Updated: February 14, 2026
How to Help Your Patients Save Money on Amoxicillin/Clavulanate: A Provider's Guide to Savings Programs
Author
Peter Daggett

Summarize with AI
- Why Medication Cost Matters for Adherence
- What Patients Are Paying
- Manufacturer Savings Programs
- Coupon and Discount Card Programs
- Walmart and Low-Cost Pharmacy Programs
- Patient Assistance Programs
- Generic Alternatives and Therapeutic Substitution
- Building Cost Conversations Into Your Workflow
- Helping Patients Find It in Stock
- Final Thoughts
A provider's guide to helping patients save on Amoxicillin/Clavulanate. Learn about discount programs, generics, and how to build cost conversations into care.
Why Medication Cost Matters for Adherence
When patients leave your office with a prescription for Amoxicillin/Clavulanate, the assumption is that they'll fill it. But for uninsured and underinsured patients, even a "cheap" generic antibiotic can be a barrier. A patient facing a $40–$60 cash price for a course of Amoxicillin/Clavulanate may delay filling the prescription, split doses, or skip it entirely — leading to treatment failure, complications, and antibiotic resistance.
As a prescriber, you're in a unique position to help patients navigate medication costs before they become adherence barriers. This guide covers the practical tools and programs available to reduce out-of-pocket costs for Amoxicillin/Clavulanate in 2026.
What Patients Are Paying
Understanding the cost landscape helps you advise patients effectively:
- Generic Amoxicillin/Clavulanate 875/125 mg (20 tablets): $20–$60 cash price without insurance
- Generic Amoxicillin/Clavulanate 500/125 mg (30 tablets): $15–$45 cash price
- With a discount coupon: $10–$25 at most pharmacies
- With insurance (Tier 1 generic): $0–$15 copay at most plans
- Brand-name Augmentin: $100–$300+ (rarely necessary given generic equivalence)
The oral suspension formulations — frequently prescribed for pediatric patients — can be more expensive and harder to find due to ongoing intermittent shortages.
For most insured patients, Amoxicillin/Clavulanate is a Tier 1 generic with no prior authorization or step therapy requirements. The cost conversation becomes most critical for your uninsured, high-deductible, and Medicare Part D patients.
Manufacturer Savings Programs
Unlike brand-name medications with active manufacturer copay cards, Amoxicillin/Clavulanate is a mature generic without dedicated manufacturer savings programs. Brand-name Augmentin is no longer actively promoted by GlaxoSmithKline (now Haleon/GSK), and no manufacturer discount cards are available.
This makes third-party discount programs the primary cost-reduction tool for this medication.
Coupon and Discount Card Programs
Free prescription discount cards are the most impactful tool for reducing Amoxicillin/Clavulanate costs for cash-pay patients. These programs negotiate discounted rates with pharmacies and require no insurance, no income verification, and no enrollment fees.
Top Discount Programs for Amoxicillin/Clavulanate
- GoodRx — Typically brings the price down to $10–$20. Patients can search online or use the app to find the lowest price at nearby pharmacies. Prices vary by location and pharmacy.
- SingleCare — Comparable savings to GoodRx. Accepted at CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, and most independent pharmacies.
- RxSaver — Another free comparison tool that shows real-time coupon pricing across local pharmacies.
- BuzzRx — Free discount card with competitive pricing on generic antibiotics.
- Optum Perks — Offers significant discounts, especially at partner pharmacies.
- America's Pharmacy — May offer lower prices at certain independent pharmacies.
How to Incorporate This Into Your Workflow
Consider these practical approaches:
- Keep a stack of GoodRx or SingleCare cards in your office or exam rooms. They're free to order in bulk.
- Print or text a coupon directly to the patient before they leave. GoodRx and SingleCare both allow you to look up pricing and share coupons from your phone in seconds.
- Note on the prescription — remind patients verbally that a discount card may be cheaper than their insurance copay, especially for high-deductible plans.
- Partner with your pharmacy staff — ask your local pharmacies which discount programs they accept and which tend to offer the best prices for Amoxicillin/Clavulanate.
Walmart and Low-Cost Pharmacy Programs
Several pharmacy chains offer flat-rate generic drug programs:
- Walmart $4 Prescription Program — Amoxicillin is included in the $4/$10 program. Amoxicillin/Clavulanate may be available at a slightly higher but still discounted price.
- Costco Pharmacy — Often has the lowest cash prices on generics. No Costco membership required to use the pharmacy.
- Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs — Online pharmacy offering transparent, low-cost generic pricing. Check costplusdrugs.com for current Amoxicillin/Clavulanate availability.
Patient Assistance Programs
For patients facing true financial hardship, these resources may help:
- NeedyMeds (needymeds.org) — Comprehensive database of patient assistance programs, discount cards, and state-based assistance
- RxAssist (rxassist.org) — Directory of patient assistance programs organized by medication
- State pharmaceutical assistance programs (SPAPs) — Many states offer prescription assistance for low-income residents
- Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) — 340B pricing can dramatically reduce medication costs for eligible patients
While patient assistance programs are more commonly utilized for expensive specialty medications, they can be relevant for patients who struggle with even modest generic costs.
Generic Alternatives and Therapeutic Substitution
When Amoxicillin/Clavulanate is unavailable or cost-prohibitive, consider these therapeutic alternatives based on the clinical indication:
- Amoxicillin alone — For infections where beta-lactamase coverage isn't critical (e.g., strep pharyngitis, uncomplicated UTIs). Available for as low as $4 at Walmart.
- Cephalexin (Keflex) — First-generation cephalosporin; useful for skin infections and UTIs. Typically $4–$15 with a coupon.
- Cefdinir (Omnicef) — Third-generation cephalosporin; broader spectrum; often used as an Amoxicillin/Clavulanate substitute. Usually $15–$30 with a coupon.
- Doxycycline — Broad-spectrum option for respiratory and skin infections. Very affordable at $4–$15 with a coupon.
- Azithromycin (Z-Pack) — For penicillin-allergic patients. Typically $10–$20 with a coupon.
For a detailed clinical comparison, see our guide on alternatives to Amoxicillin/Clavulanate.
Building Cost Conversations Into Your Workflow
Cost-of-care conversations don't have to be awkward or time-consuming. Here are strategies that work:
Ask the Question
A simple "Do you have any concerns about medication costs?" can open the door. Many patients won't volunteer financial concerns unless asked directly. Consider adding a cost question to your intake form.
Prescribe Generics by Default
Always prescribe as "Amoxicillin/Clavulanate" rather than "Augmentin" to ensure generic substitution. While most pharmacies will automatically substitute, specifying the generic removes any ambiguity.
Use Your EHR's Cost Tools
Many electronic health record systems now integrate real-time prescription pricing. Epic, for example, shows estimated patient costs at the point of prescribing. Use these tools to identify the most affordable option before the patient leaves.
Leverage Your Care Team
Medical assistants, nurses, and social workers can help patients navigate discount programs and patient assistance applications. Designate a team member as your "prescription cost resource" who stays current on available programs.
Consider Total Cost of Care
An unfilled $40 prescription can lead to a $2,000 ER visit for a worsening infection. Framing cost assistance as a clinical quality measure — not just a financial favor — helps prioritize it appropriately.
Helping Patients Find It in Stock
Cost savings don't matter if the patient can't find the medication. With intermittent shortages still affecting certain Amoxicillin/Clavulanate formulations, consider directing patients to Medfinder for Providers to help them locate in-stock pharmacies quickly. You can also check out our provider's guide to helping patients find Amoxicillin/Clavulanate in stock.
Final Thoughts
Amoxicillin/Clavulanate is an affordable generic by most standards, but "affordable" is relative. For the patient working an hourly job without insurance, a $40 antibiotic is a real barrier. The tools to help are free, fast, and readily available — discount cards, low-cost pharmacy programs, and a 30-second cost conversation can make the difference between a filled prescription and an unfilled one.
Build these resources into your workflow, empower your care team to assist, and treat prescription affordability as the clinical quality issue it is. Your patients' outcomes depend on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
The cash price for generic Amoxicillin/Clavulanate ranges from $15–$60 depending on the formulation and pharmacy. With a free discount coupon from GoodRx or SingleCare, patients can typically pay $10–$25.
No. Amoxicillin/Clavulanate is a mature generic without active manufacturer savings programs. Brand-name Augmentin is no longer actively promoted. Third-party discount cards (GoodRx, SingleCare, RxSaver) are the primary cost-reduction tools.
Amoxicillin alone ($4 at Walmart), Doxycycline ($4–$15 with coupon), and Cephalexin ($4–$15 with coupon) are the most affordable alternatives. The appropriate substitute depends on the clinical indication and patient's allergy history.
Direct patients to Medfinder (medfinder.com) to check real-time pharmacy availability by zip code. You can also use your e-prescribing system's inventory check, consider therapeutic alternatives, or contact local pharmacies to confirm stock before sending the prescription.
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