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Lynkuet Savings Card 2026: Who Qualifies for the $25 Copay Card?

The Lynkuet savings card can drop your cost to as little as $25 a month — but only if you have private (commercial) insurance that covers the drug. If you’re on Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, or VA coverage, the card is off the table — that’s a federal rule, not Bayer being picky. No insurance at all? It won’t help you either, though two other Bayer programs still might. And here’s the part the coupon sites won’t put in bold: the official $25 card is not the same thing as a GoodRx coupon, and mixing them up can cost you hundreds of dollars.

HI
The HRT Index Editorial TeamIndependent women's health research
Published: Last reviewed:
Editorial research — not medically reviewed by a clinician. Why this label

Quick-reference: your savings card situation

Your situationCan you use the Lynkuet savings card?Your first move
Private/employer insurance and your plan covers LynkuetYes, most likelyUse BlinkRx, or show the card at your pharmacy
Private insurance, but Lynkuet isn’t covered yetUsually not — until it’s coveredAsk about a prior authorization or “medical exception”
Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, or VANo — government plans are excluded by federal coupon rulesLook at Bayer’s assistance program instead
No insurance / paying cashNoCheck Bayer assistance or a cash discount card
New patient in Alaska or HawaiiMaybe — a free trial may applyAsk BlinkRx about the AK/HI free trial
Puerto Rico or a U.S. territoryUnclear — the fine print conflictsCall before you count on it

► Find your Lynkuet savings route

Answer a few quick questions and we’ll show you whether the $25 card, BlinkRx, Bayer assistance, a free trial, or a cash discount price is your real next step — before you waste an hour at the pharmacy counter.

Check my savings route →

A quick note on who we are, because trust matters when money and medicine are both on the line. We’re The HRT Index, an independent comparison resource for HRT telehealth providers. We don’t sell Lynkuet. We’re not Bayer. We read the official program terms, the FDA label, and the actual pharmacy prices so you don’t have to open fifteen tabs to figure out one thing: what you will pay.

Is the Lynkuet $25 savings card real, or just marketing?

It’s real — but “as little as $25 a month” is a best-case price, not a promise to everyone. The $25 only happens when you have commercial insurance, your plan covers Lynkuet, and the pharmacy runs the card correctly. Without all three lined up, your price can jump into the $600 range fast.

Let’s clear up the number, because a few different prices are floating around the internet and they scare people for no reason.

  • The list price. When Lynkuet was approved, Reuters reported a wholesale price of about $625 a month. That’s the “list” number — it’s a benchmark, not a guaranteed quote at your pharmacy.
  • The cash counter price. Discount-card sites show a normal out-of-pocket price closer to $1,000 and a coupon price in the low-$600s. That higher number is a retail estimate, not what most people actually pay with help.
  • The savings-card price. With commercial insurance plus the manufacturer copay card, eligible patients can pay as little as $25 a month.
Plain-English term: A copay is the share of a drug’s cost you pay after your insurance pays its part. A copay card (also called a savings card) is money the drugmaker chips in to cover part of that copay — so you pay less at the counter.

Lynkuet price snapshot — :

Route or sourceWhat it showsWorth knowing
Lynkuet copay card (with commercial insurance)As little as $25/monthEligible commercially insured patients, up to the program maximum
Wholesale/list benchmark (Reuters, at approval)About $625/monthA list price, not a guaranteed pharmacy quote
SingleCare$1,000.46 normal cash · $613.25 with couponEstimates that update daily — confirm with your pharmacy
Drugs.com / RxGo / WellRx discount cardsRoughly $613–$662/monthVaries by pharmacy and which card you use
GoodRxInconsistent — retail around $744–$782 and coupon prices all over the mapTreat GoodRx’s Lynkuet numbers with caution
Bayer Patient Assistance FoundationPossibly $0For eligible uninsured or underinsured patients

Discount-card prices are estimates and change daily. Always confirm the real price with your pharmacy before you fill.

Now the confusion that trips up almost everyone — and it’s the whole reason this page exists. Three totally different things all get called “savings”:

  1. The official Lynkuet copay card — from Bayer, for people with commercial insurance. This is the $25 path.
  2. BlinkRx — Bayer’s partner pharmacy that can apply that card for you automatically.
  3. Discount cards like GoodRx, SingleCare, or WellRx — third-party coupons for people paying cash. These are not the manufacturer card.

They are not interchangeable. Use the wrong one and you can end up paying $600 instead of $25, or accidentally throw away your insurance benefit. We’ll untangle exactly which is yours below.


