Updated: March 5, 2026
How to Find a Doctor Who Can Prescribe Lasix Near You [2026 Guide]
Author
Peter Daggett

Summarize with AI
Lasix (furosemide) is a prescription medication. Learn which doctors can prescribe it, how to find one near you, and whether telehealth is an option for your situation.
Lasix (furosemide) is a prescription-only medication — you cannot purchase it over the counter in the United States. Getting your prescription requires seeing a licensed prescriber. Whether you are a new patient looking for a doctor or an existing patient whose prescriber has retired or moved away, this guide helps you understand who can prescribe Lasix, what your options are, and whether telehealth might work for your situation.
Who Can Prescribe Lasix (Furosemide)?
Furosemide is not a controlled substance — it carries no DEA scheduling restrictions. This means any licensed prescriber in the United States can prescribe it during a standard clinical encounter. The following providers commonly prescribe furosemide:
Cardiologists: The most common prescribers for patients with congestive heart failure (CHF). Cardiologists manage fluid overload, diuretic dosing, and titration as part of comprehensive heart failure care.
Nephrologists: Prescribe furosemide for patients with chronic kidney disease, nephrotic syndrome, and edema related to renal disease.
Primary Care Physicians (PCPs): Family medicine and internal medicine physicians regularly prescribe furosemide for hypertension and mild-to-moderate edema management.
Hospitalists: Hospital physicians frequently initiate and manage furosemide for acute decompensated heart failure during inpatient stays.
Nurse Practitioners (NPs) and Physician Assistants (PAs): Advanced practice providers can prescribe furosemide in most states. Many work in cardiology, nephrology, and primary care clinics.
Hepatologists: May prescribe furosemide in combination with spironolactone for patients with cirrhosis and ascites.
How to Find a Doctor Who Prescribes Furosemide Near You
Since furosemide is prescribed by a wide range of physicians for common conditions, your best starting point is usually your primary care provider. Here is how to find a prescriber quickly:
Start with your primary care doctor. If you have been diagnosed with hypertension, heart failure, or edema, your PCP can often manage your furosemide prescription without a specialist referral.
Ask for a specialist referral if needed. For complex heart failure or kidney disease, your PCP may refer you to a cardiologist or nephrologist who will take over your diuretic management.
Use your insurance directory. Check your health plan's online provider directory for in-network cardiologists, nephrologists, or internal medicine physicians in your ZIP code.
Try community health centers. FQHC (Federally Qualified Health Centers) provide care on a sliding fee scale and can prescribe medications including furosemide. Find one at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov.
Can I Get a Lasix Prescription via Telehealth?
In many cases, yes — with important caveats. Furosemide is not a controlled substance, so there are no DEA restrictions on telehealth prescribing. A telehealth provider can prescribe furosemide during a video or phone visit if:
You have an established diagnosis (heart failure, hypertension, edema) and recent relevant medical records
The telehealth provider can assess your current condition and determine furosemide is appropriate
You have recent bloodwork (BMP/electrolytes, kidney function) available for review — furosemide affects kidney function and electrolytes, so safe prescribing requires monitoring
Telehealth may be less appropriate if you are newly presenting with edema or fluid overload symptoms without prior diagnosis — these conditions typically require in-person examination, listening to heart and lung sounds, and potentially diagnostic testing.
Popular telehealth platforms where you may be able to get a furosemide prescription (with appropriate clinical workup) include Sesame Care, Teladoc, and MDLive. Check whether the platform's physicians are licensed in your state before booking.
What to Bring to Your Appointment
Whether you are seeing a doctor in person or via telehealth, bring the following to maximize the efficiency of your visit:
List of current medications (including OTC drugs, supplements, and any diuretics you currently take)
Recent lab results: BMP (basic metabolic panel), kidney function (BUN, creatinine), and electrolytes
Any recent echocardiogram or cardiac testing results if you have heart failure
A description of your symptoms: where the swelling is, when it started, how much weight you have gained
Your insurance card and photo ID
After Getting Your Prescription: Finding Lasix in Stock
Once you have a prescription in hand, the next step is finding a pharmacy that has your specific strength in stock. medfinder can contact pharmacies near you to identify which ones can fill your prescription, saving you from calling around on your own. See our guide on how to find Lasix in stock near you for more tips.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Furosemide (Lasix) is a prescription-only medication in the United States. It is not available over the counter. Any website selling furosemide without a valid prescription is operating illegally. You need a licensed prescriber — such as a physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant — to obtain a furosemide prescription.
Yes, in many cases. Furosemide is not a controlled substance, so there are no DEA restrictions on telehealth prescribing. A telehealth provider can prescribe it if you have an established diagnosis (e.g., heart failure, hypertension, edema) and relevant recent lab results (kidney function, electrolytes). New presentations of edema or fluid overload typically require in-person evaluation first.
The right specialist depends on your diagnosis. Cardiologists manage furosemide for heart failure patients. Nephrologists prescribe it for chronic kidney disease and nephrotic syndrome. Primary care physicians (internists, family medicine) manage it for hypertension and uncomplicated edema. All of these physicians, as well as nurse practitioners and physician assistants, can prescribe furosemide.
No. Furosemide (Lasix) is not a DEA controlled substance and is not scheduled. It does not have addictive properties and is not subject to the same prescribing restrictions as opioids or stimulants. However, it still requires a valid prescription from a licensed healthcare provider because it is a potent medication that requires medical oversight for safe use.
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