · Medicare Cap · Manufacturer Programs · Biosimilars · $35 Path Explained

Brand-name insulin list prices run $300–$400 per vial. What most people actually pay is dramatically different — and the gap between those two numbers has never been wider. Medicare patients pay $35 or less. Millions of uninsured Americans qualify for $35 manufacturer programs. Walmart’s ReliOn insulin is $25 a vial without any program at all. This guide maps every path to affordable insulin.

🔥
Just Launched — California Became the First State to Sell Its Own Insulin at $11 a Pen

On January 1, 2026, California launched CalRx® Insulin Glargine pens at $55 for a five-pack ($11 per pen) — the first state government to contract and sell its own insulin, bypassing pharmaceutical pricing entirely. Made in partnership with nonprofit Civica Rx and Biocon Biologics, the pen is interchangeable with Lantus (no new prescription needed) and available to anyone with no eligibility requirements. One patient reported their three-month supply dropped from $255 to $105 immediately after California’s Senate Bill 40 cap took effect. Other states are watching closely.

💡 The Reality That Most Insulin Articles Don’t Say Clearly Enough

The “list price” of insulin — the figure that shows up in news headlines about insulin costing $300 or $400 per vial — is not what most Americans actually pay at the pharmacy. It is the manufacturer’s stated retail price, before insurance, before rebates, before savings programs, and before patient assistance. The gap between list price and what a real person pays has never been wider. On Medicare, the Inflation Reduction Act capped insulin at $35/month permanently. The three major manufacturers (Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, and Sanofi) voluntarily extended their own $35 caps to commercially insured and uninsured patients through savings programs. Walmart sells OTC insulin at $25/vial with no program required. Biosimilar generics have entered the market at 15–30% below brand-name prices. The challenge for patients is not that affordable insulin is unavailable — it’s that the path to it is fragmented and nobody hands you the map. This guide is that map.

💰 What Insulin Actually Costs — By Situation

The same insulin product can cost anywhere from $0 to $400+ per month depending on your insurance status, which programs you’ve enrolled in, and which pharmacy you use. The list below shows what each category of patient actually pays.

Your Situation Monthly Cost How to Access It
Medicare Part D CAPPED BY LAW $35/month maximumPermanent cap under the Inflation Reduction Act · Part B (pump insulin) also capped at $35 Automatic through any Medicare Part D plan — no enrollment in a separate program required
Eli Lilly insulin — any coverage status $35 CAP $35/month maxLilly Insulin Value Program · Covers Humalog, Basaglar, Humulin, Lyumjev, Insulin Lispro Register at insulinaffordability.com · Works for insured, underinsured, and uninsured patients
Novo Nordisk insulin — any coverage status $35/month maxMyInsulinRx program · Covers NovoLog, Tresiba, Levemir, Victoza Register at myinsulinrx.com or call 1-833-NOVO-411
Sanofi insulin — any coverage status $35/month maxValyou Savings Program · Covers Lantus, Toujeo, Admelog, Soliqua Register at insulinsavingsus.com or call 1-888-847-4877
Walmart ReliOn (OTC) NO PROGRAM NEEDED $25/vial — no prescriptionReliOn Novolin R, N, and 70/30 — older formulations but widely used Walk into any Walmart pharmacy. No insurance, no enrollment, no prescription required in most states.
California (CalRx program) $55 for 5-pack pens (~$11/pen)Interchangeable with Lantus · Available at CA pharmacies Jan 2026 No eligibility requirements · No application · Ask pharmacist for CalRx Insulin Glargine
Private insurance (typical copay) $30–$100/monthVaries by plan, deductible phase, and formulary tier Copay assistance cards from manufacturers often reduce this further — even with insurance
Low income, uninsured — Patient Assistance $0 (free insulin)Earn up to ~$60,240/year as an individual (400% FPL) for Lilly Cares, Novo PAP Apply at lillycares.com, novonordiskus.com/pap, or call manufacturer’s 800 number
Uninsured, no program enrolled $100–$600+/monthFull cash price at pharmacy · Never pay this — programs exist for nearly everyone Do not pay cash list price. Compare programs above. Use GoodRx, Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs, and manufacturer savings cards.
🚨 The One Thing That Can Save a Life — Never Ration Insulin

Rationing insulin — taking smaller doses than prescribed to stretch a supply — can trigger diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) within hours. DKA is a life-threatening emergency. Every person reading this who uses insulin and is struggling with cost has a path to $35/month or less through the programs listed above. The barrier is paperwork and awareness, not actual unavailability. If you are considering reducing your dose to save money, call the manufacturer’s patient assistance line first — they can often activate savings programs the same day.

