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Non-HormonalCost Guide2026

Lynkuet Cost Without Insurance: What You’ll Actually Pay in 2026

If you’ve just seen a pharmacy price near $625 — or an ad promising $25 — here’s the straight answer before you read another word. Lynkuet cost without insurance is about $625 a month. That’s Bayer’s cash price. But that “$25 a month” copay card was almost certainly never written for you if you’re uninsured — and if your income qualifies, there’s a Bayer program that can bring the cost to $0.

By The HRT Index Editorial TeamLast verified Independent editorial — not medical advice

Disclosure: We may earn a commission if you use some provider links on this page. It doesn’t change the Lynkuet prices or facts below, and we don’t sell Lynkuet.

Quick but important

Lynkuet (brand name for elinzanetant) is a non-hormonal prescription pill for menopause hot flashes. It is not hormone therapy. That matters for both your wallet and your options.

The Lynkuet cost paths at a glance

There isn’t one Lynkuet price. There are several, and the right one depends on your insurance and your income.

Your situationWhat you’ll likely payYour first move
Uninsured + lower income
(at/below 300% federal poverty level)
Possibly $0Apply to the Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation — call 866-228-7723
Uninsured + higher income~$625/monthGet a real quote through BlinkRx; price-check a discount card
New to Lynkuet in Alaska or HawaiiUp to one free 30-day supplyAsk BlinkRx about the Lynkuet Free Trial Offer — 866-839-0766
Private insurance
(job or marketplace)
As little as $25/monthUse the copay card through BlinkRx
Medicare or MedicaidPlan copay, or assistanceThe $25 card isn’t allowed; check your plan and the assistance foundation

Sources: Bayer’s official Lynkuet cost pages and BlinkRx program terms; Reuters for the $625 cash price; Drugs.com for retail pricing. Last verified .

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How much does Lynkuet cost without insurance?

Lynkuet costs about $625 a month if you have no insurance, or if your insurance won’t cover it. That figure comes straight from Bayer, and Reuters reported the same $625 wholesale price when the drug launched. Drugs.com lists 60 capsules at $618.40 — about $10.31 per capsule.

The math: the dose is 120 mg once a day at bedtime, taken as two 60 mg capsules. A normal 30-day month is 60 capsules. That’s why the “60 capsules” price you see is really a one-month price.

One thing to watch: discount-coupon sites sometimes flash a much lower “price,” but that number can quietly assume you have private insurance. Don’t treat a coupon headline as your cash price until you’ve confirmed it doesn’t require coverage you don’t have.

Time on LynkuetCost at $625/month
1 month$625
3 months$1,875
6 months$3,750
12 months$7,500

The honest catch: If a low sticker price is your only priority, hormone therapy or Veozah may cost you less. But if you’re uninsured and your income qualifies, Bayer’s assistance program can bring your real cost to $0. The right question isn’t “can I afford $625?” — it’s “which path gets me the lowest legitimate price?”

Why the “$25 a month” Lynkuet offer probably isn’t your price

The “as little as $25/month” deal is a manufacturer copay card, and it’s only for people with private insurance— the kind you get through a job or buy on the marketplace. If you’re uninsured, or on Medicare or Medicaid, you’re not eligible. This single point is the biggest source of confusion about Lynkuet’s cost.

Bayer runs Lynkuet’s version through a digital pharmacy called BlinkRx, under a program named LASS (Lynkuet Access Savings & Support). A copay cardworks on top of insurance — it doesn’t replace it.

✓ Who the $25 card IS for

  • People with private (job, marketplace, or commercial) insurance
  • Who have a valid prescription
  • Up to the program’s monthly limits

✗ Who the $25 card is NOT for

  • People paying without insurance
  • Anyone on Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA, or any government health program
  • Plans where Lynkuet isn’t covered at all

Note for Puerto Rico:Bayer’s materials don’t line up — the copay terms list Puerto Rico as included, but other pages say it isn’t. If you live there, call BlinkRx at 866-839-0766 to confirm before you count on any single path.

What is the cheapest legitimate way to get Lynkuet without insurance?

