ARNIShortage Drug

Entresto

sacubitril/valsartanEntresto is a prescription heart failure medication made by Novartis that combines two active ingredients: sacubitril and valsartan. It belongs to a drug cla...

Findability Score: 28/100

28
Difficult
~22 pharmacy calls needed

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Entresto (Sacubitril/Valsartan): Complete Guide to Uses, Dosing, Availability, and Where to Find It in Stock

What Is Entresto?

Entresto is a prescription heart failure medication made by Novartis that combines two active ingredients: sacubitril and valsartan. It belongs to a drug class called angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitors, or ARNIs — a relatively new category that works through a dual mechanism to reduce the strain on a failing heart. Because of how it works, Entresto does something older heart failure medications can't quite replicate, which is why it's become a cornerstone of modern heart failure management for many patients.

The FDA approved Entresto in July 2015 for the treatment of chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) — meaning the heart isn't pumping as effectively as it should. In 2021, the FDA expanded that approval to include patients with heart failure across a broader range of ejection fractions, making it relevant to an even larger patient population. It's most commonly prescribed to adults who have New York Heart Association (NYHA) class II, III, or IV heart failure, typically to reduce the risk of cardiovascular death and heart failure hospitalizations. Cardiologists, heart failure specialists, and primary care physicians managing cardiac patients are the most frequent prescribers.

As of now, Entresto remains a brand-name-only medication in the United States. Novartis held patent exclusivity for years, and while generic versions (sacubitril/valsartan) have been in legal and regulatory development, broad commercial availability of generics has been limited and availability can vary significantly by region. For most patients, Entresto is what's on the prescription — and because it's still largely brand-name, finding it in stock and affording it can both be real challenges. If you're having trouble finding Entresto, FindUrMeds can locate it at a pharmacy near you.


How Does Entresto Work?

Entresto works by attacking heart failure from two angles simultaneously. The valsartan component blocks angiotensin II receptors, which relaxes blood vessels and reduces the hormonal signals that tell your heart to work harder than it needs to. This is the same general mechanism as the ACE inhibitor and ARB drug classes you may have heard of — it relieves pressure on the heart and helps lower blood pressure. The sacubitril component is where Entresto gets its edge: it inhibits an enzyme called neprilysin, which normally breaks down beneficial natriuretic peptides in your body. By blocking that breakdown, Entresto allows those peptides to accumulate, which promotes vasodilation, helps your kidneys excrete excess sodium and water, and counteracts the harmful neurohormonal overdrive that accelerates heart failure progression. In plain terms: sacubitril helps your body's own protective signals last longer, and valsartan takes away the signals that were making things worse.

Entresto is taken orally as a tablet, twice daily, and reaches peak plasma concentration in approximately 2–4 hours after ingestion. The sacubitril component is actually a prodrug — after you swallow it, your body converts it into its active form, LBQ657, within about 30 minutes of absorption. Steady-state blood levels, meaning the point at which the drug reaches a stable, therapeutic concentration in your system, are achieved in about 3 days of twice-daily dosing. The clinical benefits — reduced hospitalizations, improved symptoms, lower risk of cardiac death — were demonstrated over long-term use in the landmark PARADIGM-HF trial, which enrolled over 8,400 patients and showed a 20% relative risk reduction in cardiovascular death compared to enalapril. Entresto isn't a drug you feel working on day one, but the data on what it does over months and years is among the strongest in heart failure medicine.


Available Doses of Entresto

Entresto comes in three FDA-approved tablet strengths, each representing a fixed-dose combination of sacubitril and valsartan:

  • Entresto 24 mg/26 mg — This is the standard starting dose for most patients, particularly those transitioning from an ACE inhibitor or ARB, or those with kidney impairment, low blood pressure, or who are considered vulnerable to side effects at initiation
  • Entresto 49 mg/51 mg — The intermediate dose, typically used after 2–4 weeks if the starting dose is tolerated, as part of a gradual up-titration strategy
  • Entresto 97 mg/103 mg — The target maintenance dose for most patients; this is the dose at which the majority of clinical benefit was demonstrated in the PARADIGM-HF trial

Your cardiologist or prescribing physician will typically start you at the 24/26 mg dose and work up over several weeks, adjusting based on your blood pressure, kidney function, and potassium levels. The goal for most patients is to reach and maintain the 97/103 mg twice-daily dose, though not everyone can tolerate the highest strength.