📋 Key Questions — Answered Plainly

Every frequently searched question about insulin costs, answered without hedging or insurance-company-speak.

  • 1
    How much is a 30-day supply of insulin? On Medicare: $35 maximum by law · On manufacturer savings programs: $35 for insured and uninsured · At Walmart (ReliOn): $25/vial OTC, no prescription · Uninsured at full cash price: $100–$600+ depending on type and brand
    The honest answer to “how much does insulin cost per month” requires knowing which path you’re on. A 30-day supply at list price for brand-name analog insulins like Humalog or Lantus runs $300–$400+ for a vial, and patients who use multiple vials monthly can theoretically face $600–$900 in full cash costs. These headline numbers are real but not what most insured Americans pay. For Medicare beneficiaries, the Inflation Reduction Act permanently capped monthly insulin copays at $35, regardless of how many vials a patient needs that month. The same $35 cap was voluntarily extended by all three major manufacturers to their own savings programs, covering any insured or uninsured person who registers. At Walmart, the ReliOn line of human insulin (Novolin R, N, and 70/30) is available over-the-counter for $25 per vial without a prescription. This is older human insulin rather than the more modern analog formulations like Humalog, but it has been the financial lifeline for millions of uninsured Americans and remains the fastest, cheapest walk-in option in the country.
  • 2
    What is the cheapest insulin available without insurance? Cheapest OTC (no prescription needed): Walmart ReliOn human insulin — $25/vial · Cheapest brand-name analog without insurance: $35/month through manufacturer programs (Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi all offer this) · Cheapest biosimilar: Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs offers Civica biosimilar insulin glargine from $30–$35/vial
    For someone without insurance who needs insulin right now, there are three tiers of options. The fastest is Walmart: walk into any Walmart pharmacy and buy ReliOn human insulin over the counter for $25/vial. No insurance, no prescription, no program enrollment. The limitation is that ReliOn is human insulin (Regular and NPH) rather than the rapid-acting and long-acting analogs that most Type 1 patients and many Type 2 patients are prescribed — switching formulation requires medical guidance because dosing and timing differ. For brand-name modern insulins without insurance, the three major manufacturers all offer $35/month savings cards that require only a 5-minute online registration: Lilly at insulinaffordability.com, Novo Nordisk at myinsulinrx.com, and Sanofi at insulinsavingsus.com. Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs pharmacy (costplusdrugs.com) offers several insulin products at dramatically lower prices than traditional pharmacies — their transparent pricing model eliminates the pharmacy benefit manager markup that inflates insulin prices everywhere else. GoodRx can also reduce cash prices significantly at participating pharmacies, and the combination of a GoodRx coupon plus the right pharmacy can drop certain generic insulin vials to $30–$50.
  • 3
    How much does insulin cost with insurance? Medicare: $35/month maximum by law · Private/employer insurance: $30–$100/month in copays depending on deductible phase and formulary placement · During the deductible phase before insurance kicks in: can be $150–$400/month even with coverage · Manufacturer copay cards reduce private insurance costs further
    The least understood part of insulin pricing is what happens during the insurance deductible phase at the start of each calendar year. Even with solid employer insurance, patients who haven’t yet hit their deductible are paying near-full prices — meaning January through March can be the most expensive months for insulin even for insured patients. This is when manufacturer copay assistance cards are most important: Lilly’s Insulin Value Program, Novo Nordisk’s savings program, and Sanofi’s Valyou Savings all reduce costs for commercially insured patients even while they’re in the deductible phase. These programs are separate from insurance — you use them directly at the pharmacy alongside your insurance, and they reduce your remaining balance. For Medicare specifically, the $35 cap applies across the entire year, including the coverage gap that used to be called the “donut hole.” The gap no longer exists in the way it did before the IRA. Part D plans may vary in how they structure their benefits, but the $35 monthly cap on all covered insulin applies regardless of which phase of the benefit year you’re in.
  • 4
    Why does insulin cost so much in the United States? A 1996 vial of Humalog cost $21 — by 2019 it was $275 — a 1,200% increase while overall inflation was 64% · Root causes: no federal drug price negotiation (only recently changed under IRA), pay-for-delay agreements preventing generics, PBM rebate systems that incentivize higher list prices · U.S. insulin prices are 9× higher than in 33 other high-income countries