The cheapest path depends on your income, and the smartest move is to check the options in the right order: patient assistance first, then BlinkRx for a real quote, then a discount card, and only then full cash.

1

Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation — can be $0

This is the part competitors bury, so we’re putting it first. The Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation is a charity program that gives eligible patients Bayer medicines — including Lynkuet — at no cost. To qualify: you must be uninsured, at or below 300% of the federal poverty level, have a medically appropriate diagnosis, and live in the U.S. or Puerto Rico. Approval is case-by-case.

Call 866-228-7723or ask your prescriber’s office to help you apply.

2

Have the prescription sent to BlinkRx — get a real quote

BlinkRx is Bayer’s official pharmacy partner for Lynkuet. It ships nationwide with free home delivery, usually within 3–5 days. After your doctor sends the prescription, BlinkRx texts you within 24 hours, checks your coverage, applies any savings you qualify for, and shows your price before you pay.

Honest limit:BlinkRx doesn’t publish a single fixed “uninsured” price. The only way to know your exact number is to have the prescription routed there and look. Questions: 866-839-0766.

3

Price a discount card — keep expectations low

GoodRx, SingleCare, and similar cards can offer “up to 80% off” — true for old generics. Lynkuet is brand-new with no generic, so the discount is small. Expect a price close to the ~$618 cash number, not a fraction of it. Worth a 30-second check, not worth your hope. A discount card can’t be combined with insurance.

4

Full cash — the last resort

If you don’t qualify for assistance and your income is too high for the foundation, you may simply pay the ~$625 cash price through BlinkRx or a retail pharmacy. Before you do, ask your pharmacist to confirm what kind of price they’re quoting.

What to say at the pharmacy (copy this):

“Is this the full cash price, a discount-card price, an insurance-denial price, or a manufacturer-program price? Can you rerun it with any Lynkuet savings or BlinkRx program info?”

Is Lynkuet covered by insurance, Medicare, or Medicaid?

Some private plans cover Lynkuet, but expect a prior authorization before they’ll pay. Medicare Part D plans may cover it depending on the formulary, and Medicaid varies by state— but the $25 copay card can’t be used with any government plan.

Two terms to know:

  • Prior authorization (PA): your insurer makes your doctor prove the drug is medically necessary before paying.
  • Step therapy: some plans require you to try cheaper options first and only cover the new drug if those fail.

If you have private insurance

Ask your doctor’s office to submit a PA. If it’s denied, they can file an appeal or a medical exception. The $25 copay card only helps once Lynkuet is actually covered by your plan.

If you have Medicare

Coverage depends on your specific Part D plan’s drug list. In 2026, Part D has a $2,100 cap on your out-of-pocket spending for covered drugs. If you buy Lynkuet outside your insurance through BlinkRx’s affordability program, those payments don’t count toward that cap. If your income is low, the Medicare “Extra Help” program can lower costs further.

If you have Medicaid

Coverage is state-by-state. Check your state’s drug list, and ask about exceptions if Lynkuet isn’t on it.

Is there a generic version of Lynkuet (or cheaper elinzanetant)?

No. There is no FDA-approved generic for Lynkuet, and there won’t be for years— Lynkuet has market exclusivity through at least October 2030, with patents stretching further. Any “generic elinzanetant” sold online should be treated as a red flag, not a deal.

“Elinzanetant” is just the drug’s chemical name — not a cheaper version. A website advertising “generic elinzanetant,” especially without a prescription or from outside the U.S., isn’t offering a legal bargain. At best it’s unverified; at worst it’s counterfeit and unsafe. Don’t gamble with it.

If price is the problem, the legitimate moves are the ones above (assistance, BlinkRx, a discount card) or the alternatives below — not a sketchy online “generic.”

Lynkuet vs. Veozah vs. hormone therapy: is there a cheaper option?

Yes — and for many women, hormone therapy is both cheaper and more effective for hot flashes.The closest non-hormonal rival, Veozah, runs roughly $550–$765 a month but carries the FDA’s strongest “boxed” warning for liver injury, which Lynkuet does not. A boxed warning is the most serious alert the FDA puts on a drug. The right choice depends on your health history — use this as a conversation starter with your clinician.