Who qualifies for the Lynkuet $25 copay card?

You qualify if you have commercial (private or employer) insurance, your plan covers Lynkuet, and you have a valid prescription.There’s no income test for this card — income only matters for Bayer’s separate assistance program. The single biggest “gotcha” is plan coverage: the card can’t rescue you if your insurance doesn’t cover Lynkuet in the first place.

Run yourself through this checklist. To use the official copay card, you generally need to be able to say “yes” to all of these:

You’re 18 or older.
You’re being treated in the United States.
You have a valid Lynkuet prescription.
You have commercial insurance (an employer plan, a marketplace/ACA plan, or a private individual plan).
Your plan covers Lynkuet.
Your plan doesn’t reimburse the entire cost on its own.
You’re not using Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA, the Department of Defense, or another government program.
Plain-English term: Commercial insurancejust means private insurance — the kind you get through a job or buy yourself. It’s the opposite of government insurance like Medicare or Medicaid.

One nuance worth slowing down on: having insurance is not the same as having insurance that covers Lynkuet. Lynkuet is brand-new — the FDA approved it in October 2025 — and new drugs don’t show up on every plan’s covered-drug list right away. If your plan hasn’t added it yet, the standard copay card won’t quietly fix that. But a prior authorization or medical exception might, and we cover that two sections down.

► Not sure if your plan qualifies?

The card’s “yes or no” depends on your specific insurance and whether Lynkuet is covered. Check it before you ask the pharmacy to run the card.

See if the $25 card fits my plan →

Who does NOT qualify — and what to do instead

The standard copay card won’t work if you’re uninsured, paying cash, on any government insurance (Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA, DoD), or if your plan doesn’t cover Lynkuet. That’s a lot of people — and it’s frustrating. But “no card for you” is not the same as “no help for you.” Your next move depends entirely on whythe card doesn’t apply.

We’ll be straight with you, because we’d rather lose your click than send you to a dead end at the pharmacy: the Lynkuet savings card is not the right tool for everyone.If you’re on Medicare or Medicaid — which describes a huge share of women over 65 — federal rules block you from using any drugmaker’s copay card. That’s not Bayer singling you out. It’s how manufacturer copay cards work across the board, because the government doesn’t allow drug companies to subsidize copays for federally insured patients.

Here’s the route by reason:

  • You’re on Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, or VA. Skip the copay card entirely. Don’t waste energy trying to make it work — it can’t. Instead, ask your plan whether Lynkuet is covered and what your share would be, and look at Bayer’s Patient Assistance Foundation (below), which may provide the medicine at no cost if you qualify. In 2026, Medicare Part D also caps what you pay out of pocket for covered Part D drugs at about $2,100 — once you hit that cap, you pay $0 for covered drugs for the rest of the year.
  • You have no insurance / you’re paying cash. The copay card isn’t for you either, but you have two real options: apply to Bayer’s assistance program (possibly $0 if your income qualifies), or compare cash prices with a discount card (around the $600 range). We go deeper on both in our companion guide, Lynkuet cost without insurance.
  • You have commercial insurance, but Lynkuet isn’t covered.The card can’t override “not covered.” Your move is a prior authorization or medical exception — see the next section.

► The card’s not your path? Don’t guess your cost.

If you’re uninsured or on a government plan, the cheaper routes are different — and worth comparing before you pay full price.

Compare Lynkuet cost without insurance →

How to get and use the Lynkuet savings card

There are two ways to use the card: through BlinkRx (Bayer’s partner pharmacy, which applies it for you automatically) or at a regular retail pharmacy (where you enroll first, then show the card). Eligible commercial patients pay as little as $25 a month either way. The trick is making sure the pharmacy runs the manufacturer card and not a random discount coupon.

Option 1 — BlinkRx (the hands-off path)

Bayer teamed up with BlinkRx, a mail-order pharmacy, for a program they call Lynkuet Access Savings & Support. If your prescriber sends your prescription to BlinkRx, here’s what happens:

  1. BlinkRx checks your commercial insurance and finds any savings you qualify for, automatically.
  2. They text you within 24 hours to finish your order online (or you can call).
  3. Your Lynkuet ships to your door, free, usually in 3–5 days.
  4. Questions? BlinkRx support is at 1-866-839-0766.

Eligible commercial patients are enrolled in the copay program automatically when they use BlinkRx — you don’t have to hunt down a separate card.

