Share what you actually paid. Every report helps someone else find a better deal on their prescriptions.
Your price has been added to the community database.
Recent submissions from the RxGrab community
The Price Reporter lets you submit the actual price you paid for a prescription at any pharmacy. You enter the drug name, dosage, pharmacy, price paid, whether you used a discount card, the date filled, and optionally your zip code. All submissions are stored anonymously in your browser's local storage and displayed in the Community Price Reports table. Over time, this crowdsourced data helps other patients compare real-world prices at specific pharmacies rather than relying on estimates. No account is needed, no personal information is collected, and no data leaves your device. The tool is designed to be submitted in under 30 seconds so you can report while you are still at the pharmacy counter.
You just picked up a 30-day supply of atorvastatin 20mg at Costco and paid $4.80 with no discount card. You open the Price Reporter, enter the drug name, dosage, select "Costco," type in $4.80, mark "No" for discount card, and submit. The tool confirms your report and shows the running Community Price Reports table. If another user previously reported the same drug at CVS for $18.50, both data points are visible, helping the next person see the price gap. Over weeks and months, the table builds a reliable picture of which pharmacies actually charge what for common medications. This is especially valuable for drugs not on standardized programs like the Walmart $4 list, where prices can vary dramatically between pharmacies.
No. All submitted data is stored exclusively in your browser's localStorage. It never leaves your device, is not uploaded to any server, and cannot be accessed by anyone else. In a future version, we plan to offer opt-in anonymous sharing to build a larger community database.
Prescription prices can vary by region even within the same pharmacy chain. Adding your zip code (optional) helps build location-specific pricing data. This is particularly relevant for pharmacies like CVS and Walgreens where prices differ by market. Zip codes are stored as part of the anonymous report without any connection to personal identity.
Mark "Yes" for the discount card question so other users know whether the reported price reflects a standard cash price or a discounted rate. This distinction matters because GoodRx and SingleCare prices are often 40 to 70% below standard cash prices at the same pharmacy. Both data points are valuable.
The Community Price Reports section at the bottom of this page shows the most recent 20 submissions from your local browser. For broader pharmacy comparisons using estimated data, use our Pharmacy Price Finder tool, which covers 8 pharmacies and 20 or more common medications.