Updated: February 15, 2026
How to Save Money on Rexulti in 2026: Coupons, Discounts, and Patient Assistance
Author
Peter Daggett

Summarize with AI
- What does Rexulti actually cost?
- Option 1: Rexulti Savings Card (for commercially insured patients)
- Option 2: Otsuka Patient Assistance Foundation (for uninsured/underinsured)
- Option 3: Medicare Part D coverage
- Option 4: GoodRx, SingleCare, and other discount cards
- Option 5: Mail order for a 90-day supply
- Option 6: Ask about a therapeutic alternative
- Summary: Savings options by insurance status
Rexulti can cost over $1,500/month without help. Here's every way to save money on Rexulti in 2026 — savings cards, patient assistance, Medicare options, and more.
Rexulti (brexpiprazole) is an effective medication for major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer's-related agitation — but it's expensive. The list price is approximately $1,515 per month, and the average retail cash price can exceed $1,800 to $2,000 per month depending on the pharmacy and dosage strength.
The good news: most patients are not paying that full price. Here's a complete breakdown of every option available to reduce your cost of Rexulti in 2026 — whether you have commercial insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, or no insurance at all.
What does Rexulti actually cost?
Before exploring savings options, it helps to understand the pricing landscape:
- Cash price (no insurance): $1,527–$2,061 per 30-day supply, depending on the pharmacy and strength
- Commercial insurance average: According to Otsuka, commercially insured patients pay an average of $31 per month for Rexulti
- Medicare average: Medicare patients pay an average of approximately $21 per month, per Otsuka data (varies by plan and coverage phase)
- Without savings programs: Even with a GoodRx or SingleCare coupon, cash price remains $1,400–$1,500+ per month — discount cards have limited impact on expensive brand-name medications
Option 1: Rexulti Savings Card (for commercially insured patients)
This is the most impactful savings tool for patients with commercial (employer-sponsored or marketplace) insurance. The Rexulti Savings Card, offered by manufacturer Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, can reduce your out-of-pocket cost to as little as $0 per month, with an annual maximum benefit of $8,180.
The savings card covers copays, co-insurance, and pharmacy deductibles. It works for both monthly and 90-day supplies. Register at rexulti.com/savings-cost.
Who qualifies: Patients with commercial insurance that covers Rexulti. You must not be enrolled in Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, or other government insurance programs.
Restriction note: Residents of Massachusetts and California are not eligible if a generic alternative becomes available.
Option 2: Otsuka Patient Assistance Foundation (for uninsured/underinsured)
The Otsuka Patient Assistance Foundation (OPAF) is a nonprofit organization that provides Rexulti at no cost to eligible patients who are uninsured or underinsured and cannot afford their medication. This program is significantly underutilized — many qualifying patients never learn about it.
To apply, contact Otsuka Patient Support at 1-833-468-7852 or visit otsukapatientsupport.com/rexulti. Your prescriber will need to complete part of the application.
Option 3: Medicare Part D coverage
Most Medicare Part D plans cover Rexulti, though it may be on a specialty tier requiring prior authorization. According to Otsuka, the average monthly out-of-pocket cost for Medicare patients is approximately $21 per month, depending on the plan and coverage phase.
In 2026, the Medicare Part D annual out-of-pocket cap of $2,100 provides important protection for patients on expensive medications like Rexulti. Once your total out-of-pocket drug costs reach $2,100 for the year, you pay nothing for the rest of the year.
For low-income Medicare patients, the Part D Extra Help (Low-Income Subsidy) program may provide additional assistance. Apply at ssa.gov or by calling Social Security at 1-800-772-1213.
Option 4: GoodRx, SingleCare, and other discount cards
Prescription discount cards like GoodRx and SingleCare can provide some savings on Rexulti, but their impact is limited on expensive brand-name drugs. With a SingleCare coupon, the price may come down to around $1,471 for 30 tablets. GoodRx shows similar prices. These are meaningful savings on paper, but still out of reach for most uninsured patients.
Where discount cards become much more useful: if and when generic brexpiprazole becomes commercially available, discount cards can reduce generic prices to a fraction of the brand cost. Keep an eye on Medfinder updates for when this changes.
Option 5: Mail order for a 90-day supply
Many insurance plans offer reduced copays for 90-day mail-order prescription supplies. If you have commercial insurance with Rexulti coverage, ask your insurance plan about their mail-order pharmacy (Express Scripts, CVS Caremark, OptumRx are common). You may pay a lower total for a 90-day supply than for three separate 30-day fills.
Option 6: Ask about a therapeutic alternative
If cost remains a barrier after exploring all of the above, it may be worth discussing with your prescriber whether a similar medication with better generic availability — like aripiprazole (Abilify generic) — might be appropriate. Generic aripiprazole costs as little as $5–$88 per month. See our guide to Rexulti alternatives for a full comparison. This is a medical decision and should always involve your healthcare provider.
Summary: Savings options by insurance status
- Commercial insurance: Rexulti Savings Card (as low as $0/month), 90-day mail order
- Medicare: Part D coverage (~$21/mo avg), 2026 $2,100 out-of-pocket cap, Part D Extra Help/LIS program
- Medicaid: Covered for nearly all enrollees after meeting step therapy requirements
- Uninsured: Otsuka Patient Assistance Foundation (no-cost medication for eligible patients), GoodRx/SingleCare coupons
Frequently Asked Questions
Without insurance, Rexulti can cost $1,527–$2,061 per month depending on the pharmacy and dose strength. Discount cards like GoodRx or SingleCare can reduce this somewhat (to around $1,400–$1,500), but the most impactful savings for uninsured patients come from the Otsuka Patient Assistance Foundation, which provides Rexulti at no cost to eligible applicants.
Register for the Rexulti Savings Card at rexulti.com/savings-cost. You must have commercial insurance (not Medicare, Medicaid, or other government programs) that covers Rexulti. Eligible patients may pay as little as $0 per month, with an annual maximum benefit of $8,180.
Yes. Most Medicare Part D plans cover Rexulti, and the 2026 annual out-of-pocket cap of $2,100 limits total drug costs for the year. The average monthly cost for Medicare patients is approximately $21, though this varies by plan. Low-income Medicare patients may qualify for the Part D Extra Help (LIS) program for additional savings. Note: the Rexulti manufacturer Savings Card cannot be used with Medicare.
Yes, the Otsuka Patient Assistance Foundation (OPAF) provides Rexulti at no charge to eligible patients who are uninsured or underinsured and meet financial criteria. Contact Otsuka Patient Support at 1-833-468-7852 or visit otsukapatientsupport.com/rexulti to apply. Your prescriber will need to participate in the application.
The FDA approved a generic brexpiprazole from Alembic in January 2025, but active patent protections are expected to prevent it from being commercially available until 2032–2033. Generic Rexulti is not available at pharmacies in 2026. The closest available generic alternative is aripiprazole, which costs $5–$88/month but requires a new prescription from your provider.
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