Option 2 — Your local retail pharmacy

Prefer to pick it up in person? You can. But you have to enroll for the card yourself first (at LynkuetSavings.com), then hand the card details to your pharmacist. Bayer’s card-questions line is 1-844-LYNKUET (1-844-596-5838).

What to say at the counter so you don’t accidentally pay the cash price:

Say this to your pharmacist:
“Can you confirm this is going through my commercial insurance with the Lynkuet manufacturer copay card — not a third-party discount card? I want to make sure I’m not bypassing the manufacturer program.”

And if you don’t have a prescription routed yet, this is what to ask your prescriber:

Say this to your prescriber’s office:
“Can you send my Lynkuet prescription to BlinkRx so they can check my insurance and apply any savings I qualify for? And if my plan doesn’t cover it, can your office help with the medical exception paperwork?”

► Want the official card in hand?

If you’ve got commercial insurance and a prescription, you can start the copay card straight from Bayer’s site. It’s free and takes a few minutes.

Start the official Lynkuet copay card →

Lynkuet savings card vs. GoodRx, SingleCare, and other discount cards

The Lynkuet savings card is a manufacturer copay card tied to commercial insurance. GoodRx, SingleCare, and WellRx are third-party discount cards for cash payers — and they generally can’t be combined with insurance.If you’re insured, the manufacturer card almost always wins (as little as $25 versus roughly $600). The danger is using a discount coupon by reflex and unknowingly skipping your own insurance benefit.

Official Lynkuet savings cardDiscount cards (GoodRx, SingleCare, WellRx)
Who’s behind itBayer (the drugmaker)A third-party coupon company
Do you need insurance?Yes — commercial insuranceNo — it’s a cash-price tool
Best-case priceAs little as $25/monthAround $613–$662/month
Can you use it with insurance?Yes — it works with your commercial planNo — it’s used instead of insurance, never on top of it
Can Medicare/Medicaid patients use it?NoOnly as a cash option (not combined with their plan)
Best forInsured patients whose plan covers LynkuetCash payers, or people the card won’t cover
Biggest riskAssuming you qualify when you don’tAccidentally bypassing your insurance and the $25 card

The rule of thumb is simple: if you have commercial insurance, try the manufacturer card first. Don’t jump to a GoodRx-style coupon unless you already know the manufacturer card doesn’t apply to you — because a discount card replaces your insurance for that fill. For an insured person, that can turn a $25 month into a $600 one.

Discount cards aren’t villains. If you’re uninsured and paying cash, a $613 price beats a $1,000 sticker. Just know which lane you’re in before you hand anything to the pharmacist. (And remember those prices are estimates — call the pharmacy to confirm before you fill.)


Why did my pharmacy quote me $600+ if the card says $25?

Almost always, it’s one of six things: your plan doesn’t cover Lynkuet, you’re on government insurance, you’re paying cash, the pharmacy ran a discount card instead of the manufacturer copay card, you’ve hit the card’s yearly limit, or the prescription wasn’t processed through your insurance. Sort out which one, and the fix is usually quick.

This is the moment most people give up and walk out. Don’t. Run down this list:

  • Your plan doesn’t cover Lynkuet. The copay card only lowers a covered drug’s cost. Ask your plan about a prior authorization or medical exception (next section).
  • You’re on Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, or VA. The card legally can’t apply. Look at Bayer assistance instead.
  • You’re paying cash with no insurance on file. The card needs commercial insurance to work alongside.
  • The pharmacy ran a discount card, not the manufacturer card. This is the sneaky one. Ask them to re-run it through your commercial insurance with the Lynkuet copay card (use the pharmacist script above).
  • You’ve hit the card’s program maximum for the year. Manufacturer cards cap how much they’ll cover annually. Call 1-844-LYNKUET to check where you stand.
  • The claim didn’t go through your insurance at all. Sometimes it’s a simple processing miss. Ask them to reprocess.

Nine times out of ten, a $600 quote for an insured patient means the card wasn’t applied — not that you don’t qualify.


What if your insurance won’t cover Lynkuet?

If your plan says Lynkuet isn’t covered, the $25 card alone usually can’t fix it — but a “not covered” answer is often not the final answer.Your next step is to ask whether the plan needs a prior authorization, a medical exception, or step therapy. BlinkRx says it can help start and pre-fill a medical exception request and send it to your prescriber’s office.