OptionHormonal?Cash price, no insuranceKey tradeoff
Lynkuet (elinzanetant)No~$625/monthLiver tests at start + ~3 months; can cause drowsiness; not for use in pregnancy. No boxed warning.
Veozah (fezolinetant)No~$550–$765/monthBoxed warning for liver injury; liver tests at start, then months 1, 2, 3, 6, and 9
Hormone therapy
(estrogen ± progesterone)
YesOften far lessMost effective for hot flashes, but not safe for everyone — ask your clinician

Lynkuet vs. Veozah.Both block brain signals (NK receptors) that trigger hot flashes. Lynkuet’s liver monitoring is lighter (start and ~3 months, versus Veozah’s five blood draws), and Lynkuet has no boxed warning. Veozah can be slightly cheaper for some, and its copay card waives the first month for insured patients. Neither has a generic.

Hormone therapy.For hot flashes and night sweats, hormone therapy is widely considered the most effective treatment, and generic estradiol can cost a fraction of $625. If you can’t take hormones — for example, after certain breast cancers — a non-hormonal drug like Lynkuet may be the safe path. But if you’re open to hormones and your clinician agrees, you may have a far cheaper option.

Open to hormone therapy and not sure where to start?

See our breakdown of FDA-approved hormone options and what they cost.

Compare HRT providers and costs →

The costs beyond the prescription: labs and doctor visits

The drug price isn’t your only cost. Before you start Lynkuet, the FDA label calls for a pregnancy check (for anyone who could become pregnant) and a baseline liver blood test, with a follow-up liver test at about 3 months. Budget for a visit and basic labs on top of the medication.

None of this is a dealbreaker — it’s routine, and it’s lighter than what Veozah requires. If a pharmacist seems to be holding your prescription, this is often why: they’re confirming your labs, your other medicines, or your insurance paperwork.

Common side effects from the label include headache, fatigue, dizziness, drowsiness, stomach pain, rash, diarrhea, and muscle spasms. Because it can make you drowsy or dizzy, you take it at bedtime.

How to get a Lynkuet prescription (and make sure it’s right for you)

Lynkuet is prescription-only, so you’ll need a clinician — your own doctor, or a telehealth menopause provider. A clinician who knows menopause can also tell you whether Lynkuet, Veozah, or hormone therapy is the smartest fit before you commit to $625 a month.

If you don’t have a menopause-savvy clinician — and many people don’t, because menopause care is patchy — telehealth is often the fastest route to a real evaluation. Midi Health is a virtual menopause and midlife-health clinic, available in all 50 states, that takes insurance for its visits, and its clinicians prescribe both hormonal and non-hormonal treatments for hot flashes.

A visit can get you evaluated, let you talk through hormonal and non-hormonal options, and get any prescription routed correctly — including an honest read on whether a cheaper option fits you better. See our full Midi Health review.

Don’t have a menopause-savvy prescriber?

Check eligibility for a telehealth menopause visit and get a clinician’s read on whether Lynkuet — or a lower-cost option — is right for you.

Check Midi Health eligibility →

What to ask your clinician (bring this list):

  1. “Am I a good candidate for Lynkuet, or should we compare it with Veozah and hormone therapy?”
  2. “Do I need baseline liver labs or a pregnancy check before starting?”
  3. “Do any of my current medicines interact with Lynkuet?”
  4. “Can you send the prescription to BlinkRx?”
  5. “If insurance denies it, will you file a prior authorization or appeal?”
  6. “If my cost is still over $600, what’s the next best option for me?”

Who should wait before paying cash for Lynkuet

Don’t hand over $625 until you’ve checked assistance, gotten a real quote, and confirmed Lynkuet actually fits your situation.

Wait if you’re uninsured: Apply to the Bayer assistance program before anything else — your price could be $0.
Wait if you have private insurance: Run a prior authorization and the copay card first; $25 beats $625.
Wait if you’re on Medicare or Medicaid: The copay card won’t work, but plan coverage, exceptions, and the assistance foundation might.
Wait if your symptoms are mild: Lynkuet only treats vasomotor symptoms — hot flashes and night sweats. It’s a steep price for mild symptoms.
Wait if hormones might be a better fit: If you’re open to hormone therapy and your clinician agrees, you may get more relief for less money.