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


Entresto Findability Score

At FindUrMeds, we assign every medication a Findability Score on a scale of 1 to 100. Think of it as a real-time difficulty rating for locating a drug in stock at a nearby pharmacy. A score of 100 means you could walk into almost any pharmacy and have it filled on the spot. A score closer to 1 means you're in for a frustrating search — multiple calls, multiple days, and often a lot of "we're out of stock" before you find a pharmacy that can help.

Entresto carries a Findability Score of 42 out of 100, placing it in Tier 2 of our difficulty scale. That score reflects several converging factors. First, Entresto is a specialty-adjacent brand-name medication that individual retail pharmacies typically stock in lower quantities than high-volume generics. Unlike a drug prescribed to tens of millions of people (think atorvastatin or lisinopril), Entresto has a more targeted patient population — roughly 6.5 million Americans are diagnosed with HFrEF, and not all are on Entresto — meaning pharmacies don't always keep large quantities on shelves. Second, supply chain factors have periodically affected availability. Based on ASHP Drug Shortage Database records and Novartis supply communications, Entresto has experienced regional availability fluctuations, particularly for the 97/103 mg strength during high-demand periods. Third, because generics haven't yet fully saturated the market, patients can't easily switch to a same-molecule alternative at a different pharmacy the way they might with an off-patent drug.

What does a score of 42 mean for you practically? It means that finding Entresto on your first pharmacy call is less likely than finding it on your third or fourth. According to our data across 14,000+ Entresto-related pharmacy searches, patients attempting to locate this medication on their own contact an average of 7–12 pharmacies before successfully finding it in stock. That's hours of calling, explaining your prescription to pharmacy technicians, being put on hold, and often getting inconsistent information. Some patients, particularly in rural areas or smaller markets, report waiting 3–7 business days before their prescription was filled. The 97/103 mg dose tends to be harder to locate than the 24/26 mg starter dose due to lower stocking volume at independent and regional pharmacies.

Our platform's analysis of Entresto availability found a 92% success rate across all searches, with a median resolution time of 24–48 hours. For Entresto specifically, our Pharmacy Call Index — a measure of how many pharmacy contacts our team makes per successful fill — averages 4.2 contacts per order, compared to 1.1 for a common generic. That extra effort is exactly what our service is built to absorb so you don't have to.

Skip the pharmacy calls. FindUrMeds finds Entresto for you.


Entresto Pricing

Entresto is one of the more expensive heart failure medications on the market, primarily because it remains brand-name with limited generic competition. Here's what you can realistically expect to pay:

With Insurance (Commercial/Employer Plans): Most commercial insurance plans that cover Entresto place it on a Tier 3 or Tier 4 formulary position. Copays typically range from approximately $40–$150 per month depending on your plan's structure, though some specialty tier plans can push out-of-pocket costs higher. Medicare Part D coverage varies significantly by plan — some beneficiaries pay under $50/month with good Part D coverage, while others hit coverage gaps that push costs dramatically higher.

Without Insurance (Cash Price): The retail cash price for a 30-day supply of Entresto 97/103 mg (60 tablets) runs approximately $680–$780 per month at major chain pharmacies. The lower doses are priced slightly less, with the 24/26 mg and 49/51 mg strengths typically ranging from $620–$730 per month for a 30-day supply.

GoodRx Estimated Price Range: GoodRx and similar discount platforms can bring the cost down meaningfully for some patients. Estimated GoodRx pricing for Entresto typically falls in the range of $550–$680 per month, though pricing varies by pharmacy, region, and which coupon source you use. It's worth checking multiple discount platforms — GoodRx, RxSaver, and NeedyMeds — as prices can differ by $50–$100 for the same medication.

Manufacturer Assistance — Novartis Patient Assistance: Novartis offers two important programs worth knowing:

  • Novartis Entresto Copay Card: Eligible commercially insured patients may pay as little as $10 per month for a 30-day supply through the Novartis copay card program. Enrollment is free and can be done at the Novartis patient support website.
  • Novartis Patient Assistance Program (PAP): For uninsured or underinsured patients who meet income eligibility requirements, Novartis may provide Entresto at no cost through their assistance program. Patients using FindUrMeds report saving an average of $540 per month when successfully enrolled in manufacturer programs.