Don’t read “not covered” as “case closed.” Lynkuet is new, and plans add new drugs on their own timelines. Here’s the plain-English version of the three things a plan might ask for:

  • Prior authorization: the plan wants your prescriber to send paperwork proving you need the drug before it’ll pay.
  • Medical exception: your prescriber formally asks the plan to cover a drug that isn’t on its standard list.
  • Step therapy: the plan wants you to try a cheaper option first before it’ll cover this one.

Two scripts to move it along fast:

Call your insurance and ask:
“Is Lynkuet covered under my pharmacy benefit? Does it need prior authorization, step therapy, or a medical exception? If it’s not covered, what does my prescriber need to send for a review?”
Then tell your prescriber’s office:
“My plan said Lynkuet isn’t covered. Can your office check whether BlinkRx can help with a medical exception or the coverage paperwork?”

None of this guarantees a “yes” — plans differ. But a surprising number of “not covered” answers turn into “covered” after one form. And once it’s covered, the $25 card comes back into play.

For the full prior authorization picture — including what six major insurers actually require, liver lab documentation, step therapy specifics, and how to appeal a denial — see our companion guide: Lynkuet Prior Authorization (2026).

► Save the exact words to use

Get the coverage-call script so you’re not improvising with your plan, prescriber, and pharmacy.

Get the coverage-call script →

Cheaper paths if the card doesn’t work for you

If the $25 card is out, your main fallbacks are: Bayer’s Patient Assistance Foundation (possibly $0 if your income qualifies), BlinkRx’s affordability program, a free trial for new patients in Alaska or Hawaii, or a cash discount card (around $600). The right one depends on why the copay card failed and what kind of insurance — if any — you have.

Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation (the “possibly free” route)

This is Bayer’s charity program, and Bayer’s own Lynkuet materials point patients to it. It may provide Lynkuet at no cost to people who qualify, generally based on income and insurance status — and it can sometimes help even if you have a government plan or your commercial plan doesn’t cover the drug. This is the first door to knock on if money is tight. Call 1-866-228-7723 or visit patientassistance.bayer.us. Final approval is decided by the program after you apply.

BlinkRx affordability program

Separate from the standard copay card, BlinkRx’s program describes a way to buy Lynkuet outside of insurance. Important fine print: if you go this route, payments generally don’t count toward your deductible or out-of-pocket maximum, and the program isn’t available in Puerto Rico. Call BlinkRx before assuming you’re eligible.

Alaska / Hawaii free trial

This one’s easy to miss. The program’s terms describe a free-trial offer for new Lynkuet patients in Alaska or Hawaii — up to one 30-day supply, one per person for life, with a valid signed prescription. If that’s you, ask BlinkRx about it directly, since program terms can change.

Cash discount card

If you’re paying cash and don’t qualify for assistance, a discount card (GoodRx, SingleCare, WellRx) can bring the price into the $600 range. Compare a couple, then call the pharmacy to lock in the price before filling.

A quick word on the Puerto Rico and territories puzzle. The fine print contradicts itself: one Bayer page says the program is “not available in Puerto Rico,” while the copay terms say the offer is valid for patients treated in the U.S. including Puerto Rico, Guam, and other territories — and the separate BlinkRx affordability program excludes Puerto Rico. If you live in Puerto Rico or a U.S. territory, call BlinkRx (1-866-839-0766) or Bayer before you rely on the card.

► Match yourself to the right program

Assistance, free trial, affordability program, or cash card — the finder points you to the one that actually fits your situation.

Find my best non-card option →

No prescription yet? How to get evaluated for Lynkuet

Lynkuet is prescription-only, so the savings card does nothing until a clinician prescribes it. If you want to use the $25 card, you’ll need commercial insurance — which means the simplest starting point is a provider who takes your insurance and prescribes non-hormonal hot-flash medications. Plan for a short lead time, because the label calls for a baseline liver blood test before you start.

Here’s a connection most pages don’t make: the prescription and the savings card are linked. The $25 card needs commercial insurance. So if you don’t have a prescription yet and you want that card to work, pick a path that keeps you on the commercial-insurance track.

ProviderWhat they sayWhat we verifiedWhy it fits this page
Midi HealthAccepted by major insurers and offered by employers in all 50 states; in-network with most PPO plans; care plans can include non-hormonal optionsConfirmed on Midi’s site; coverage still varies by plan. Midi does not treat Medicaid or Medi-Cal patients, even as self-payThe copay card needs commercial insurance — Midi’s covered patients are exactly that group
SesameLow-cost cash telehealth visits; a clinician can send a prescription to your pharmacyConfirmed on Sesame’s site; whether you get a prescription depends on the clinician’s judgmentA cash path to get evaluated if you’re uninsured or just want speed

What a clinician will typically check before prescribing, straight from the label: whether your hot flashes are moderate to severe and menopause-related, your pregnancy status, your liver lab values, your other medications, and any history of seizures.

