The federal Ready, Set, PrEP program ended July 2025. Many websites still list it as active. See what replaced it →

How to Get PrEP for Free in 2026

Every pathway to $0 PrEP — insurance, manufacturer programs, state assistance, telehealth, and the new injectables. The landscape changed dramatically in 2025. Here's what actually works right now.

PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) prevents HIV with up to 99% effectiveness. For most Americans, it can be obtained at absolutely zero cost — but navigating the system has gotten harder since mid-2025.

The federal Ready, Set, PrEP program ended in July 2025. Gilead discontinued its free Truvada patient assistance program in January 2025. And the July 2025 budget legislation imposed significant Medicaid restrictions. Meanwhile, a revolutionary twice-yearly injectable (Yeztugo) was approved in June 2025.

The result: a fractured landscape where dozens of websites still reference defunct programs while new options go unadvertised. This guide covers every current pathway to free PrEP, updated monthly.

Short on time? Use our free eligibility tool — answer 4 questions and get personalized results in under 60 seconds.

If You Have Private Insurance

This is the simplest path. Under the Affordable Care Act, most private insurance plans must cover PrEP at $0 cost-sharing — that means no copay, no coinsurance, and no deductible for the medication, lab work, and clinical visits.

This coverage comes from the USPSTF Grade A recommendation for PrEP (first issued in 2019, updated in 2023). It applies to employer-sponsored plans, ACA marketplace plans, and most individual plans. The only exceptions are grandfathered plans and some religious employer exemptions.

Legal threat: The Braidwood Management v. Becerra case in Texas federal court is challenging the ACA preventive services mandate. As of March 2026, the requirement remains in effect, but its future is uncertain. We're tracking this →

What to do

If you have private insurance, you have two main approaches:

Option A: Go through your regular doctor. Ask your primary care provider or an HIV specialist for a PrEP prescription. They'll order the required lab work (kidney function, HIV test, STI screening). Your insurance should cover everything at $0. If your pharmacy charges a copay, the Gilead Copay Savings Program (below) can cover it.

Option B: Use a telehealth platform. Services like MISTR handle everything — the consultation, lab orders (at-home kits shipped to you), the prescription, and insurance billing. You never deal with claims or paperwork. For many people, this is the easiest path.

Gilead Copay Savings Program

If your insurance charges any out-of-pocket cost for Descovy or Yeztugo, this program covers up to $7,200/year for oral PrEP or $8,000/year for Yeztugo (plus $100/visit for injection administration). No income restriction. Cannot be combined with government insurance (Medicaid, Medicare, TRICARE).

Up to $7,200–$8,000/year No income limit
Get the copay card

Patient Advocate Foundation — Copay Relief

Up to $7,500/year in copay assistance for commercially insured patients with household income under 400% FPL (~$63,800/year for a single person). This can cover any remaining out-of-pocket costs after insurance. Call 1-866-512-3861.

Up to $7,500/year Income ≤ 400% FPL
Apply at PAF

If You Have No Insurance

Losing Ready, Set, PrEP and Gilead's free Truvada program in 2025 hit uninsured individuals the hardest. But free PrEP is still available through several pathways — you just need to know where to look.

Path 1: Telehealth platforms (fastest, easiest)

Platforms like MISTR provide completely free PrEP to uninsured patients through partnerships with 340B-eligible healthcare organizations. The 340B program allows these organizations to purchase medications at steep discounts and cross-subsidize uninsured care with revenue from insured patients. The result: $0 PrEP for you, including medication, labs, and consultations.

Path 2: Gilead Advancing Access (Medication Assistance Program)

Gilead's MAP provides free brand-name Descovy or Yeztugo to uninsured patients with income at or below 500% FPL (~$79,800/year for a single person). Key details:

Important: Gilead discontinued free generic Truvada (TDF/FTC) through Advancing Access on January 31, 2025. The MAP now covers only brand-name Descovy and Yeztugo. If you need generic PrEP specifically, your options are state PrEP DAPs (if your state has one) or 340B-based telehealth platforms.

Gilead Advancing Access — Medication Assistance Program

Free Descovy or Yeztugo for uninsured patients under 500% FPL. No SSN required. Overnight delivery available.

