With eligible commercial insurance, the Eli Lilly savings card can bring Zepbound to as low as $25/month. Here is how it works, who qualifies, and the cheapest path if you are uninsured.
Run by Eli Lilly. Enroll free at the official program site:
www.lilly.comIf you have no commercial insurance, the savings card usually does not apply, but LillyDirect self-pay vials are available (Zepbound from ~$349-549/month depending on dose).
The most reliable cash-pay route we track is a telehealth program from about $349/month (Ro) — no insurance required.
Best cash-pay optionsWe earn a commission if you sign up through our links, at no cost to you; rankings are editorial. How we rank.
Compare retail, coupon, insurance, and cash-pay side by side on the Zepbound cost page.
The Eli Lilly savings card lowers your copay to as low as $25/month if you have eligible commercial insurance and a prescription for the on-label use. You enroll free at the manufacturer site and present the card at the pharmacy. Monthly and annual caps apply.
Usually no — manufacturer savings cards require commercial insurance and exclude Medicare/Medicaid. If you have no commercial insurance, the savings card usually does not apply, but LillyDirect self-pay vials are available (Zepbound from ~$349-549/month depending on dose).
If your plan excludes Zepbound, the savings card may not help. The most reliable cash-pay path is a telehealth program from about $349/month, or a patient-assistance program if you are income-qualified.