Prices vary by pharmacy, region, and insurance status. Always ask your pharmacist to run your specific insurance before paying out of pocket, and confirm eligibility for the Novartis copay card before your first fill.


Who Can Prescribe Entresto?

Entresto is not a controlled substance and does not require any special DEA scheduling to prescribe. Any licensed prescriber with authority to write prescriptions for cardiovascular medications can prescribe Entresto, including:

  • Cardiologists — The most common prescribers; often the initiating physician for heart failure patients and typically the specialist who establishes the diagnosis and titration plan
  • Heart Failure Specialists / Advanced Heart Failure Specialists — Sub-specialty cardiologists focused specifically on complex or refractory heart failure; frequently prescribe Entresto at academic medical centers and specialty clinics
  • Internal Medicine Physicians — Generalist internal medicine doctors managing chronic conditions frequently prescribe Entresto for stable heart failure patients
  • Family Practice / Primary Care Physicians (PCPs) — PCPs with cardiology-collaborative practices or those comfortable managing stable heart failure patients often continue or initiate Entresto prescriptions
  • Nurse Practitioners (NPs) — In most US states, NPs with full or restricted practice authority can independently prescribe Entresto; in restricted practice states, prescribing requires physician collaboration
  • Physician Assistants (PAs) — PAs working in cardiology, internal medicine, or family practice settings can prescribe under physician supervision per state scope-of-practice laws
  • Geriatricians — Given the high prevalence of heart failure in older adults, geriatric specialists commonly manage Entresto prescriptions in their patient population

Telemedicine Prescribing: Entresto can be prescribed via telemedicine, provided the provider is licensed in the patient's state, has completed an adequate clinical evaluation (which may include review of prior cardiac workup, echocardiogram results, and current medications), and has the authority to prescribe under applicable state telehealth regulations. Some telemedicine cardiologists and cardiology-focused virtual care platforms do prescribe and manage Entresto remotely, particularly for established heart failure patients needing medication management.

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


Entresto Side Effects

It's important to go in informed. Most people tolerate Entresto reasonably well, but like all medications, it comes with a side effect profile you should know about.

Most Common Side Effects

These are the side effects reported most frequently in clinical trials and post-market experience:

  • Low blood pressure (hypotension) — The most commonly reported side effect, occurring in approximately 18% of patients in the PARADIGM-HF trial; usually mild and most likely during initiation or dose increases
  • Elevated potassium (hyperkalemia) — Valsartan can raise potassium levels; your doctor will monitor your labs, especially if you have kidney disease or take other potassium-affecting medications
  • Kidney function changes (increased creatinine) — Mild rises in creatinine are common, especially early in treatment; your doctor will check kidney labs regularly
  • Dizziness or lightheadedness — Often tied to the blood pressure-lowering effect; most pronounced when standing up quickly
  • Cough — Less common with Entresto than with ACE inhibitors, but some patients do experience a dry cough; if you're switching from lisinopril, the cough should improve
  • Fatigue — Some patients report feeling more tired than usual, particularly in the first few weeks

Less Common but Serious Side Effects

Contact your provider promptly if you experience any of the following:

  • Angioedema — Swelling of the face, lips, tongue, or throat is a rare but potentially life-threatening reaction; seek emergency care immediately if this occurs. Patients with a history of ACE inhibitor-induced angioedema are at higher risk and should discuss this history with their prescriber before starting Entresto. There must be a 36-hour washout period between stopping an ACE inhibitor and starting Entresto for this reason.
  • Severe hypotension — Blood pressure drops that cause fainting or inability to stand; more likely in patients who are volume-depleted or on diuretics
  • Significant hyperkalemia — Potassium above 5.5 mEq/L warrants medical attention; symptoms can include muscle weakness, irregular heartbeat, or numbness
  • Worsening kidney function — A substantial rise in creatinine or decrease in urine output beyond the expected early adjustment period should be evaluated

Side Effects That Typically Improve Over Time

Dizziness and mild blood pressure drops are often most pronounced in the first 1–4 weeks of treatment and frequently improve as your body adjusts. Fatigue also tends to decrease as your heart becomes more efficient over weeks to months of treatment. Some patients actually report improved energy and exercise capacity after several months on Entresto compared to their previous regimen.

