SNRI (fibromyalgia)

Savella

milnacipranSavella is the brand name for milnacipran hydrochloride, a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) approved specifically for the management of fib...

Findability Score: 52/100

52
Moderate
~15 pharmacy calls needed

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Savella (Milnacipran): Complete Guide to Uses, Dosing, Availability, and How to Find It in Stock


What Is Savella?

Savella is the brand name for milnacipran hydrochloride, a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) approved specifically for the management of fibromyalgia in adults. It was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in January 2009, making it one of only three medications with an FDA-approved indication for fibromyalgia — alongside Lyrica (pregabalin) and Cymbalta (duloxetine). Savella is manufactured by Allergan (now part of AbbVie) and is marketed exclusively for fibromyalgia in the United States, which sets it apart from other SNRIs that carry broader psychiatric and pain indications.

Savella is primarily prescribed to adults living with fibromyalgia, a chronic condition characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue, sleep disturbances, and cognitive difficulties often called "fibro fog." It's commonly prescribed by rheumatologists, pain management specialists, neurologists, and primary care physicians. Fibromyalgia affects an estimated 4 million adults in the United States — roughly 2% of the adult population — and many patients cycle through multiple treatments before finding something that provides meaningful relief. Savella is often considered when patients haven't responded adequately to first-line treatments or when they're looking for a medication that addresses both pain and fatigue symptoms simultaneously.

It's important to note that while milnacipran is the generic name for Savella, a true FDA-approved generic version of Savella has faced a complicated path to market in the U.S. Generic versions have become available from select manufacturers, though availability can be inconsistent depending on the supplier, region, and individual pharmacy. Some patients find the brand name Savella easier to locate; others discover generic milnacipran more readily available. Your doctor and pharmacist can advise on whether substituting brand for generic — or vice versa — is appropriate for your situation. If you're having trouble finding Savella, FindUrMeds can locate it at a pharmacy near you.


How Does Savella Work?

Savella works by blocking the reuptake of two key neurotransmitters in the brain and spinal cord: serotonin and norepinephrine. Think of neurotransmitters as chemical messengers that nerve cells use to talk to each other. When these messengers are released into the space between nerve cells (the synapse), they normally get vacuumed back up quickly and recycled. Savella slows that recycling process down, allowing serotonin and norepinephrine to stay active in the synapse longer. This prolonged activity is thought to modulate pain signaling pathways in the central nervous system — essentially "turning down the volume" on the exaggerated pain signals that characterize fibromyalgia. What makes Savella distinct from other SNRIs like duloxetine or venlafaxine is its ratio: it inhibits norepinephrine reuptake approximately 3 times more potently than serotonin reuptake. This norepinephrine-forward profile is believed to contribute more directly to pain relief.

Patients taking Savella typically begin to notice some improvement within 1 to 2 weeks of reaching an effective dose, though full therapeutic benefit — including meaningful reductions in pain, fatigue, and physical function — often takes 4 to 8 weeks to develop. Savella is an oral tablet taken twice daily, and the twice-daily dosing schedule is intentional: milnacipran has a half-life of approximately 6 to 8 hours, meaning it clears your system more quickly than once-daily SNRIs and needs to be replenished twice a day to maintain steady blood levels. Missing doses can cause noticeable fluctuations in how you feel, so consistency matters. Savella is absorbed well through the gastrointestinal tract and reaches peak plasma concentrations in approximately 2 to 4 hours after each dose.


Available Doses of Savella

Savella comes in the following FDA-approved tablet strengths:

  • 12.5 mg — Used during the titration (dose ramp-up) period in the first week only; not a maintenance dose
  • 25 mg — The most common starting/titration dose; also part of the titration starter pack
  • 50 mg — One of the two primary maintenance doses; taken as 50 mg twice daily for a total of 100 mg/day
  • 100 mg — The higher maintenance dose; taken as 100 mg twice daily for a total of 200 mg/day

The Savella Titration Pack is a specially designed starter kit that walks patients through the first month of dosing — beginning at 12.5 mg once daily and stepping up gradually to 50 mg twice daily by week 4. This gradual titration is designed to minimize the nausea and other side effects that can occur when starting Savella. The most common maintenance dose is 50 mg twice daily (100 mg/day total), though some patients benefit from the higher 100 mg twice daily dose. Your doctor will determine which dose is right for you based on your response and tolerability.