Free medication No SSN required Income ≤ 500% FPL
Apply at Advancing Access

Path 3: Federally Qualified Health Centers

Nearly 1,400 FQHCs at approximately 15,000 sites nationwide offer sliding-fee services based on income. They can prescribe PrEP, perform lab work, and connect you to assistance programs — even if you're uninsured or undocumented. Fees are based on your ability to pay, and no one is turned away.

Find a Health Center Near You

HRSA's Health Center Finder locates FQHCs and community health centers by zip code. Many offer PrEP services, STI testing, and primary care on a sliding-fee scale.

Find an FQHC

Path 4: Get insured

If you're currently uninsured, getting an ACA marketplace plan would unlock $0 PrEP coverage under the preventive services mandate. Many people qualify for subsidies that significantly reduce monthly premiums — in some cases to $0. Open enrollment runs November through mid-January each year, but qualifying life events (job loss, moving, marriage) can trigger a Special Enrollment Period.

If You Have Medicaid

Medicaid covers PrEP in all states, including medication, lab work, and clinical visits. Coverage details and any cost-sharing requirements vary by state. Some states require prior authorization for brand-name PrEP (Descovy) or injectable options (Apretude, Yeztugo) when cheaper generic alternatives exist.

The July 2025 budget legislation imposed new work requirements and tighter immigrant eligibility rules for Medicaid that may affect coverage in some states. If you're concerned about your Medicaid eligibility, contact your state Medicaid office or visit Medicaid.gov.

Telehealth platforms like MISTR accept Medicaid in most states and can handle billing so you pay nothing out of pocket.

If You Have Medicare

Medicare Part D covers PrEP medications, though copay amounts vary by plan. The challenge: manufacturer copay cards (Gilead, ViiV) cannot be used with government insurance, including Medicare. This leaves Medicare beneficiaries relying on nonprofit copay funds, which frequently open and close based on funding.

Good Days Foundation

Offers up to $7,500/year primarily for Medicare and military beneficiaries with income under 500% FPL. SSN is required. Fund availability fluctuates — check their website for current status.

Up to $7,500/year Medicare eligible Fund may be closed — check status
Check fund status

The Patient Advocate Foundation and PAN Foundation also operate copay funds for PrEP, but these are primarily for commercially insured patients. PAF and PAN announced a merger in March 2026 with a unified "TotalAssist" program launching July 1, 2026 — we'll update this guide when details are available.

Injectable PrEP Options

Two injectable PrEP medications are now FDA-approved, offering alternatives to the daily pill:

Yeztugo (lenacapavir) — Every 6 Months

Approved June 2025 by Gilead Sciences. A subcutaneous injection every 6 months after initial oral loading doses. The PURPOSE trials showed extraordinary efficacy — up to 100% risk reduction in cisgender women and 96% in the broader population. List price: ~$28,218/year.

Twice yearly Up to 100% effective in trials

Cost assistance: Gilead Advancing Access covers Yeztugo — free via MAP for uninsured patients under 500% FPL, or up to $8,000/year copay assistance plus $100/visit for commercially insured patients.

Apply for Yeztugo assistance

Apretude (cabotegravir) — Every 2 Months

Approved December 2021 by ViiV Healthcare. An intramuscular injection every 2 months after an initial loading phase. List price: ~$24,000/year (~$4,038 per injection). Covered under most commercial, Medicaid, and Medicare plans as a medical benefit, though prior authorization is common.

Every 2 months No daily pill

Cost assistance: ViiVConnect provides free Apretude to uninsured patients under 500% FPL, plus a $0 copay savings card for commercially insured patients.

Apply at ViiVConnect

For a detailed comparison of injectable vs. oral PrEP — including side effects, efficacy data, and who each option is best for — see our complete injectable PrEP guide.

State PrEP Assistance Programs

Only 12 states (plus DC) operate dedicated PrEP Drug Assistance Programs. If you live in one of these states, you may have an additional pathway to free PrEP beyond the national programs listed above.

The remaining 38+ states have no dedicated PrEP assistance infrastructure — a gap that's particularly damaging in the South, which bears the highest HIV burden but has the fewest state programs.

