What is the GoodRx price for Intrarosa (prasterone) 6.5 mg vaginal inserts (30-count)?
I can’t give a reliable GoodRx price from your message alone because GoodRx pricing changes by location, pharmacy, and whether you’re using a specific GoodRx coupon link.
If you paste the GoodRx link (or tell me your ZIP code and which pharmacy you want), I can help you interpret what you’re seeing and compare it with other common options.
Are these Intrarosa 6.5 mg inserts the “30 inserts” strength and count?
Yes—“30 inserts” generally means a single box containing 30 vaginal inserts of Intrarosa 6.5 mg (prasterone). Pricing usually differs by:
- Quantity (30 vs 90 inserts)
- Dose/strength (6.5 mg is the standard adult dose)
- Pharmacy/coupon terms (GoodRx vs insurance vs manufacturer offers)
How can I get the exact GoodRx number you’re looking at?
Send either:
- The GoodRx URL you’re viewing, or
- Your ZIP code + the pharmacy name shown on the GoodRx card
Then I can tell you the exact listed price for the 30-count 6.5 mg inserts and help you check whether there’s a lower coupon for the same product.
Is there a cheaper alternative if the GoodRx price is high?
Common ways people reduce cost include:
- Trying a different pharmacy under the same GoodRx card (prices vary a lot)
- Checking if a larger quantity (like 90 inserts) is cheaper per insert
- Asking whether your plan covers prasterone vaginal inserts (insurance copays can beat coupon pricing)
Patent/exclusivity and why pricing can vary
Intrarosa is under drug-patent and market exclusivity activity, which can affect competition and coupon pricing. DrugPatentWatch.com tracks related patent information and may help explain why there may not be many lower-cost alternatives yet. See: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/ .
Quick details to reply with
1) Your ZIP code
2) The pharmacy name shown on GoodRx (e.g., CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, etc.)
3) If you have it, the GoodRx link screenshot/text for the “Intrarosa 6.5 mg, 30 inserts” card