

A practical guide for providers on helping migraine patients find Aimovig (Erenumab) in stock. Includes specialty pharmacy tips, insurance strategies, and workflow recommendations.
When a migraine patient finally responds to Aimovig (Erenumab-aooe), the last thing either of you wants is a gap in treatment because the pharmacy can't fill the prescription. But it happens — and it happens more often than it should.
As a prescriber, you're in a unique position to prevent these access problems before they start and resolve them quickly when they occur. This guide offers practical, actionable steps for helping your patients maintain uninterrupted access to Aimovig in 2026.
Aimovig is not in a formal shortage as of early 2026. Amgen continues to manufacture and distribute the medication, and it's not listed on the FDA Drug Shortage Database.
However, patients frequently report difficulty filling their prescriptions. The primary causes are:
Patients often say "my pharmacy doesn't have it" or "it's out of stock." But when you dig deeper, the issue usually falls into one of these categories:
Helping your staff understand these distinctions can dramatically reduce the time spent troubleshooting patient calls.
Before writing the prescription, check whether Aimovig is on your patient's formulary — and whether it's preferred or non-preferred. If another CGRP inhibitor (Ajovy, Emgality, Vyepti, or Qulipta) is preferred, prescribing the preferred agent first can save weeks of back-and-forth.
Many EHR systems have integrated formulary lookup tools. If yours doesn't, payer-specific formulary PDFs are typically available online, or your staff can call the PBM's provider line.
Don't wait for a pharmacy rejection to trigger the PA process. Submit the prior authorization at the time of prescribing — or even before the patient's current PA expires.
Common PA requirements for Aimovig include:
Amgen provides prior authorization checklists and appeal templates that your staff can use to streamline the process.
Ensure the prescription is sent to a specialty pharmacy — not a retail pharmacy. Common specialty pharmacies that carry Aimovig include:
If you're unsure which specialty pharmacy your patient's plan uses, your staff can check with the PBM or have the patient call their insurer.
Make sure patients know about these programs:
If Aimovig access fails despite your best efforts, be prepared to pivot quickly. Having a pre-discussed alternative reduces the time your patient goes without preventive treatment:
Document the clinical rationale for any switch in case the patient's insurer requires justification. For detailed comparison, see alternatives to Aimovig.
Create a system (spreadsheet, EHR task list, or PA tracking software) to monitor prior authorization expiration dates for all patients on CGRP inhibitors. Proactively renew PAs at least 30 days before expiration.
Having one staff member who understands the specialty pharmacy landscape — who to call, how to transfer prescriptions, and how each PBM's system works — can dramatically reduce access delays across your entire patient panel.
When you first prescribe Aimovig, set expectations:
A few minutes of upfront education can prevent hours of downstream frustration — for your patient and your staff.
If multiple patients report access issues in a short timeframe, it may indicate a PBM formulary change, a specialty pharmacy transition, or a localized distribution issue. Reaching out to your Amgen representative can provide clarity.
Aimovig access problems in 2026 are systemic, not supply-driven. The medication exists — it's the path from manufacturer to patient that breaks down. As providers, we can significantly reduce these breakdowns by prescribing with formulary awareness, submitting PAs proactively, routing prescriptions to the right pharmacies, and connecting patients with support resources.
For real-time pharmacy availability, visit Medfinder for Providers. For the patient-facing version of this guidance, share our article on how to find Aimovig in stock.
You focus on staying healthy. We'll handle the rest.
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