Updated: January 7, 2026
How to Save Money on MicRhoGAM in 2026: Coupons, Discounts, and Patient Assistance
Author
Peter Daggett

Summarize with AI
MicRhoGAM can cost $100–$300+ per dose without insurance. Learn how insurance coverage, hospital billing, and discount tools can reduce your out-of-pocket cost in 2026.
MicRhoGAM is a critical medication, but its cost can be a surprise — especially for patients who are already managing the financial and emotional weight of a pregnancy loss. The good news is that most people who need MicRhoGAM will pay little or nothing out of pocket, as long as they know how the billing works. Here is a complete breakdown of MicRhoGAM costs and how to minimize them in 2026.
What Does MicRhoGAM Cost Without Insurance?
The cash price for MicRhoGAM (50 mcg mini-dose prefilled syringe) at retail pharmacies typically ranges from $100 to $300 or more per dose, depending on the pharmacy and region. The related full-dose RhoGAM product starts at approximately $136 at some pharmacies per GoodRx pricing data. Prices vary significantly by location and pharmacy.
However, MicRhoGAM is rarely paid for at the pharmacy cash register by the patient. Here's why:
How MicRhoGAM Is Usually Billed: Medical vs. Pharmacy Benefit
MicRhoGAM is almost always administered by a healthcare professional as an intramuscular injection — it cannot be self-administered at home. When it is given in a doctor's office, hospital, clinic, or emergency department, the cost is typically billed as a medical benefit (through your health insurance's Part A/B or medical coverage) rather than a pharmacy benefit.
This means:
Your pharmacy deductible typically does NOT apply
You pay your medical plan's office visit copay or coinsurance — often $0–$50 for preventive obstetric care
GoodRx and pharmacy discount cards do NOT typically apply to medically administered biologics (only to pharmacy dispenses)
Coverage Under Common Insurance Types
Private health insurance (ACA marketplace and employer plans): RhIg given in a clinical setting is typically covered as standard obstetric care. Many plans cover it at no cost share as a preventive service under the Women's Preventive Services guidelines.
Medicaid: Rho(D) immune globulin is covered under most state Medicaid programs as a medically necessary obstetric service. Cost-sharing (if any) is typically minimal.
Medicare Part B: MicRhoGAM administered in an outpatient medical setting may be covered under Medicare Part B (not Part D/pharmacy benefit). The standard 20% coinsurance applies after the Part B deductible ($257 in 2025).
Uninsured patients: May face the full cash price. Community health centers and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) often provide RhIg at sliding-scale or reduced cost. Ask your local health department about indigent care resources.
What If I'm Filling a Prescription at a Retail Pharmacy?
In some cases, patients may be directed to pick up MicRhoGAM at a pharmacy and then bring it to their provider's office for administration. In this scenario, it is billed through the pharmacy benefit:
Submit through your pharmacy insurance plan first; biologic injectable drugs are often covered under specialty tiers with copays of $0–$100 depending on your plan
Use GoodRx or SingleCare to compare cash prices across pharmacies if your insurance doesn't cover it; some pharmacies may have lower negotiated cash rates
Ask your pharmacist about the lowest available price for 'Rho(D) immune globulin mini-dose' or 'HyperRHO S/D Mini-Dose' — comparing all available brands may reveal a lower-cost option
Manufacturer Patient Assistance
Kedrion Biopharma does not have a widely publicized direct patient assistance program for MicRhoGAM. However, uninsured or underinsured patients may be eligible for assistance through:
NeedyMeds.org: Database of pharmaceutical assistance programs; search for Rho(D) immune globulin programs.
RxAssist.org: Patient assistance program locator that may identify available resources for biologics.
Hospital financial assistance programs: If you receive MicRhoGAM in a hospital setting, ask the billing department about charity care or financial hardship programs.
Bottom Line: What You Should Pay
If you have private insurance, Medicaid, or Medicare and receive MicRhoGAM in a clinical setting, your out-of-pocket cost should be $0–$50 in most cases. If you are uninsured, look into community health centers and sliding-scale resources before paying full cash price. If you're still struggling to find the medication, medfinder can help you locate pharmacies with stock near you — see our guide on how to find MicRhoGAM in stock.
Frequently Asked Questions
Cash prices for MicRhoGAM mini-dose typically range from $100 to $300+ per dose at retail pharmacies. However, most patients receive MicRhoGAM in a clinical setting where it is billed as a medical benefit through insurance, often at no or low cost to the patient.
Yes. MicRhoGAM is typically covered by private insurance, Medicaid, and Medicare when administered in a clinical setting, as it is a medically necessary preventive obstetric treatment. Most patients with insurance pay little to nothing out of pocket. Check with your insurer to confirm your specific coverage.
GoodRx and pharmacy discount cards apply to pharmacy-dispensed prescriptions, not to medications administered in a clinical or hospital setting. If MicRhoGAM is dispensed at a retail pharmacy for you to bring to your provider, GoodRx may help reduce the cost — but if it's given directly in a clinic or hospital, it's billed through your medical benefit instead.
Community health centers and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) provide obstetric services including RhIg on a sliding-scale fee basis. Hospital charity care programs may also help. Contact NeedyMeds.org or RxAssist.org for manufacturer and foundation assistance programs.
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