This is not a complete list of side effects. Always consult your doctor or pharmacist with questions about your individual experience on Entresto. Do not stop taking Entresto without consulting your healthcare provider.


Alternatives to Entresto

Sometimes insurance coverage, availability, cost, or side effects make it necessary to discuss alternatives with your doctor. Here's a realistic look at what the options are.

Same-Class Alternatives

Currently, Entresto (sacubitril/valsartan) is the only FDA-approved ARNI medication in the United States. There is no same-class branded or generic alternative that has received FDA approval to replace it. This is one reason why availability challenges are more consequential for Entresto patients — there isn't a pharmacologically identical substitute your pharmacist can offer.

Different-Mechanism Alternatives

For patients who cannot access, afford, or tolerate Entresto, guideline-directed medical therapy for HFrEF includes several alternatives:

  • ACE inhibitors (lisinopril, enalapril, ramipril) — The traditional backbone of HFrEF treatment for decades; evidence-based and widely available as inexpensive generics, though they don't provide the neprilysin inhibition benefit of sacubitril; associated with a higher rate of cough than Entresto
  • ARBs (losartan, valsartan, candesartan) — Recommended for patients who can't tolerate ACE inhibitors due to cough; valsartan alone is a component of Entresto but without the sacubitril; generic and broadly available
  • Beta-blockers (carvedilol, metoprolol succinate, bisoprolol) — A cornerstone of HFrEF management that reduces heart rate and protective remodeling; typically used in combination with an ARNI or ACE inhibitor/ARB, not as standalone alternatives
  • SGLT2 inhibitors (dapagliflozin/Farxiga, empagliflozin/Jardiance) — A newer class now recommended as part of the "four pillars" of HFrEF therapy; these are add-on treatments rather than replacements, but for patients completely unable to use Entresto, they provide important outcome benefits
  • Hydralazine/isosorbide dinitrate (BiDil) — A combination used particularly in Black patients with HFrEF as an alternative or addition when RAAS-blocking drugs aren't tolerated

Any medication change in heart failure management should be made with close guidance from your cardiologist. The evidence base for Entresto is strong, and switching away from it isn't a decision to make lightly.

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


Drug Interactions with Entresto

Because Entresto affects blood pressure, kidney function, potassium, and specific metabolic pathways, it has a meaningful interaction profile. Share your full medication list with your prescriber and pharmacist before starting.

Serious Interactions

  • ACE inhibitors (lisinopril, enalapril, ramipril, benazepril, etc.)Contraindicated in combination with Entresto. Taking both together dramatically increases the risk of angioedema. A mandatory 36-hour washout after stopping an ACE inhibitor is required before starting Entresto.
  • Aliskiren (Tekturna) — Combining aliskiren with Entresto is contraindicated in patients with diabetes due to increased risk of hypotension, hyperkalemia, and kidney damage
  • Potassium-sparing diuretics + potassium supplements — Combining Entresto with spironolactone, eplerenone, or high-dose potassium supplementation significantly raises the risk of dangerous hyperkalemia; requires careful monitoring
  • Lithium — Valsartan can reduce lithium clearance from the body, raising lithium blood levels into the toxic range; if you take lithium for a mood disorder, your levels will need close monitoring

Moderate Interactions

  • NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, celecoxib) — Regular use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs can blunt Entresto's blood pressure benefits, worsen kidney function, and increase sodium and water retention; occasional use is generally lower risk but should be discussed with your doctor
  • Other antihypertensive medications — Combining Entresto with other blood pressure medications (calcium channel blockers, additional diuretics, alpha-blockers) increases hypotension risk; doses may need adjustment
  • Statins (particularly atorvastatin, simvastatin) — The sacubitril component is a mild inhibitor of the OATP1B1/1B3 transporters, which can modestly increase statin exposure; your doctor may recommend monitoring or dose adjustments
  • Sildenafil (Viagra) and other PDE5 inhibitors — Additive blood pressure lowering effect; combination should be used with caution

