Sexual Health Published April 22, 2026 · 7 min read

How to Talk to Your Doctor About PrEP (Script Included)

Asking a doctor about PrEP can feel awkward — especially if you're worried about judgment, don't know what to say, or aren't sure your doctor even knows what PrEP is. Here's exactly how to bring it up, what to say, and what to do if your doctor pushes back.

TL;DR

You can use one sentence: "I'd like to start PrEP for HIV prevention." That's all you need to say. Your doctor should respond by ordering an HIV test, kidney function test, and STI screening. If they don't know what PrEP is, seem uncomfortable, or try to talk you out of it — that's on them, not you. You have other options: MISTR telehealth, LGBTQ+ health centers, and Planned Parenthood all prescribe PrEP without the awkwardness.

The script: what to say

You don't need a long explanation. Here are three approaches depending on your comfort level:

Direct approach (recommended)

"I'd like to start PrEP for HIV prevention. Can you prescribe it, or refer me to someone who can?"

This is clear, clinical, and doesn't require disclosing details about your sex life. Any competent provider should know how to proceed from here.

Information-seeking approach

"I've been reading about PrEP and I'm interested in starting it. What do I need to do?"

This frames it as research-driven, which some people find less intimidating.

If you're seeing a new provider

"I'm looking for a provider who prescribes PrEP. Is that something you do here?"

This lets you screen the provider before committing to an appointment.

What your doctor should do next

After you ask about PrEP, a knowledgeable provider should:

  1. Ask a few questions about your sexual health and risk factors (this is routine, not judgmental)
  2. Order baseline labs: HIV test (must be negative to start PrEP), kidney function (creatinine), and STI screening (gonorrhea, chlamydia, syphilis, hepatitis B)
  3. Discuss which PrEP option is best: daily pill (generic Truvada or Descovy) or injectable (Apretude or Yeztugo)
  4. Write the prescription
  5. Schedule a 3-month follow-up for monitoring

The whole conversation typically takes 10–15 minutes. It's a straightforward, preventive health decision — like asking for a flu shot or a cholesterol medication.

What if your doctor pushes back?

Unfortunately, not all providers are PrEP-knowledgeable, and some may have biases. Here's how to handle common pushback:

"You don't need that"

PrEP is appropriate for anyone who feels they could benefit from HIV protection. You don't need to justify your sex life. If a provider dismisses your request without discussing your risk factors, they're not doing their job. Response: "I've considered my risk factors and I'd like to start PrEP. Can you prescribe it?"

"Just use condoms"

PrEP and condoms are complementary, not competing strategies. CDC guidelines recommend PrEP for anyone at substantial risk. Response: "I understand condoms are important too. I'd like the additional protection that PrEP provides."

"I'm not comfortable prescribing it"

This is the doctor's limitation, not yours. Response: "Can you refer me to someone who does prescribe PrEP?" Or skip the referral and go directly to MISTR, a local LGBTQ+ health center, or Planned Parenthood.

"I don't know enough about PrEP"

This is actually a fair response. Not all primary care doctors are up to date on PrEP. You can suggest they review the CDC's PrEP clinical guidelines, or you can find a PrEP-experienced provider. The CDC's PrEP provider directory and your state's FreePrEP.org guide can help.

Skip the doctor entirely: alternatives that work

If talking to your regular doctor feels uncomfortable or unproductive, you have excellent alternatives:

Get free PrEP delivered anywhere in your door

MISTR operates across all of all 50 states — PrEP delivered to your your door address with no clinic visit required. Free consultation, free labs (at-home or local), and discreet home delivery.

Start free consultation →
ANDR735

Using this code at signup helps us achieve our mission of getting free PrEP out to all who need it. MISTR's $0 PrEP is funded through insurance reimbursement and 340B program partnerships — you pay nothing whether you have insurance or not.

LGBTQ+ health centers: Providers at centers like Equitas Health, Howard Brown, CrescentCare, Kind Clinic, and Fenway Health prescribe PrEP daily. It's routine for them — no awkwardness.

Planned Parenthood: Many locations prescribe PrEP. Staff are trained in nonjudgmental sexual health care.

Health department STD clinics: City and county health departments frequently offer PrEP or can refer you directly.

Questions your provider might ask (and why)

Don't be caught off guard — these are routine clinical questions, not judgment:

You can answer these honestly without disclosing anything you're not comfortable with. A simple "I have multiple partners and I want to be protected" is sufficient.

Find a PrEP-friendly provider in your state

Every state has providers who prescribe PrEP routinely. Find them:

Browse All 50 State Guides →

Not sure which your area option is right for you?

A free MISTR consultation can help you decide. If telehealth works, MISTR handles everything. If you need in-person care, they can direct you to the right your area provider.

Get started with MISTR →
ANDR735

Using this code at signup helps us achieve our mission of getting free PrEP out to all who need it.

Frequently asked questions

Do I have to tell my doctor about my sex life to get PrEP?

You need to answer basic clinical questions about risk factors, but you don't need to disclose details beyond what's medically relevant. "I have multiple partners and want HIV prevention" is sufficient.

Can my doctor refuse to prescribe PrEP?

A doctor can decline if they're not knowledgeable about PrEP, but they should refer you to someone who is. If they refuse based on moral judgment, that's a red flag — find a different provider or use MISTR.

What if I don't have a doctor?

You don't need one. MISTR provides PrEP entirely online. LGBTQ+ health centers, Planned Parenthood, and health department clinics also prescribe PrEP without requiring you to have an established primary care provider.

Is asking about PrEP awkward?

It can feel that way, but PrEP is a routine preventive medication — like statins or blood pressure meds. Millions of people take it. The more matter-of-fact you are, the smoother the conversation goes. And if it still feels awkward in person, MISTR removes the face-to-face entirely.

Related guides

Sources & last updated
Information sourced from state and county health departments, CDC, NASTAD, AIDSVu, and verified provider websites. Last updated April 22, 2026.

FreePrEP.org is an independent public health resource. We maintain editorial independence from our affiliate partners. Information on this page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider about PrEP.