Estrogen

Divigel

estradiol gelDivigel is a prescription estrogen gel containing estradiol — the primary form of estrogen naturally produced by the ovaries. It comes in single-dose packets...

Findability Score: 77/100

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Divigel (Estradiol Gel): Complete Guide to Uses, Dosing, Availability, and How to Find It in Stock

What Is Divigel?

Divigel is a prescription estrogen gel containing estradiol — the primary form of estrogen naturally produced by the ovaries. It comes in single-dose packets that you apply directly to your skin, delivering estradiol transdermally (through the skin) into your bloodstream. Unlike oral estrogen tablets, Divigel bypasses the digestive system entirely, which changes how the hormone is processed by your body and is one reason many doctors and patients prefer the topical route.

The FDA approved Divigel in 2007 specifically to treat moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms associated with menopause — the hot flashes and night sweats that can significantly disrupt daily life and sleep for millions of women. It is not approved for use in preventing osteoporosis or cardiovascular disease, and it is not a contraceptive. Divigel is prescribed almost exclusively to women in the menopausal transition or postmenopause, typically between the ages of 45 and 65, though it may be used outside that range based on your doctor's clinical judgment. It is also used off-label in gender-affirming hormone therapy for transgender women, a prescribing context that has grown meaningfully over the past decade.

Divigel is a brand-name product manufactured by Upsher-Smith Laboratories. Generic estradiol gel in the 0.1% concentration — the same active ingredient and strength — has been available in the US market, though availability and formulary coverage vary significantly by insurance plan and region. Some patients find the brand name better covered by their specific plan; others pay less out of pocket for the generic. If you're having trouble finding Divigel, FindUrMeds can locate it at a pharmacy near you.


How Does Divigel Work?

Divigel works by replenishing estradiol — the estrogen your ovaries produce less of during and after menopause. When you apply the gel to your skin (typically the upper thigh), estradiol absorbs through the skin layers and enters your bloodstream directly, bypassing first-pass metabolism in the liver. This is meaningfully different from taking an oral estrogen pill, where the liver processes the hormone before it reaches circulation, altering the estrogen compounds and potentially affecting proteins like clotting factors. With Divigel, you get a steadier, more consistent estradiol level in the blood throughout the day. Most patients see measurable serum estradiol levels within 1–2 hours of application, with peak blood levels typically reached around 12–16 hours after a single dose. Once-daily dosing is designed to maintain stable levels across a 24-hour period.

Once estradiol enters the bloodstream, it binds to estrogen receptors throughout the body — in the hypothalamus, skin, bone, cardiovascular tissue, and more. In the context of vasomotor symptoms, the most important action is in the hypothalamus, the brain region that regulates body temperature. The decline in estrogen during menopause disrupts the hypothalamic thermostat, triggering hot flashes and night sweats. By restoring circulating estradiol to physiologically meaningful levels, Divigel essentially recalibrates that thermostat. Clinical trials used in Divigel's FDA approval showed statistically significant reductions in the frequency and severity of moderate-to-severe hot flashes compared to placebo at both 4 and 12 weeks of treatment — with many patients noticing meaningful improvement within 2–4 weeks of starting therapy.


Available Doses of Divigel

Divigel is available in a single concentration — 0.1% estradiol gel — but comes in three packet sizes that deliver different amounts of estradiol per dose:

  • 0.25 g packet — delivers 0.25 mg of estradiol per day
  • 0.5 g packet — delivers 0.5 mg of estradiol per day (most common starting dose)
  • 1.0 g packet — delivers 1.0 mg of estradiol per day

The 0.5 g packet is the standard starting point for most new patients. Your doctor may titrate you up to 1.0 g or down to 0.25 g depending on your symptom response and how your body tolerates the initial dose. All three strengths come as unit-dose foil packets — single-use, pre-measured, and designed to be applied once daily to a 5-by-7-inch area of skin on the upper thigh, alternating sides daily.

It's worth knowing that some insurance plans only cover one specific strength, which can create access friction if your doctor has prescribed a different packet size. That's a practical issue that comes up more often than patients expect.

Having trouble finding a specific dose? FindUrMeds searches all strengths simultaneously.


Divigel Findability Score

Divigel's Findability Score: 78 out of 100.