    The structural reasons behind U.S. insulin prices have been documented extensively by RAND Corporation, the Senate Finance Committee, and academic health economists. Unlike virtually every other developed country, the U.S. had no direct government negotiation of drug prices until the Inflation Reduction Act created limited Medicare negotiating authority. Drug manufacturers could set any list price they chose. Simultaneously, the rebate system created by pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) inadvertently incentivized higher list prices — manufacturers set prices high, offered large rebates to PBMs, who then gave formulary placement to high-list-price drugs, creating a cycle that pushed prices upward. “Pay-for-delay” agreements, where brand-name manufacturers pay generic competitors to delay entering the market, kept competition out for years. Three manufacturers — Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, and Sanofi — produce the vast majority of U.S. insulin, creating an oligopoly with little competitive pressure. According to a RAND study, U.S. insulin prices even after accounting for rebates remain 2.3 times higher than in comparison nations. The price of a single product (Humalog) increased 1,200% between 1996 and 2019 while inflation rose only 64% — not because of improved product or manufacturing costs, but because the market structure permitted it.
  • 5
    How much does insulin cost in other countries? Germany: ~$11 per vial · Canada: ~$32 per vial · France: ~$8 per vial · United Kingdom (NHS): £0 with prescription · U.S. list price: $100–$400+ per vial · U.S. prices are 5–10× higher than in comparable nations · Some Americans travel to Canada or Mexico to buy insulin at lower prices
    The international comparison is stark and widely documented. A vial of Humalog that costs $274 at a U.S. pharmacy without savings programs costs approximately $32 in Canada, $11 in Germany, and $8 in France — for the same product from the same manufacturer. In the UK, insulin is free with a prescription under the NHS. A RAND analysis found that U.S. gross insulin prices are more than nine times higher than in 33 comparison high-income nations. Even accounting for U.S. rebates that reduce what insurers pay, the net price in the U.S. remains 2.3 times higher. This disparity is why insulin tourism — Americans crossing into Canada or Mexico to purchase insulin at local prices — became a recurring news story. The practice is technically legal for personal-use quantities and is documented in studies from academic journals and government health agencies. Some advocacy groups organize bus trips to Canadian pharmacies specifically for insulin purchasing. The Inflation Reduction Act changed the Medicare picture significantly, but the U.S. still pays far more than any comparable country for the same vials.
  • 6
    What are biosimilar insulins and are they safe? Biosimilars are FDA-approved “generic equivalents” of brand-name biologic drugs · The FDA confirms biosimilars have no clinically meaningful differences in safety, purity, or potency from the reference product · Cost 15–30% less than brand-name insulin · Several are now FDA-approved and available including Semglee (interchangeable with Lantus) and Rezvoglar
    Insulin is classified as a biologic drug — it’s a protein produced through complex biological manufacturing rather than simple chemical synthesis, which is why it took longer than typical drugs to get “generic” versions. The FDA’s biosimilar pathway, established under the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act, requires manufacturers to demonstrate no clinically meaningful differences from the reference (brand-name) product in terms of safety, purity, and potency. An FDA-designated “interchangeable” biosimilar (the highest approval level) can be substituted for the brand-name product at the pharmacy without a new prescription from your doctor — exactly like a generic drug. Semglee (biosimilar for Lantus/insulin glargine) became the first FDA-designated interchangeable insulin biosimilar and is available at pharmacies now. Rezvoglar is another. California’s CalRx is also a biosimilar insulin glargine. These products typically cost 15–30% less than their brand-name equivalents, and with GoodRx coupons or savings programs, can be even cheaper. Ask your pharmacist whether your current insulin has an approved interchangeable biosimilar — switching requires no doctor’s visit in most states and can immediately lower your cost.
  • 7
    How many vials of insulin does the average person need per month? Type 1 diabetes: typically 2–4 vials per month · Type 2 on insulin therapy: typically 1–3 vials per month · Varies widely based on body weight, activity level, and blood sugar control · People using insulin pens: equivalent consumption but different format
    The number of vials a person uses monthly varies significantly by diabetes type, individual physiology, treatment regimen, and blood sugar management. A typical Type 1 patient on a basal-bolus regimen (a long-acting insulin once daily plus a rapid-acting insulin with meals) might use one vial of each type per month — or more if their doses are higher. People with greater insulin resistance (common in Type 2) or those managing less well-controlled blood sugar levels generally use more. Vials contain 1,000 units (10 mL at 100 units/mL). A person taking 50 units daily of one insulin would use 1,500 units per month — requiring 1.5 vials. Someone taking 80 units daily of basal plus variable bolus doses might need 3–5 vials monthly. Insulin pens contain 300 units (3 mL) and come in packs of 5, making comparisons slightly different — 5 pens equal 1,500 units, roughly what one to two vials provide. This vial math matters for budgeting: the $35 monthly program caps apply per person regardless of how many vials they use, making them far more valuable for patients who require larger quantities.
  • 8
