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Updated: January 16, 2026

How to Find Cataflam in Stock Near You (Tools + Tips for 2026)

Author

Peter Daggett

Peter Daggett

Person searching for Cataflam at local pharmacies using smartphone

Can't find Cataflam at your pharmacy? These tools and tips will help you locate diclofenac potassium in stock near you without spending hours on hold.

If you've been prescribed Cataflam (diclofenac potassium) and your usual pharmacy doesn't have it, you're not stuck. With the right approach, you can locate a pharmacy with it in stock — often the same day. This guide walks you through every tool and tip available in 2026.

First: Know What to Ask For

The brand name Cataflam is discontinued in the U.S., so many pharmacies don't list it by that name. When calling pharmacies, always ask for:

"Diclofenac potassium 50 mg immediate-release tablets"

Not just "Cataflam" — the generic name will get you much further. Also verify that your prescription is written for diclofenac potassium (not diclofenac sodium), since they are different salt formulations.

Option 1: Use medfinder to Have Pharmacies Called for You

The fastest option is to use medfinder.com. Here's how it works:

You provide your medication name (diclofenac potassium), dosage (50 mg), and your ZIP code

medfinder calls pharmacies near you to ask which ones have it in stock

You receive a text with a list of pharmacies that can fill your prescription

This eliminates the time-consuming process of calling pharmacy after pharmacy yourself — a task that can take 30-60 minutes with hold times.

Option 2: Call Pharmacies Directly — the Right Way

If you prefer to call pharmacies yourself, use this script to get accurate answers quickly:

"Hi, I need to check if you have diclofenac potassium 50 mg tablets in stock. I need [quantity] tablets. Can you check your inventory?"

Tips for calling pharmacies:

Call in the morning (9–11 AM) — pharmacists are less rushed and can check inventory more thoroughly

Ask to speak with the pharmacist, not just the tech — pharmacists can also check ordering options

Ask "Can you order it?" even if they don't have it today — many pharmacies can receive orders within 24-48 hours

Try chains first (CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Kroger) — they have larger inventories and ordering networks

Option 3: Check Pharmacy Apps and Websites

Some pharmacy chains allow you to check stock online or via their app before visiting. Here's what each major chain offers:

CVS: You can transfer or start a new prescription online; chat feature allows stock inquiries

Walgreens: App lets you search for prescriptions at nearby locations; limited stock visibility

Walmart: Pharmacy page shows $4/$10 generic programs — diclofenac potassium may be included

Costco: Often has competitive generic pricing; membership not required for pharmacy services in many states

Option 4: Ask Your Doctor's Office to Help

Many doctor's offices — particularly those in busy practices — have pharmacy contacts they work with regularly. A quick call to your prescriber's office explaining that you can't find the medication may result in them:

Calling a pharmacy they know stocks diclofenac potassium

Prescribing an equivalent alternative that's more widely available (e.g., meloxicam or naproxen)

Writing a new prescription for diclofenac potassium 50 mg to ensure pharmacists recognize the generic name

What to Do If You Can't Find It Anywhere

If you've exhausted local options, consider asking your doctor about alternatives to Cataflam. Several NSAIDs in the same class provide similar pain relief:

Meloxicam (Mobic): Once-daily dosing, widely stocked, often on $4 generic lists

Naproxen (Aleve, Naprosyn): Twice-daily dosing, available OTC and by prescription

Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin): Available OTC at any pharmacy without a prescription

Quick Reference: Steps to Find Cataflam in 2026

Use medfinder.com to have pharmacies called for you automatically

Ask for "diclofenac potassium 50 mg" — not just Cataflam

Start with large chain pharmacies (CVS, Walgreens, Walmart)

Ask your pharmacist to order it — delivery often arrives in 24-48 hours

Contact your doctor's office if you're still stuck — they can help find an alternative

Frequently Asked Questions

Use medfinder.com to have local pharmacies called on your behalf. You can also call pharmacies directly and ask for 'diclofenac potassium 50 mg' — the generic name — since the brand Cataflam is discontinued but the generic is available.

Most pharmacy websites don't display real-time inventory for prescription drugs. Your best options are calling the pharmacy directly, using medfinder.com, or using the pharmacy's app to start a transfer and confirm availability.

The generic name for Cataflam is diclofenac potassium. The standard dose is 50 mg immediate-release tablets. Always ask your pharmacist for 'diclofenac potassium 50 mg' to ensure you're looking for the right formulation.

Large chain pharmacies like CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Kroger, and Costco are most likely to carry generic diclofenac potassium regularly. Smaller independent pharmacies may need to order it. Walmart in particular often carries it at low cost on their generic drug program.

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Patients searching for Cataflam also looked for:

Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin)Naproxen (Aleve, Naprosyn)Meloxicam (Mobic)Celecoxib (Celebrex)

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