Our Findability Score runs on a scale of 1 to 100, where 1 represents a medication that is extremely difficult to locate in stock at retail pharmacies — think acute shortage drugs or tightly DEA-quota-controlled substances — and 100 represents a medication you can walk in and grab off the shelf at virtually any pharmacy in the country. A score of 78 means Divigel is generally available at a majority of retail locations but does require some verification, particularly at independent pharmacies and smaller chains. It is not on the FDA's official drug shortage list as of our most recent data review, and because estradiol is not a controlled substance under DEA scheduling, there are no federal quota restrictions limiting how much can be produced or dispensed. Both of those factors push the score upward.

That said, a score of 78 is not a score of 95. Divigel is a specialty hormonal product, not a high-volume chronic medication like metformin or lisinopril, which means not every pharmacy stocks every packet strength at all times. According to our data across 15,000+ pharmacy searches, topical estradiol products like Divigel are reliably stocked at roughly 65–72% of major chain pharmacy locations at any given time — but that number drops to approximately 40–50% at independent pharmacies, which tend to order hormonally specific products on a more demand-driven basis. Based on our platform's analysis of Divigel availability, the 1.0 g packet is the least consistently stocked strength, followed by the 0.25 g; the 0.5 g packet has the widest availability.

Practically speaking, what a Findability Score of 78 means for you is this: there's a solid chance your local CVS, Walgreens, or Walmart pharmacy has Divigel in stock — but there's also a meaningful chance they don't, and there's an even more meaningful chance that calling around to find out will take more time than it should. Patients seeking Divigel and other specialty hormonal medications contact an average of 4–7 pharmacies before locating their prescription in stock, compared to 1–2 for common generics. That's not a nightmare scenario, but it's not nothing either, especially when you're managing menopausal symptoms and just need your medication filled.

Our success rate for locating Divigel for patients using the FindUrMeds platform is 94%, slightly above our platform-wide average of 92%. Most requests are resolved within 24–48 hours. Skip the pharmacy calls. FindUrMeds finds Divigel for you.


Divigel Pricing

Pricing for Divigel varies more than you might expect — not just by insurance plan, but by pharmacy, region, and whether you're using a copay card, GoodRx discount, or paying cash.

With insurance: If Divigel is covered on your plan's formulary (typically Tier 3 or Tier 4 for brand-name hormonal products), expect a copay in the range of $30–$80 per month for the brand-name version. Generic estradiol gel, where available and covered, often runs $15–$40 with insurance. Some plans require prior authorization for brand-name Divigel, particularly if a generic equivalent is available.

Without insurance (cash price): Brand-name Divigel can be expensive at full retail. Expect to pay approximately $180–$280 per month for a 30-packet supply depending on the strength and the pharmacy. Prices are generally lower at Walmart, Costco, and Sam's Club compared to CVS and Walgreens for cash-pay customers.

With GoodRx: GoodRx discounts on estradiol gel (the generic form of Divigel 0.1%) typically bring prices to approximately $60–$130 per month at major chains. Specific pricing varies significantly by pharmacy — GoodRx prices at Costco and Walmart pharmacy tend to be lower than at CVS or Rite Aid. Always compare multiple pharmacy options on GoodRx before paying.

Manufacturer savings programs: Upsher-Smith has offered a Divigel savings card program for commercially insured patients, which in some cases can reduce the out-of-pocket cost to as low as $25 per month. Eligibility typically excludes patients using Medicare, Medicaid, or other government-funded insurance. Visit the official Divigel website or ask your doctor's office for the most current savings card information, as these programs change periodically.

Patient assistance: Patients who are uninsured or underinsured and meet income criteria may qualify for manufacturer patient assistance programs or through organizations like NeedyMeds or the Partnership for Prescription Assistance. Ask your prescriber's office or pharmacist to help you apply.


Who Can Prescribe Divigel?

Divigel is a prescription medication, meaning you need an authorized prescriber to write or send the script to your pharmacy. The good news: a wide range of providers can prescribe it.

  • OB/GYN (Obstetrician-Gynecologist): The most common prescriber for Divigel. OB/GYNs specialize in women's reproductive and hormonal health and are very familiar with menopausal hormone therapy protocols. If you're already seeing an OB/GYN, this is your most direct path.

  • Primary Care Physician (PCP) / Internal Medicine: Family medicine doctors and internists routinely prescribe hormone therapy for menopausal symptom management. Many PCPs are comfortable initiating and managing Divigel.

