Crestor Patient Assistance Programs
Crestor (rosuvastatin), made by AstraZeneca, offers discounts through its official savings card. Eligible patients pay as little as $10 for a 30- to 90-day supply if commercially insured, with no income requirements. Uninsured patients may qualify for free medication via the AstraZeneca Partnership for Patient Assistance Program.
Pharmacy Discount Cards and Coupons
Print or digital coupons from GoodRx or SingleCare reduce Crestor costs to $1–$3 per pill at pharmacies like Walmart or CVS, often beating insurance copays. These work for cash-paying customers and stack with some manufacturer offers.
Generic Rosuvastatin Savings
Generic versions cost 80–90% less than brand-name Crestor ($10–$30 for 30 days vs. $200+). No brand-specific discounts apply to generics, but the same pharmacy cards lower prices further to under $5 monthly.
Who Qualifies and Limits
Savings cards exclude government insurance like Medicare/Medicaid. Programs cap at 12–48 fills yearly and end if income exceeds limits for free meds (under $50,000 for singles). Check eligibility at AstraZeneca's site or DrugPatentWatch.com for patent details on generics [1].
[1]: DrugPatentWatch.com - Crestor Patents