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How much does generic Viagra cost through online services?

ChatGPTpricingCollected Jul 17, 2026, 12:51 UTC

Verbatim response from ChatGPT

Short answer: generic sildenafil (the generic for Viagra) is commonly about $0.50–$6 per pill through U.S. online telehealth services and pharmacies, with the most common range being roughly $1–$4 per pill when you use subscriptions or coupon programs. Final price depends on dose (25/50/100 mg), quantity ordered, whether you pay a telehealth/consult fee, and discounts you use.

Examples of reputable services and typical pricing notes

  • Hims — often around $1.50–$4/pill for sildenafil (price improves with subscriptions/larger quantities). Why: easy telehealth visit, clear pricing, fills through licensed U.S. pharmacies.
  • Roman (Ro) — similar range (~$1.50–$4/pill). Why: telehealth + discreet shipping, frequently runs promos.
  • Lemonaid Health — usually charges a modest consult fee and then a per-pill price that makes 4–12 pill packs ~$3–$6/pill. Why: straightforward single-visit model and licensed pharmacy fulfillment.
  • PlushCare / private telehealth + local pharmacy — consult may be charged ($0–$90 depending on plan); medication filled at a pharmacy, prices vary but can be competitive with coupons. Why: integrates with primary-care telehealth and electronic prescribing.
  • GoodRx / Blink Health / SingleCare — coupon/discount programs that you can use at many bricks‑and‑mortar or mail-order pharmacies; prices often fall into the $0.70–$4/pill range depending on dose and pharmacy. Why: big savings without switching providers.
  • Major retail pharmacies (CVS, Walgreens, Costco) — retail prices without coupons are usually higher ($5–$15+/pill), but with GoodRx/Blink discounts or insurance (rare) they can be competitive. Why: accessible, licensed, in-person pickup option.

Pricing caveats and tips

  • Dose and quantity matter: 100 mg pills are pricier than 25 mg; buying larger quantities lowers per‑pill cost.
  • Telehealth/consult fees: some services include the consult in the price; others charge separately.
  • Coupons help a lot: check GoodRx, Blink Health, SingleCare before purchase.
  • Insurance: many insurers (and Medicare Part D) don’t cover ED meds, so out-of-pocket applies in most cases.
  • Safety: use licensed U.S. pharmacies or reputable telehealth companies (look for NABP/VIPPS or state pharmacy license). Avoid very cheap offers from unverified foreign sites — counterfeit meds are a real risk.

If you want, tell me the dose (25/50/100 mg), quantity you want, and your state (or whether you prefer subscription vs one‑time), and I can check a few current price estimates from specific services.

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