  • Menopause Specialists: Physicians and advanced practice providers certified through the Menopause Society (formerly NAMS) offer specialized expertise in hormone therapy. Useful if your symptoms are complex or you've had difficulty getting optimal dosing from other providers.

  • Endocrinologists: Endocrinologists who focus on reproductive or metabolic hormones may prescribe Divigel, particularly in cases involving complex hormonal profiles or comorbid endocrine conditions.

  • Nurse Practitioners (NPs) and Physician Assistants (PAs): In all 50 US states, NPs and PAs can prescribe Divigel under their prescribing authority. Many women's health NPs and PA-Cs in gynecology or primary care are experienced in HRT prescribing.

  • Telehealth providers: This is increasingly where new Divigel prescriptions are being initiated. Telehealth platforms specializing in women's health and menopause — such as Midi Health, Evernow, Alloy, and others — can prescribe Divigel in most US states following a video or asynchronous consultation. Standard telehealth prescribing rules apply: a valid patient-provider relationship must be established, and prescribers must be licensed in the state where the patient is located. Because estradiol is not a controlled substance, there are no DEA telemedicine prescribing restrictions to navigate.

Once you have your prescription, the harder problem is finding a pharmacy that has it in stock. That's where FindUrMeds comes in.


Divigel Side Effects

Like all estrogen-containing medications, Divigel carries a side effect profile that your doctor will have weighed against the benefits of treatment before prescribing. Most patients tolerate it well, particularly at the starting dose.

Most Common Side Effects

These are the side effects most frequently reported by patients using Divigel in clinical trials and postmarket experience:

  • Application site reactions — Mild redness, itching, or irritation at the site where you apply the gel. Usually minor and often resolves as your skin adjusts. Rotating application sites helps.
  • Breast tenderness or swelling — Common when starting HRT and often improves after the first 1–3 months. If severe or persistent, let your doctor know.
  • Headaches — Reported by some patients, particularly in the first few weeks. Often related to fluctuating estrogen levels as your body adjusts to consistent supplementation.
  • Nausea — Less common with topical estradiol than oral forms, but still reported occasionally. Usually mild.
  • Vaginal discharge — A change in vaginal secretions is common with estrogen therapy. Report any unusual odor, color, or irritation to your provider.
  • Fluid retention / bloating — Some patients notice mild bloating or ankle swelling, particularly early in treatment.
  • Mood changes — Both positive (improved mood, reduced irritability) and occasionally negative changes (mood swings, anxiety) are reported. Often stabilizes after initial adjustment period.
  • Spotting or breakthrough bleeding — More relevant for women who still have a uterus and are using Divigel without a progestogen. Discuss this with your doctor if it occurs.

Less Common but Serious Side Effects

These are less common but warrant prompt attention:

  • Blood clots (DVT or pulmonary embolism): Contact your provider or seek emergency care if you experience leg pain, leg swelling, sudden shortness of breath, or chest pain. Transdermal estrogen carries a lower clot risk than oral estrogen, but risk is not zero.
  • Stroke: Seek emergency care immediately for sudden facial drooping, arm weakness, or speech difficulty. Call 911.
  • Cardiovascular events: Discuss your personal cardiovascular risk with your doctor before starting Divigel, particularly if you are more than 10 years past menopause onset.
  • Breast changes: Report any new lumps, nipple discharge, or breast skin changes to your doctor promptly. Divigel is generally not recommended for women with a history of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer.
  • Abnormal uterine bleeding: Unexpected heavy or irregular bleeding in women with a uterus should be evaluated. Unopposed estrogen (estrogen without progesterone) increases endometrial cancer risk in women who have not had a hysterectomy.
  • Signs of liver problems: Jaundice (yellowing of skin or eyes), severe upper abdominal pain, or dark urine. Rare with transdermal estradiol but worth knowing.
  • High blood pressure: Estrogen can affect blood pressure in some patients. Monitor if you have a history of hypertension.

Side Effects That Typically Improve Over Time

Many of the most common side effects of Divigel — breast tenderness, mild headaches, bloating, and minor mood fluctuations — tend to be most noticeable in the first 4–8 weeks of therapy as your body adjusts to consistent estradiol levels. For most patients, these symptoms ease significantly after the initial adjustment period. If a side effect is significantly affecting your quality of life after 6–8 weeks, that's worth a conversation with your doctor about dose adjustment or switching formulations rather than automatically discontinuing therapy.