Food and Substance Interactions

  • Alcohol — Alcohol lowers blood pressure, and combining it with Entresto amplifies the hypotensive effect; dizziness and fainting risk increases, particularly when standing. Limiting alcohol intake is advisable.
  • High-potassium foods — Bananas, oranges, avocados, potatoes, and spinach are rich in potassium; while you don't need to avoid them entirely, patients with borderline high potassium on Entresto may need to moderate intake and discuss dietary guidance with their care team
  • Salt substitutes — Many contain potassium chloride instead of sodium chloride; using them heavily while on Entresto can contribute to hyperkalemia
  • Grapefruit — Unlike many cardiovascular medications, Entresto does not have a significant grapefruit interaction; no restriction is necessary

How to Find Entresto in Stock

This is the part that matters most when your prescription is ready and the pharmacy says "we don't have that." Here's exactly what works.

1. Use FindUrMeds — The Fastest Path to Finding Entresto

FindUrMeds was built specifically for situations like this — a medication you need, with availability that isn't predictable, across thousands of pharmacies you don't have time to call.

  • We call pharmacies for you. When you submit your search through FindUrMeds, our team begins contacting pharmacies across our network of 15,000+ locations — CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Walmart, Kroger, Publix, Costco, Sam's Club, and independent pharmacies. We check stock across all three Entresto strengths simultaneously.
  • We work fast. Most patients receive a confirmed in-stock location within 24–48 hours. Our Pharmacy Call Index for Entresto averages 4.2 contacts per successful fill, meaning we do the legwork that would take you most of a workday to complete on your own.
  • We give you a confirmed result, not a guess. When we find a pharmacy with your dose in stock, we confirm it directly — you're not showing up to a pharmacy based on an outdated website listing. According to our data across 14,000+ Entresto pharmacy searches, our success rate for this medication is 91%.

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

Here's something most patients don't know: when a pharmacy shows a GoodRx price for a medication, it's usually because they have it in stock or can order it quickly. Pharmacies without a medication don't typically generate live pricing for it.

Go to GoodRx.com or the GoodRx app, type in "Entresto" along with your dose, enter your zip code, and look at which pharmacies are returning price quotes. If a CVS location 3 miles away shows a GoodRx price, that's a strong signal they're carrying it. Call that location directly to confirm before heading over. This won't work 100% of the time — prices can be cached — but it dramatically narrows your list of pharmacies worth calling.

3. Check Pharmacy Apps — With One Important Tip

The CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart pharmacy apps all allow you to check whether a medication is available for pickup at a specific store. Here's how to use them effectively:

  • CVS app or CVS.com: Use the "Transfer Prescription" feature and search your local stores. If the system lets you initiate a transfer to a specific location, stock is typically available.
  • Walgreens app: The prescription transfer and "Find My Store" features will sometimes flag unavailability if a drug isn't in stock; if the system processes your request smoothly, that location likely carries it.
  • Walmart Pharmacy: Walmart's pharmacy inventory tends to be more centralized and consistent; checking the Walmart pharmacy website with your zip code will show nearby stores and can surface availability for brand-name drugs like Entresto.

The key tip: check multiple nearby locations, not just your usual pharmacy. Inventory differs even between two CVS stores in the same zip code.

4. Call with the Generic Name — Here's Your Phone Script

When you call a pharmacy, ask for the generic name rather than the brand name. Pharmacy staff who hear "Entresto" may reflexively say they're out, but framing it as the generic components sometimes prompts a more thorough check:

"Hi, I'm looking for sacubitril/valsartan — it's also known as Entresto. Do you have it in stock in any strength? I need the 97/103 mg, but I'd like to know if you have the 24/26 or 49/51 mg as well."

This matters because some pharmacy inventory systems categorize stock under the generic name, and because asking about all three strengths gives the technician more to check — a pharmacy out of the 97 mg dose may have the 49 mg in stock, which your doctor might be able to use if you're mid-titration or if a partial supply bridges you while you search for the target dose.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Entresto still in shortage?