    I am on a fixed income and cannot afford insulin — what are my options? Step 1: Call the manufacturer’s patient assistance line — income up to 400% FPL (~$60,240/year) qualifies for free insulin · Step 2: Apply to a community health center (340B clinic) for income-based pricing · Step 3: Check your state — 20+ states have copay caps between $25–$100 · Step 4: Use Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs or GoodRx for lowest cash prices · Never ration insulin — call the manufacturer first
    For patients on fixed incomes — Social Security, retirement, disability — three paths reliably reach $0 to $35 per month. Manufacturer Patient Assistance Programs (PAPs) provide insulin free of charge to patients whose income is at or below 400% of the federal poverty level, which in 2026 is approximately $60,240/year for a single person or $124,800 for a family of four. These programs are Lilly Cares Foundation (lillycares.com), Novo Nordisk Patient Assistance Program (novonordiskus.com/pap), and Sanofi Patient Connection (sanofi.us/media/pdf/patient-connection). Applications take roughly 15–30 minutes online and often deliver a 90–120 day supply of free insulin by mail within two weeks. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) — also called 340B clinics — receive drugs at dramatically reduced prices under a federal program designed for underserved patients. If you live near one, you may access significantly reduced or sliding-scale insulin pricing regardless of insurance status. Find your nearest FQHC at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov. For Medicare patients on low incomes, the Extra Help program (also called Low Income Subsidy, or LIS) further reduces prescription costs beyond the $35 cap — apply through Social Security at ssa.gov/i1020.
💡 The $35 Path — Four Ways to Get There
🏛️ Medicare (Permanent Law)
$35 cap/month
Applies to all covered insulins under Part D and Part B (pump) · Permanent under Inflation Reduction Act · Automatic — no extra enrollment needed beyond your Part D plan
🏢 Manufacturer Savings Programs
$35 cap/month
Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, and Sanofi all cap at $35 for insured AND uninsured · Register online in 5 minutes · Covers brand-name insulins from each manufacturer
🏥 Patient Assistance (Low Income)
$0 — Free insulin
Income up to ~$60,240/year qualifies (400% FPL) · 90–120 day supply mailed free · Lilly Cares, Novo PAP, Sanofi Patient Connection · Takes 15–30 min to apply online
🛒 Walmart ReliOn / Cost Plus Drugs
$25–$35/vial
Walmart ReliOn: $25 OTC, no Rx needed (older human insulin formulation) · Cost Plus Drugs: transparent pricing, often $30–$55/vial · No enrollment required
🔍 Your Situation — What to Do Next
I have Medicare and pay more than $35 per month for insulin — what’s wrong?
MEDICARE · $35 CAP
If you have Medicare Part D coverage and are paying more than $35 per month for insulin, something is incorrect — the $35 cap is permanent law and applies automatically. The Inflation Reduction Act made $35 the maximum monthly out-of-pocket cost for all covered insulins under Part D, effective January 2024 and continuing forward. This cap applies during every phase of the benefit year, including what used to be the coverage gap (“donut hole”). It does not require you to apply for anything separately — it is built into how Medicare Part D plans must price insulin. If you are paying more than $35, the most likely explanations are: your insulin is not currently on your plan’s formulary (in which case you or your doctor can request an exception or switch to a covered equivalent), you are using an insulin pen device that is classified under a different benefit, or there is a billing error. Call your Part D plan’s member services number on your insurance card and specifically say: “I understand the Inflation Reduction Act caps insulin at $35 per month — why am I paying more?” If they cannot resolve it, contact the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) in your state — free Medicare counseling available at shiphelp.org.
📞 Call your Part D plan: ask specifically about the $35 IRA cap 🆓 Free Medicare help: shiphelp.org or call 1-800-MEDICARE 📋 Extra Help / LIS program: reduces costs further for low-income Medicare: ssa.gov 🚨 Pay no more than $35: it’s the law — escalate to your state SHIP if plan won’t comply
I have no insurance and currently pay full price for insulin — what do I do first?
UNINSURED · IMMEDIATE SAVINGS
Stop paying full price today. Every major insulin manufacturer offers a $35/month cap for uninsured patients — this is available to you right now and requires only a 5-minute online registration. Here is the exact process: go to insulinaffordability.com (Lilly), myinsulinrx.com (Novo Nordisk), or insulinsavingsus.com (Sanofi) depending on which brand you use. Create an account, confirm your insulin, and print or download your savings card. At your next pharmacy visit, present the savings card — your cost is capped at $35 regardless of how many units you need. If your income is below approximately $60,240/year, also apply to the same company’s Patient Assistance Program for free insulin. Check your state’s own copay cap laws — Colorado, Illinois, Maine, New Mexico, Washington, California, and 15+ other states now cap insulin costs at $25–$100 per month regardless of insurance status. For the fastest possible option right now — today, without any registration — drive to Walmart and buy ReliOn human insulin OTC for $25/vial. Talk to your doctor about whether ReliOn insulin is an appropriate substitute for your current prescription before switching formulations, particularly if you use rapid-acting analogs like Humalog.