Have commercial insurance but no prescription yet?

That’s the one combination where seeing a provider actually moves you toward the $25 price. Midi takes most PPO plans and its clinicians prescribe non-hormonal hot-flash options — ask whether Lynkuet is right for you.

Check whether Midi takes your insurance →

Paying cash and want a quick evaluation instead? Book a low-cost visit on Sesame →

Affiliate note: the Midi and Sesame links above may earn us a commission. We recommend them because they fit this specific situation — not because they sell Lynkuet (they don’t; your prescription goes to your pharmacy).


Before you fill it: what Lynkuet is, and what can delay your first fill

Lynkuet (generic name elinzanetant) is a non-hormonal pill for moderate-to-severe hot flashes and night sweats from menopause — not hormone replacement therapy.It works on brain signals that control body temperature, not by adding estrogen or progesterone. If you came here from an HRT search, that difference matters for what you’re actually buying.

Plain-English terms: Vasomotor symptoms is the medical name for hot flashes and night sweats. Non-hormonalmeans the drug contains no estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone — so it can be an option for women who can’t or don’t want to take hormones.

A few honest things to know before you spend a dollar — and a few that can hold up your first fill:

  • It treats hot flashes, not everything. Lynkuet won’t do what estrogen does for vaginal dryness or bone health. It’s a targeted tool for the heat-and-sweat side of menopause.
  • There’s a liver-test step — twice. The label says to check liver labs before you start, and to recheck them at 3 months. Factor in a little lead time before your first fill.
  • Pregnancy matters. Lynkuet is not for use in pregnancy and can cause pregnancy loss or stillbirth. Your clinician will confirm you’re not pregnant first, and the label advises effective birth control during treatment and for 2 weeks after your last dose.
  • Watch grapefruit and drug interactions. Lynkuet is processed by a liver pathway called CYP3A4, so grapefruit and certain medicines can change how it works. Share your full medication list with your prescriber and pharmacist.
  • Common side effects include headache, fatigue, dizziness, drowsiness, stomach pain, rash, diarrhea, and muscle spasms. It’s taken as 120 mg — two 60 mg capsules — once a night.
  • It’s brand-only. There’s no generic version of Lynkuet yet, which is why the price won’t quietly drop on its own. The savings card is the main lever for now.

What can delay your first Lynkuet fill? No prescription yet · baseline liver labs not done · pregnancy not yet ruled out where it applies · your plan needs a prior authorization · the pharmacy runs a discount card instead of the manufacturer card · a grapefruit or interaction question your prescriber needs to clear first.

Now the disqualifier, said plainly: if your main goal is broad menopause relief — or you cantake estrogen and want the bone and vaginal benefits too — then hormone therapy may simply fit you better than a hot-flash-only pill. That’s not a knock on Lynkuet. It’s a different tool for a different job. If you’re not sure which lane is yours, don’t guess.

► Lynkuet, HRT, or something else?

Still not sure which menopause treatment is right for you? Take our free 60-second matching quiz and get a personalized starting point.

Take the free matching quiz →

You can also compare the two non-hormonal options head-to-head in Veozah vs Lynkuet, or weigh non-hormonal against hormones in Lynkuet vs HRT.


What we actually verified

We don’t expect you to take our word for it — so here’s what we confirmed, when, and what we’re still chasing down. Drug-cost programs change, and we’d rather flag a gap than fake certainty.

What we checkedWhat we foundWhereLast checked
Copay card priceAs little as $25/month for eligible commercially insured patients; terms say “up to the program maximum,” but the public terms don’t state the dollar capBayer (lynkuet-us.com)
Government-plan exclusionMedicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA, and DoD are excludedBayer copay terms
BlinkRxCommercial patients using BlinkRx are auto-enrolled; free delivery in about 3–5 days; can help with medical exception paperworkBayer (lynkuet-us.com)
Patient Assistance FoundationBayer directs Lynkuet patients here; may be $0 for eligible patients; final approval set by the programBayer (patientassistance.bayer.us)
Cash / discount priceList benchmark about $625; discount-card estimates about $613–$662Reuters; SingleCare; Drugs.com
Safety (from the FDA label)Non-hormonal; 120 mg nightly; liver test before starting and again at 3 months; contraindicated in pregnancy; contraception during and for 2 weeks after; grapefruit/CYP3A4 caution; not a controlled substanceFDA label / DailyMed

