Last Updated:February 06, 2026, 08:45 IST
Trump said Americans would 'save a fortune,' as the platform lists discounted cash prices for 43 brand-name drugs. But savings differ sharply for insured and uninsured patients.

US President Donald Trump speaks during an event to unveil the TrumpRx drug discount site. (REUTERS)
US President Donald Trump on Thursday launched TrumpRx.gov, a new self-pay prescription drug website offering discounted cash prices on 43 brand-name medications.
The website brings together cash-pay options for medicines ranging from respiratory treatments to high-demand weight-loss drugs and is being presented by the Trump administration as a major step toward lowering out-of-pocket costs.
Although the administration has promoted the platform as a major affordability measure, the discounts are expected to benefit mainly people who are uninsured or already paying out of pocket, while insured patients may still find their existing coverage cheaper than the cash prices on the site.
What Is TrumpRx And Why Has It Been Launched?
TrumpRx is part of the administration’s wider attempt to make prescription drugs more affordable for American consumers. It follows repeated pledges to reduce what the president has described as excessive price burdens on households, particularly at a time when health care remains one of the top economic concerns for US voters.
The platform consolidates discounted prices that drugmakers have agreed to offer under direct arrangements with the White House, forming a centralised site for patients who are prepared to pay cash rather than use insurance.
The initiative also aligns with the administration’s push for a “most favoured nation" pricing framework, which seeks to ensure that the US does not pay more for a drug than the lowest price charged in comparable wealthy countries. “You’re going to save a fortune," Trump said at a White House news conference Thursday evening launching the website. “And this is also so good for overall health care."
How Does TrumpRx Work?
TrumpRx functions primarily as a directory rather than a sales platform. Users can browse the list of available medicines or search for a specific prescription. For some products, the site issues digital coupons that can be redeemed at pharmacies. For others, TrumpRx redirects patients to the manufacturer’s own direct-to-consumer website, where purchases are completed.
The structure varies by drug. Certain treatments, including several used in IVF protocols, are available only through speciality pharmacies. Some listings do not provide coupons at all, offering only the manufacturer link; AstraZeneca’s diabetes medicine Xigduo XR is one such example. The site also carries a prominent advisory instructing patients with insurance to check their co-pay before opting for the TrumpRx discount, as insured prices may remain lower.
Because TrumpRx involves cash-pay purchases, these transactions generally do not count toward a patient’s deductible or out-of-pocket maximum, according to NBC. This creates a significant limitation for insured users, as they may end up paying more across the year, even if a particular month appears cheaper.
What Drugs Are Available And What Do They Cost?
The platform currently lists 43 brand-name medicines from companies including AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, EMD Serano, Novo Nordisk and Pfizer. They span respiratory diseases, metabolic conditions, autoimmune disorders and other therapeutic categories.
Some of the clearest examples of pricing include:
Zepbound, Eli Lilly’s blockbuster weight-loss injection, starting at $299 a monthThe Wegovy pill from Novo Nordisk, beginning at $149The Bevespi inhaler for respiratory issues, listed at $51Xeljanz, used for conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, offered at $1,518.30CNN notes that discounts across the site range from roughly one-third to more than 90 per cent off list prices, though list prices frequently diverge from what insured patients pay.
Who Benefits The Most From TrumpRx?
The clearest beneficiaries are people who lack insurance entirely or those enrolled in high-deductible plans that leave them paying full retail prices for extended periods. For these users, the reductions negotiated under TrumpRx can meaningfully lower monthly costs, particularly for medicines with little or no insurance coverage.
TrumpRx also caters to patients who prefer not to involve insurance for privacy or administrative reasons, though this represents a smaller segment of users.
Why Obesity Drugs Are Central To The Platform
Weight-loss medicines such as Wegovy and Zepbound are among the most visible listings on TrumpRx, and their presence is significant. Insurance coverage for these treatments remains inconsistent across the US, prompting millions of patients to look for self-pay alternatives.
Direct-to-consumer channels were already well established before the launch of TrumpRx. NovoCare, Novo Nordisk’s own portal, accounts for roughly 30 per cent of all Wegovy prescriptions and around 90 per cent of prescriptions for the Wegovy pill.
Eli Lilly’s platform, LillyDirect, has surpassed one million enrolled patients and reports strong demand for Zepbound through its cash-pay programme. These figures suggest that obesity drugs are likely to be among the most frequently purchased items on TrumpRx.
What Are The Concerns And Limitations?
Several uncertainties surround the TrumpRx arrangements. The administration has not publicly released full details of the deals struck with drugmakers, including the duration of discounts or the conditions attached to them. Consumer advocacy group Public Citizen has filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit seeking documents after the White House declined to release records related to tariff-relief discussions linked to price reductions.
Another limitation is that the platform covers only brand-name drugs. This excludes generic medicines, which account for nine in ten prescriptions in the US and are typically far cheaper already. Some experts warn that if insurers assume patients can access certain drugs through direct-to-consumer channels, they may scale back coverage, shifting more costs onto households.
How Does TrumpRx Compare With Other Direct-to-Consumer Drug Models?
The US already has a growing market for self-pay drug platforms. Billionaire investor Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs, launched in 2022, offers low-cost generics with transparent pricing formulas. Pharmaceutical companies themselves operate direct channels that provide focused discounts on selected brand-name treatments.
TrumpRx differs in that it aggregates these types of discounts into a single government-backed interface, though it does not process transactions.
Its success will depend on whether more drugs are added, whether prices remain stable, and whether insurance rules eventually change to allow cash-pay purchases to count toward deductibles. Until then, TrumpRx is best understood as an additional option for specific patient groups rather than a comprehensive affordability solution.
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First Published:
February 06, 2026, 08:45 IST
News world Trump Launches TrumpRx: How His New Discounted Drug Platform Works And Who It Helps
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