Telling you when notto buy is the opposite of a sales pitch — and that’s the point. We’d rather you get the right care than rush the expensive one.

Not sure Lynkuet is your best path?

Take our free 60-second matching quiz and get a personalized action plan to bring to your clinician.

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What we actually verified

Commercial facts verified against Bayer’s official Lynkuet pages, BlinkRx program terms, Reuters, and Drugs.com (): the ~$625 cash price; the $618.40 retail benchmark; that the $25 copay card is for private insurance only and excludes government plans; that the Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation can provide Lynkuet at no cost to uninsured patients at or below 300% of the federal poverty level; that a free trial of up to one 30-day supply exists for new patients in Alaska and Hawaii only; that BlinkRx is the official pharmacy partner; and that no generic exists, with exclusivity through at least October 2030.

Medical facts verified against the FDA-approved label and FDA resources: that Lynkuet is non-hormonal, FDA-approved in October 2025, dosed at 120 mg (two capsules) nightly, requires baseline and ~3-month liver tests, must not be used in pregnancy, and carries no boxed warning; and that Veozah carries a boxed warning for liver injury.

What we could not verify for you:your personal eligibility, your exact insurance coverage, your pharmacy’s price on a given day, or whether you’ll be approved for assistance. Those depend on your situation — which is exactly what the cost-path checker and a clinician visit are for.

Lynkuet cost FAQ

How much is Lynkuet without insurance?
Lynkuet costs about $625 a month without insurance or when it isn’t covered, and retail pricing runs about $618.40 for a 30-day supply (60 capsules). Your exact price can vary by pharmacy and savings path.
Can uninsured patients use the Lynkuet $25 copay card?
No. The $25 copay card is only for people with private insurance. People paying without insurance, and anyone on Medicare, Medicaid, or other government coverage, are not eligible.
Can I get Lynkuet for free?
Possibly. The Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation provides Lynkuet at no cost to patients who are uninsured, at or below 300% of the federal poverty level, and medically appropriate. You apply and must be approved case-by-case. Call 866-228-7723 to start.
Is there a generic for Lynkuet?
No. There is no FDA-approved generic for Lynkuet, and exclusivity runs through at least October 2030. Avoid any online “generic elinzanetant” that can’t be verified as FDA-approved and dispensed by a legitimate pharmacy.
Is Lynkuet the same as Veozah?
No. Both are non-hormonal prescription drugs for menopause hot flashes, but they’re different medicines. Veozah costs roughly $550–$765 a month and carries a boxed warning for liver injury; Lynkuet has no boxed warning and lighter liver monitoring.
Does Lynkuet require lab tests?
Yes. The label calls for a baseline liver blood test before you start and a follow-up at about 3 months, plus a pregnancy check for anyone who could become pregnant.
Is Lynkuet hormone therapy?
No. Lynkuet is not a hormone. It’s a non-hormonal prescription pill for moderate-to-severe hot flashes and night sweats due to menopause.
Do I need a prescription for Lynkuet?
Yes. Lynkuet is prescription-only. Don’t buy any “no-prescription Lynkuet” from unverified sellers.
Does Medicare cover Lynkuet?
It depends on your Part D plan’s drug list. The manufacturer’s $25 copay card can’t be used with Medicare, so check your plan’s coverage, ask about exceptions, and look into the assistance foundation instead.
What should I do if Lynkuet is too expensive?
Check the Bayer assistance program and a real BlinkRx quote first, compare a discount card, ask your clinician about a prior authorization or appeal, and discuss whether Veozah or hormone therapy is a better-value fit for you.

Still not sure which HRT program is right for you?

Take our free 60-second matching quiz. It asks about your symptoms, your state, your insurance situation, and whether you’re leaning hormonal or non-hormonal — then points you toward the most likely next step.

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Sources

The HRT Index is an independent comparison resource for HRT telehealth providers. This is independent editorial research, not medical advice — talk to your own clinician before starting or stopping any medication. Last verified .

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