Still to confirm before you rely on it (and what we recommend you do):

  • The exact yearly maximum on the copay card — the public terms mention a maximum but don’t state the dollar figure. Confirm it by calling 1-844-LYNKUET.
  • The Puerto Rico / territories contradiction — the fine print conflicts. Call BlinkRx or Bayer if you’re there.
  • The Alaska / Hawaii free trial details — confirm with BlinkRx if you’re a new patient in those states, since terms can change.
Why we don’t run patient testimonials here.Lynkuet only reached pharmacies in late 2025, so real, verifiable savings-card reviews barely exist yet — and a cost page is the wrong place to use treatment testimonials anyway, since they can imply results that aren’t typical. The most honest thing we can tell you about real people’s experience is this: in public menopause discussions, the recurring frustration isn’t whether Lynkuet exists — it’s the gap between the advertised “$25” and the much higher number people see at the pharmacy when the card doesn’t apply to them. Closing that gap is the entire point of this page.

Lynkuet savings card FAQ

Is there a savings card for Lynkuet?
Yes. Eligible commercially insured patients may pay as little as $25 a month through Bayer’s official Lynkuet copay card, subject to the program’s terms and limits. It is not a universal coupon — it doesn’t apply to government insurance or cash payers.
Can uninsured patients use the Lynkuet savings card?
No. The copay card requires commercial insurance. If you’re uninsured, your better options are Bayer’s Patient Assistance Foundation (possibly $0 if you qualify) or a cash discount card (around the $600 range).
Can Medicare or Medicaid patients use the Lynkuet savings card?
No. Federal rules block drugmaker copay cards for anyone on Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA, or other government coverage. Those patients should check plan coverage and Bayer’s assistance program instead.
What is the annual maximum on the Lynkuet copay card?
The card’s terms say the $25 benefit applies “up to the program maximum,” but the public terms don’t list the dollar amount of that cap. Call 1-844-LYNKUET to confirm your remaining benefit before you fill.
Why did my pharmacy quote me $600+ if the card says $25?
Usually because the card wasn’t applied — your plan doesn’t cover Lynkuet, you’re on government insurance, you’re paying cash, the pharmacy ran a discount card instead of the manufacturer card, you hit the yearly maximum, or the claim didn’t go through your insurance. For an insured patient it’s almost always a fixable processing issue.
Does BlinkRx apply the Lynkuet savings card automatically?
Yes, for eligible commercial patients. If your prescriber sends your prescription to BlinkRx, the savings are applied for you and the drug ships free, usually in 3–5 days. Retail pharmacy users have to enroll and present the card themselves.
What if my insurance says Lynkuet isn’t covered?
The $25 card alone usually can’t override “not covered,” but the answer often isn’t final. Ask your plan about a prior authorization or medical exception — BlinkRx can help start that paperwork, and once it’s covered, the card applies.
Is the Lynkuet savings card the same as GoodRx or SingleCare?
No. The Lynkuet card is a manufacturer copay program for insured patients. GoodRx and SingleCare are separate cash-price discount cards that generally can’t be combined with insurance. If you’re insured, try the manufacturer card first.
Is there a generic for Lynkuet?
No. Lynkuet (elinzanetant) is brand-only with no generic version available — which is why the savings card is the main way to lower the price.
Do I need a prescription to use the savings card?
Yes. Lynkuet is prescription-only, so the card can’t be used until a clinician evaluates you and writes a prescription.
Is Lynkuet hormone replacement therapy?
No. Lynkuet is non-hormonal — it contains no estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone. It treats moderate-to-severe hot flashes from menopause by acting on the brain’s temperature controls.
Can I use my HSA or FSA to pay for Lynkuet?
Generally yes, for the amount you actually pay out of pocket for a valid prescription. Just don’t use HSA or FSA money to cover the part the copay card already paid. Check with your HSA/FSA administrator if you’re unsure.
Who do I call if the card doesn’t work?
For card questions, call 1-844-LYNKUET (1-844-596-5838). For BlinkRx orders or program help, call 1-866-839-0766. Confirm the current number on the official site before relying on it.

Still not sure which menopause treatment is right for you?

Take our free 60-second matching quiz →

Sources