🖥️ Lilly $35 card: insulinaffordability.com 🖥️ Novo $35 card: myinsulinrx.com 🖥️ Sanofi $35 card: insulinsavingsus.com 🛒 Walk-in option today: Walmart ReliOn $25/vial — no registration, no Rx
I have insurance but hit my deductible at the start of the year — how do I manage January–March?
DEDUCTIBLE PHASE · PRIVATE INSURANCE
The deductible reset at the start of each calendar year is one of the most predictable and painful parts of being an insulin-dependent person with private insurance — and there are specific tools designed exactly for this window. While your deductible hasn’t been met, your insurance plan pays nothing and you’re effectively paying near-full cash price. The manufacturer copay assistance programs work during this phase too: Lilly’s $35 cap, Novo Nordisk’s savings program, and Sanofi’s Valyou Savings all apply during the deductible phase — in fact, this is the time they provide the most value. Register before January 1st each year so you’re ready when your deductible resets. A second option: ask your prescriber or pharmacist whether your insulin has an approved biosimilar. Biosimilar substitution can reduce your out-of-pocket cost 15–30% versus the brand name, and interchangeable biosimilars can be dispensed by the pharmacist without a new prescription in most states. A third approach: switching to a 90-day mail-order supply before the deductible phase typically locks in a lower per-unit cost than 30-day fills, and in some plans mail order fills count toward the deductible faster.
📅 Register for manufacturer savings card before Jan 1 — be ready when deductible resets 💊 Ask pharmacist: does my insulin have an interchangeable biosimilar? 📦 90-day mail order: often cheaper per unit and fulfills deductible faster 📋 Insurer formulary exception: ask if a covered equivalent is available at lower tier
I’ve heard I can buy insulin in Canada — is that legal and is it actually cheaper?
INTERNATIONAL PURCHASE · LEGAL FACTS
Yes, it is substantially cheaper — and the FDA’s personal importation policy, while technically not authorizing it, creates a de facto tolerance for personal-use quantities. The same Humalog vial that costs $274 at a U.S. pharmacy costs approximately $32 in Canada — an 88% reduction for the identical product from the same manufacturer. The FDA’s enforcement discretion policy (last formally articulated in an FDA guidance document) acknowledges that individuals importing up to a 90-day personal supply for personal use — not resale — pose low enforcement priority. Customs typically does not interfere with properly packaged prescription insulin in reasonable quantities carried across the border or shipped by licensed Canadian pharmacies. That said: the FDA has not formally authorized personal importation, which means it technically occurs outside of legal channels even when tolerated in practice. For patients in financial crisis who cannot access domestic savings programs for any reason, cross-border options are real and documented. Before making the trip: check whether a manufacturer assistance program or community health center can provide a comparable price domestically. For a same-day cash need, Walmart ReliOn at $25 is a faster domestic solution than any cross-border trip.
🇨🇦 Canada pharmacy: Humalog ~$32 vs $274 in U.S. — 88% less for same product ⚖️ FDA personal import policy: tolerates 90-day personal use, does not formally authorize 🛒 Faster domestic option: Walmart ReliOn $25/vial — no border crossing needed ⚠️ Try domestic programs first: manufacturer programs reach $35 without travel risk
I live in a state that’s not California — can I still access affordable insulin in 2026?
NON-CALIFORNIA STATES · NATIONAL OPTIONS
The CalRx program is currently available only to California residents, but the national landscape has improved substantially regardless of where you live. The manufacturer $35 savings programs (Lilly, Novo, Sanofi) are available in all 50 states. Medicare’s $35 cap is federal law, applying nationwide. Walmart ReliOn insulin at $25/vial requires no residency, no insurance, and no application anywhere in the U.S. Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs ships to all 50 states and offers transparent pricing on several insulin products at dramatically lower prices than traditional pharmacies. More than 20 states have passed their own insulin copay cap laws ranging from $25–$100 per month for state-regulated commercial insurance: Colorado ($35 cap signed into law 2019), Illinois ($35), Maine ($35), New Mexico ($35), Washington state ($100), Minnesota ($35), and others. Check insulinhelp.org or your state insurance commissioner’s website for your state’s current laws. At the federal level, the INSULIN Act (capping commercial insurance at $35 and creating a pilot for uninsured patients) passed the Senate in 2022 but stalled in the House — it was reintroduced in 2026 and advocates are pushing for passage. Even without that law, the combination of manufacturer programs, state laws, and retail options means every American can access insulin for $35 or less per month right now if they know where to look.
🗺️ State copay cap checker: insulinhelp.org 💊 Cost Plus Drugs: costplusdrugs.com — ships nationwide at transparent prices 🏥 340B clinics: findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov — income-based pricing near you 📬 Mail-order PAP: Lilly Cares, Novo PAP send 90–120 day supply free to all states
📍 Find Help Near You