This information is for educational purposes only. Always consult your doctor or pharmacist about side effects specific to your health history and current medications.


Alternatives to Divigel

If Divigel isn't available at your pharmacy, isn't covered by your insurance, or simply isn't the right fit for you, there are meaningful alternatives worth discussing with your doctor.

Same-Class Alternatives

These are all estradiol-based products — same hormone, different formulation:

  • EstroGel (estradiol gel 0.06%) — A pump-based topical estradiol gel in a lower concentration; one pump delivers 0.75 mg of estradiol. Many patients find the pump format more convenient than individual packets, and it tends to have slightly wider availability at chain pharmacies.
  • Elestrin (estradiol gel 0.06%) — Another pump-based topical estradiol gel, similar to EstroGel in concentration and delivery format.
  • Estradiol patches (Climara, Vivelle-Dot, Minivelle, generics) — Transdermal patches changed once or twice weekly instead of daily gel application. Patches are widely available, often more affordable with insurance, and beloved by patients who prefer a set-it-and-forget-it routine.
  • Estradiol spray (Evamist) — A metered-dose topical spray applied to the forearm. One pump delivers 1.53 mg of estradiol. Good option for patients who find gels messy.
  • Oral estradiol tablets (Estrace, generics) — Widely available and typically the least expensive option. Does undergo first-pass liver metabolism, which is a clinical consideration some providers weigh.
  • Estradiol vaginal ring (Femring) — Systemic estrogen delivered via a vaginal ring changed every 90 days. Excellent adherence profile.

Different-Mechanism Alternatives

For patients who need or prefer a non-estrogen approach to menopausal vasomotor symptoms:

  • Fezolinetant (Veozah) — A non-hormonal neurokinin 3 receptor antagonist approved by the FDA in 2023 specifically for vasomotor symptoms. A meaningful option for women who cannot or choose not to use estrogen.
  • Paroxetine (Brisdelle) — The only FDA-approved non-hormonal medication for hot flashes prior to Veozah. An SSRI at a low dose. Also used off-label in this indication in its generic form.
  • Venlafaxine, gabapentin, clonidine — Commonly used off-label for hot flash reduction, with varying evidence and side effect profiles. Discuss with your doctor.

If you'd prefer to stick with Divigel, FindUrMeds has a high success rate finding it in stock.


Drug Interactions with Divigel

Because Divigel delivers estradiol transdermally, it generally has a lower interaction burden than oral estrogen — particularly with liver-metabolized drugs — but interactions still exist and are worth knowing.

Serious Interactions

  • Strong CYP3A4 inducers (rifampin, carbamazepine, phenytoin, St. John's Wort): These medications significantly accelerate the liver's breakdown of estradiol, potentially reducing Divigel's effectiveness to the point where hot flash control is inadequate. If you're taking any of these, your doctor may need to adjust your dose or choose a different strategy.
  • Thyroid medications (levothyroxine): Estrogen can increase thyroid-binding globulin levels, which may affect the amount of free thyroid hormone in your blood. Women on thyroid replacement therapy starting Divigel may need their TSH rechecked and their levothyroxine dose adjusted.
  • Anticoagulants (warfarin): Estrogen can affect clotting factors and alter the response to warfarin. INR monitoring is important when starting, stopping, or changing estrogen therapy in patients on warfarin.

Moderate Interactions

  • Moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors (erythromycin, clarithromycin, ketoconazole, certain HIV protease inhibitors): May increase estradiol levels, potentially enhancing effects and side effects. Your provider should be aware of any antifungals or macrolide antibiotics you're taking.
  • Corticosteroids: Estrogen may increase the concentration of corticosteroids in the blood, potentially amplifying their effects. Relevant if you take prednisone or similar medications regularly.
  • Insulin and oral hypoglycemics: Estrogen can affect glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity. Women with diabetes starting HRT should monitor blood sugar more closely during the adjustment period.
  • Cyclosporine: Estrogen may increase cyclosporine concentrations, raising the risk of cyclosporine toxicity. Important for transplant patients.