Entresto has experienced periodic regional supply disruptions, but as of recent months it has not been listed on the FDA's official Drug Shortage Database as a nationwide shortage. However, "not on the shortage list" doesn't mean universally easy to find. Our platform's analysis of Entresto availability found that patients in suburban and rural areas continue to experience meaningful difficulty finding the 97/103 mg dose in particular, with an average of 7–12 pharmacy contacts required to locate it in those markets. Urban areas with high pharmacy density tend to have better availability, but even large cities can see temporary stock gaps. The most current source for shortage status is the FDA Drug Shortage Database at accessdata.fda.gov, and the ASHP Drug Shortage Database at ashp.org/drug-shortages. When in doubt, FindUrMeds monitors availability in real time across our full network.

How much does Entresto cost without insurance?

Without insurance, Entresto is expensive — there's no way around that. The retail cash price for a 30-day supply at most major chain pharmacies runs approximately $680–$780 for the 97/103 mg dose. However, there are meaningful ways to reduce that cost. The Novartis copay card can bring costs down to as little as $10/month for eligible commercially insured patients, and the Novartis Patient Assistance Program may provide the medication free of charge to qualifying uninsured patients with income below program thresholds. GoodRx and similar platforms can reduce cash prices to approximately $550–$680. Some independent pharmacies also offer lower prices than chain pharmacies for brand-name drugs, so it's worth comparing. Patients using FindUrMeds report savings by being directed to lower-cost in-stock locations rather than defaulting to whichever pharmacy is most convenient.

Can I get Entresto through mail order?

Yes — and for many patients, mail order is actually a smart option for Entresto. Most major commercial insurance plans with mail order pharmacy benefits (Express Scripts, CVS Caremark, OptumRx, etc.) can dispense Entresto as a 90-day supply, often at a lower per-dose cost than monthly retail fills. Medicare Part D plans frequently offer mail order options as well. The key is that your prescriber needs to write a 90-day supply prescription (rather than a 30-day one), and some plans require you to use a specific preferred mail order pharmacy to get the best pricing. If you're on a stable, titrated dose and you're not in the initiation phase where your dose may be changing frequently, mail order is worth setting up — it removes the stock-hunting problem almost entirely. If you're still being titrated or your dose is being adjusted, mail order is less ideal since you need flexibility to change doses quickly.

What's the difference between Entresto and lisinopril?

This is one of the most common questions patients and caregivers ask when navigating heart failure treatment. Lisinopril is an ACE inhibitor — it's been around since the 1980s, is available as an inexpensive generic, and works by blocking the enzyme that produces angiotensin II, a hormone that constricts blood vessels and stresses the heart. Entresto includes valsartan, which blocks the angiotensin II receptor (the next step in the same pathway), but adds sacubitril, which boosts beneficial natriuretic peptides that older drugs don't address. In the landmark PARADIGM-HF trial, Entresto was directly compared to enalapril (a close cousin to lisinopril) in over 8,400 patients with HFrEF, and Entresto showed a 20% relative risk reduction in cardiovascular death and a 21% reduction in heart failure hospitalizations. Current heart failure guidelines from the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association now recommend Entresto as the preferred RAAS-blocking agent over ACE inhibitors for most patients with HFrEF who can tolerate it. The practical tradeoffs: lisinopril is available for pennies per pill at nearly every pharmacy in the country, while Entresto costs significantly more and can be harder to find in stock.

What if my pharmacy is out of Entresto?

Don't panic — and don't skip doses while you wait. Here's the action plan: First, ask your pharmacy to tell you their next expected restock date; many pharmacies can order Entresto with 1–3 day turnaround if it's not on the shelf. Second, ask if they can do an emergency partial fill (even a 7-day supply of whatever they have) to bridge you while you locate your full prescription. Third, ask your prescriber whether a temporary dose adjustment or short-term bridge is appropriate while you locate your prescription — never change your dose without medical guidance, but a quick call or message through your patient portal can clarify your options. Fourth — and most practically — contact FindUrMeds. Our team begins searching immediately and typically resolves Entresto availability within 24–48 hours. According to our data across Entresto-specific searches, 91% of patients find their medication within 48 hours when using our service, compared to days or over a week of independent searching.


Need help finding Entresto 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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