Use the buttons below to find community health centers with income-based insulin pricing, local pharmacies, or Medicare counseling services near you.

Searching near you…
🔑 Quick Reference — Insulin Savings Programs & Key Links
💉 Lilly $35 savings: insulinaffordability.com 💉 Lilly Cares (free): lillycares.com 💉 Novo Nordisk $35: myinsulinrx.com 💉 Novo PAP (free): 1-866-310-7549 💉 Sanofi $35: insulinsavingsus.com 💉 Sanofi Patient Connection: 1-888-847-4877 🛒 Walmart ReliOn OTC: $25/vial at any Walmart pharmacy 💊 Cost Plus Drugs: costplusdrugs.com 🏥 Find FQHC near you: findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov 📋 Medicare Extra Help (LIS): ssa.gov/i1020 📞 Free Medicare help: 1-800-633-4227 🗺️ State caps checker: insulinhelp.org 🇨🇦 California CalRx info: calrx.ca.gov 🆘 SHIP counseling (free): shiphelp.org
✅ Action Checklist — Do These in Order If You’re Overpaying for Insulin
  • Step 1: Identify your insulin manufacturer (it’s on the box: Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, or Sanofi). Go to that manufacturer’s savings program website and register. This takes 5 minutes and caps your cost at $35/month immediately for most patients — insured or not.
  • Step 2: If your income is below approximately $60,240/year as a single person, also apply to the manufacturer’s Patient Assistance Program on the same website. Free insulin is mailed in a 90–120 day supply. This is a real program used by millions of Americans annually.
  • Step 3: On Medicare paying more than $35? Call 1-800-MEDICARE immediately. The $35 cap is law. If your plan is charging more, request an exception or call your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) at shiphelp.org for free help.
  • Step 4: Ask your pharmacist whether your insulin has an FDA-approved interchangeable biosimilar. These can be dispensed without a new prescription and typically cost 15–30% less. Ask specifically: “Does this have an interchangeable biosimilar?” and “Can you look it up on GoodRx for me?”
  • Step 5: Never reduce, skip, or ration insulin doses to save money before exhausting every program on this list. Rationing insulin is life-threatening. Every step above can reach $35 or less per month — the barrier is paperwork, not availability.

This guide provides general educational information about insulin pricing and patient assistance programs. It is not medical advice. Insulin dosing, formulation changes, and medication substitutions should always be discussed with a licensed healthcare provider. Program eligibility, pricing, and availability change frequently — verify current terms at each program’s official website before applying. This page has no affiliation with any pharmaceutical manufacturer, pharmacy, or government agency mentioned.

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