State Covers Income Limit Notes
CaliforniaMeds + labs + visits + STI treatment500% FPLCovers generic TDF directly for uninsured
ColoradoMeds + labs + visits500% FPLInsured must apply for Gilead copay first
DCMeds + labs + visitsNot publishedDC Health Pharmacy Benefits Program
IllinoisMeds + labs + visitsNot publishedPart of state ADAP infrastructure
IndianaMeds + labs + visitsNot publishedComprehensive HIV health insurance at no cost
IowaMeds + labs + visitsNot publishedTelePrEP navigation via University of Iowa
MassachusettsMedication costs500% FPLAdministered by Community Research Initiative
New MexicoMeds + clinical servicesNot published
New YorkClinical servicesNeed-basedMedication via manufacturer PAPs
OklahomaMeds + labs + visitsNot published
VirginiaMeds + labs + visitsNot published
WashingtonGeneric PrEP + labs + visitsIncome-basedContracted providers/labs required

For detailed information about your state's specific programs, eligibility, and how to apply, see our state-by-state PrEP directory.

Telehealth PrEP Providers Compared

Telehealth has become one of the most popular ways to access PrEP — an estimated 20% of all US PrEP users (~110,000 people) received PrEP via telehealth in 2024, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open. Here's how the major platforms compare:

Platform Cost States At-Home Labs Injectable PrEP
MISTR $0 (insured & uninsured) 50 + DC + PR Yes Enrolling for Yeztugo
Q Care Plus $0 (99% of insured) Select states Yes Not yet
Freddie $0 for most 50 states Yes Coming soon
Nurx $15–$30 consult + lab fees ~36 states Yes No
PlushCare $99–$129 consult + membership Most states No No

For a detailed breakdown of each platform, see our full telehealth comparison.

Not sure which option is right for you?

Our eligibility tool cross-references your insurance, state, income, and preferences to show you exactly which programs you qualify for.

Find My Free PrEP Path

All Programs at a Glance

Program Who It's For What It Covers Status
ACA Preventive Coverage Privately insured Medication + labs + visits at $0 Active
Gilead MAP Uninsured, ≤500% FPL Free Descovy or Yeztugo Active
Gilead Copay Savings Commercially insured Up to $7,200–$8,000/year Active
ViiVConnect PAP Uninsured, ≤500% FPL Free Apretude Active
ViiV Copay Savings Commercially insured $0 copay for Apretude Active
Patient Advocate Foundation Insured, ≤400% FPL Up to $7,500/year copay Active
Good Days Foundation Medicare/military, ≤500% FPL Up to $7,500/year copay Check status
State PrEP DAPs Varies (12 states) Varies by state Active
Ready, Set, PrEP Ended July 2025
Gilead Truvada PAP Ended Jan 2025

Frequently Asked Questions

Is PrEP really free?

For most Americans, yes. If you have private insurance, the ACA requires $0 cost-sharing for PrEP. If you're uninsured and earn under ~$79,800/year, manufacturer programs provide free brand-name medication, and telehealth platforms like MISTR cover labs and visits at no cost.

Can I get PrEP without seeing a doctor in person?

Yes. Telehealth platforms provide the full PrEP experience remotely — video consultation, at-home lab kits, prescription, and medication delivery. You never need to visit a clinic unless you prefer to or need injectable PrEP administered.

Can undocumented immigrants get PrEP?

Yes. Gilead's Medication Assistance Program does not require a Social Security Number and explicitly serves undocumented residents. FQHCs serve patients regardless of immigration status. Telehealth platforms like MISTR also serve undocumented individuals.

What happened to Ready, Set, PrEP?

The federal Ready, Set, PrEP program stopped accepting new enrollments on July 30, 2024 and fully ended on July 18, 2025. No replacement federal program has been established. Read our full explainer on what replaced it.

Can I get generic PrEP for free?

This is currently the biggest gap. With Gilead's Truvada PAP gone, there is no manufacturer program for free generic TDF/FTC. Your options are: the 12 state PrEP DAPs (some cover generics), 340B-based telehealth platforms, or FQHCs with sliding-fee scales. Alternatively, Gilead's MAP provides free brand-name Descovy, which works just as well.

Does PrEP have side effects?

Most people tolerate PrEP well. Common early side effects include mild nausea, headache, and fatigue — these typically resolve within the first few weeks. Long-term, TDF-based PrEP (Truvada/generic) carries a small risk of kidney and bone density effects, which is why quarterly lab monitoring is part of PrEP care. Descovy (TAF-based) has a better kidney and bone safety profile. Read our side effects guide for detailed information.

Information sourced from HIV.gov, CDC, Gilead Advancing Access, ViiV Healthcare, NASTAD, and state health departments. FreePrEP.org is an independent resource — we are not affiliated with any government agency or pharmaceutical company. Full disclosure