Food and Substance Interactions

  • Alcohol: Moderate to heavy alcohol consumption can significantly increase circulating estradiol levels — sometimes substantially — which may heighten side effects and risks. There is also evidence that alcohol use combined with estrogen therapy is associated with elevated breast cancer risk. Moderation is strongly advisable.
  • Grapefruit and grapefruit juice: Grapefruit inhibits CYP3A4 enzymes in the gut wall, which can modestly increase estradiol absorption. The effect with transdermal estradiol is smaller than with oral forms, but limiting regular grapefruit consumption is a reasonable precaution.
  • Smoking (cigarettes): Smoking is a significant cardiovascular risk factor that compounds the already modest cardiovascular risks associated with estrogen therapy. Smoking also accelerates estrogen metabolism. Your doctor will likely discuss smoking cessation as part of your HRT conversation.
  • Soy and phytoestrogens: High intake of soy isoflavones and other phytoestrogens can have weak estrogenic activity in the body. The interaction with prescription estradiol is not fully characterized at typical dietary intake levels, but worth discussing if you consume large amounts of soy-based foods or phytoestrogen supplements.

How to Find Divigel in Stock

This is where the rubber meets the road. You have your prescription. Now you need to find a pharmacy that actually has Divigel — in your dose, in the quantity prescribed, today. Here's exactly how to do it.

1. Use FindUrMeds — The Fastest Option

FindUrMeds was built specifically to solve this problem. Here's how it works:

  • Submit your medication details online. Tell us the drug name (Divigel), the dose (0.25 g, 0.5 g, or 1.0 g), and your zip code. It takes about 90 seconds.
  • We contact pharmacies for you. Our team reaches out to pharmacies across our network of 15,000+ locations — including CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Walmart, Kroger, Publix, Costco, and Sam's Club — to confirm in-stock availability in real time. You don't make a single call.
  • You get confirmation within 24–48 hours. When we find a pharmacy with your Divigel in stock, we notify you with the pharmacy name, address, and phone number so you can send your prescription directly there and pick up without surprises.

Patients using FindUrMeds report saving an average of 3–4 hours compared to calling pharmacies independently. Our success rate for Divigel specifically is 94%.

Find Divigel Near You →


2. Check GoodRx — The Price-Listing Signals Stock Trick

Here's a practical hack that many patients don't know: when a pharmacy is listed on GoodRx with a price for a medication, that generally signals the pharmacy carries it. Pharmacies that don't stock a medication typically don't populate pricing data in GoodRx's system. It's not a guarantee, but it's a useful signal.

Go to GoodRx.com, type in "estradiol gel 0.1%" (the generic name for Divigel), enter your zip code, and look at which pharmacies show active pricing. The ones with specific prices listed are more likely to have stock. Sort by distance, then call the top 2–3 to confirm. This approach reduces your call volume from random dialing to targeted confirmation calls.


3. Check Pharmacy Apps — CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart

The major chain pharmacy apps and websites have improved significantly in showing real-time inventory, though they're not perfect. Here's how to use them effectively:

  • CVS app/website: Use the prescription transfer tool or "check drug price at my store" feature. Type in estradiol gel and your store's zip code. If the price populates for your specific location, it usually means the store carries it — but call to confirm quantity.
  • Walgreens app: The medication search feature under "pharmacy" can show pricing by location. Look for the "estimated price" feature under the specific store, not just the generic national price.
  • Walmart pharmacy: Walmart's pharmacy page lets you search drug pricing by store. Walmart and Sam's Club tend to have strong pricing on generics and often carry estradiol gel consistently given their high-volume pharmacy model. Worth checking first if cash price matters.

One important tip: always call to confirm before driving across town. App inventory data can lag real-world stock by 24–48 hours, and pharmacy inventory is dynamic.


4. Call Using the Generic Name — Here's the Exact Script

When you call a pharmacy to check availability, use the generic name, not the brand name. Pharmacy technicians search by generic name in their dispensing systems, and some may not immediately recognize "Divigel" while instantly knowing "estradiol gel."

Here is a phone script you can use verbatim:

"Hi, I'm a patient looking to fill a prescription. I'm calling to check if you have estradiol gel, 0.1% in stock — specifically the [0.25 g / 0.5 g / 1.0 g] packets — for a 30-day supply. Do you currently have that in stock?"

If they say yes, follow up with:

"Great — can you confirm the quantity you have available? I just want to make sure you have enough to fill my full prescription before I transfer it over."

This prevents the frustrating scenario where a pharmacy says "yes we have it" but only has 10 packets in stock when you need 30.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Divigel still in shortage?

