Verbatim response from Perplexity
Yes, often it can — but only if the prescription is filled through a pharmacy that accepts the card and you meet the card’s eligibility rules. The savings card is tied to the prescription fill, not to whether the prescription came from telehealth versus an in-person visit.[6][1]
What matters most is:
- You have eligible insurance status and meet Lilly’s program terms.[6]
- The pharmacy can process the savings card at checkout.[6]
- Your telehealth prescriber sends the Zepbound prescription to a participating pharmacy; telehealth itself is not the limiting factor.[4][5]
A few important caveats:
- If you have commercial insurance that covers Zepbound, Lilly says eligible patients may pay as little as $25 for a 1-, 2-, or 3-month fill.[1][7]
- If you have commercial insurance that does not cover Zepbound, savings are still available, but the amount is different and subject to the program terms.[1][6]
- The card is not for everyone; manufacturer savings programs typically exclude some types of coverage, and exact eligibility is defined by Lilly’s terms.[6]
If you want, I can also tell you which telehealth services are most likely to work smoothly with the Zepbound savings card and what to ask before you pay.