As of our most recent data review, Divigel is not on the FDA's official Drug Shortage Database, and it does not appear on ASHP Drug Shortage Database records as an active shortage product. That said, "not in shortage" doesn't mean "universally in stock." Divigel is a specialty hormonal product with more variable retail availability than everyday generic medications. Based on ASHP Drug Shortage Database records and our platform's internal availability data, the most common access friction with Divigel isn't a formal supply shortage — it's that many pharmacies don't maintain standing inventory of all three packet sizes, leading to sporadic localized stockouts. If you're having trouble finding it at your usual pharmacy, the problem is likely local stock management, not a nationwide supply crisis.

How much does Divigel cost without insurance?

Without insurance, brand-name Divigel typically costs between $180 and $280 per month at retail prices depending on the strength and pharmacy. Generic estradiol gel 0.1% — the bioequivalent alternative — is meaningfully less expensive, often running $60–$130 per month with a GoodRx coupon at major chains. Walmart and Costco pharmacies tend to offer the most competitive cash prices on estradiol products. If you're uninsured or your plan doesn't cover Divigel, check the Upsher-Smith savings card program (for commercially insured patients) and GoodRx or RxSaver for the best available discount at pharmacies near you. Some patients find that switching to an estradiol patch generic, which is very widely available and inexpensive, delivers equivalent clinical results at a fraction of the cost — worth a conversation with your doctor.

Can I get Divigel through mail order?

Yes. Divigel can be dispensed via mail-order pharmacy, and for many patients — especially those managing long-term hormone therapy — mail order is the most convenient and cost-effective option. Most major insurance plans with pharmacy benefits include a mail-order option (CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, OptumRx, and others) that typically allows 90-day supplies at a reduced copay. Because Divigel is not a controlled substance, there are no special restrictions on mail-order dispensing. Telehealth platforms that prescribe Divigel often have affiliated mail-order pharmacies that can ship directly to your home, sometimes with same-day or next-day shipping depending on your location. If your insurance plan's mail-order formulary doesn't cover Divigel specifically, ask your doctor about prescribing generic estradiol gel 0.1% instead — functionally identical, often better covered.

What's the difference between Divigel and EstroGel?

Both Divigel and EstroGel are topical estradiol gels applied to the skin once daily, and both are FDA-approved for the same indication — moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms of menopause. The key differences come down to concentration, dose format, and dose flexibility.

Divigel is a 0.1% gel dispensed in individual pre-measured foil packets (0.25 g, 0.5 g, or 1.0 g), which makes exact dosing simple and portable. EstroGel is a 0.06% gel dispensed from a multi-dose pump, with each pump delivering 0.75 mg of estradiol. Some patients prefer the pump format for its convenience and less daily waste; others prefer the disposable packets for hygiene and precision. From a clinical standpoint, both deliver estradiol transdermally at comparable therapeutic levels, and your doctor can titrate either to your needs. The choice often comes down to personal preference, insurance coverage, and — practically — which one is in stock at your pharmacy.

What if my pharmacy is out of Divigel?

First, don't panic — this is common and solvable. Here are your best next steps:

  1. Ask your pharmacist to check sister locations. Chain pharmacies like CVS and Walgreens can transfer prescriptions between stores. A location 2–3 miles away may have stock when your usual store doesn't.
  2. Ask about a partial fill. If your pharmacy has some but not all of your prescribed supply, most will partial-fill and order the remainder, usually arriving within 1–2 business days.
  3. Ask your doctor for an alternative. If Divigel is out of stock regionally, your prescriber can often switch you to an equivalent estradiol gel (like EstroGel) or an estradiol patch without requiring a full new evaluation. A quick message through your patient portal is usually sufficient.
  4. Use FindUrMeds. Our platform's analysis of Divigel availability consistently finds in-stock locations that patients can't find on their own — our 94% success rate on Divigel requests reflects how often we locate it when individual pharmacy calls come up empty. Submit your search at findurmeds.com and we'll handle the calling for you.

Need help finding Divigel in stock? FindUrMeds contacts pharmacies for you and finds your prescription nearby — usually within 24–48 hours. No more calling around.

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FindUrMeds is committed to providing accurate, evidence-based medication information to help patients in the United States manage their prescriptions. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your doctor or pharmacist before making any changes to your medication regimen.

About FindUrMeds: We contact pharmacies on your behalf and find your prescription in stock nearby, usually within 24–48 hours across 15,000+ US pharmacies. Learn how it works →

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