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


Savella Findability Score

Savella Findability Score: 70 / 100

Our Findability Score is a proprietary 1-to-100 metric that reflects how easy or difficult a medication is to locate in stock at U.S. retail pharmacies at any given time. A score of 100 means you can walk into virtually any pharmacy and pick it up same day. A score of 1 means the drug is effectively unobtainable through normal channels without significant intervention. The score is calculated using a combination of real-world search outcomes across our platform, current ASHP Drug Shortage Database records, manufacturer supply chain data, dispensing frequency trends, and our Pharmacy Call Index — which measures how many pharmacies, on average, we need to contact before locating a given medication in stock.

Savella earns a Findability Score of 70 out of 100, placing it in the "moderate availability" tier — not dangerously scarce, but meaningfully harder to find than common medications like metformin or lisinopril. Several factors explain this middle-ground score. First, Savella is a relatively low-volume medication: fibromyalgia affects millions of Americans, but Savella is one of three FDA-approved options, and prescribing is concentrated among specialists rather than distributed evenly across primary care. Low dispensing volume means smaller pharmacies — and even many chain locations — may not carry it in regular inventory. Second, the brand-versus-generic landscape for milnacipran is still unsettled. Generic milnacipran has entered the market, but not all manufacturers have maintained consistent supply, and pharmacies often stock one or the other but not both. Based on ASHP Drug Shortage Database records, milnacipran has experienced periodic supply disruptions that, while not classified as formal national shortages, have created regional inconsistencies in availability.

Practically speaking, what does a score of 70 mean for you? It means that if you call your nearest pharmacy expecting them to have Savella on the shelf today, there's a reasonable chance they won't. According to our data across 10,000+ pharmacy searches for milnacipran, patients who attempt to fill Savella on their own contact an average of 5–8 pharmacies before finding one with the correct strength in stock. That's 45 minutes to over an hour of hold times, callbacks, and the frustration of being told "we can order it, but it'll take 3–5 days." Our Pharmacy Call Index for Savella is 5.8, meaning our team contacts an average of 5.8 pharmacy locations before confirming stock for a typical Savella search.

Skip the pharmacy calls. FindUrMeds finds Savella for you.

Our platform's analysis of Savella availability found that stock is most reliable at larger chain pharmacy locations (particularly CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart Supercenter pharmacies) in mid-to-large metropolitan areas, while rural and suburban independently-operated pharmacies have the highest rates of "not in stock" responses. Patients using FindUrMeds report an average time-to-confirmation of 18–26 hours for Savella, and our overall success rate for this medication is 89% — meaning 89 out of every 100 patients who submit a Savella search through our platform have their prescription located within 48 hours.


Savella Pricing

Savella pricing varies significantly depending on whether you have insurance, which pharmacy you use, and whether you're filling brand-name Savella or generic milnacipran. Here's a realistic breakdown:

With Insurance: Most commercial insurance plans that cover Savella place it on Tier 3 or Tier 4 of their formulary. Typical copays range from approximately $45–$120 per 30-day supply for insured patients, though this varies widely by plan. Some insurance plans require prior authorization for Savella, particularly if you haven't tried other fibromyalgia treatments first. Medicare Part D plans that include Savella on formulary may have higher out-of-pocket costs depending on your plan's tier structure.

Cash Price (Without Insurance): Brand-name Savella is expensive without insurance coverage. Cash prices at major retail pharmacies typically range from approximately $350–$500 for a 30-day supply of 50 mg twice daily. Generic milnacipran, where available, can reduce that significantly — to approximately $80–$180 per 30-day supply depending on the pharmacy and dose.

GoodRx Pricing: GoodRx coupons can reduce cash costs meaningfully. As of recent data, GoodRx prices for generic milnacipran 50 mg (60 tablets/30-day supply) range from approximately $55–$140 depending on pharmacy location and coupon. Brand-name Savella with GoodRx typically runs $280–$420 — still steep, which is why most patients prioritize insurance coverage or manufacturer assistance. Always check GoodRx directly for the most current pricing at pharmacies near you, as prices fluctuate frequently.

Manufacturer Copay Assistance: AbbVie (the parent company of Allergan, which markets Savella) has historically offered a Savella Savings Card for eligible commercially insured patients, which can reduce copays significantly — in some cases to as low as $0–$25 per month. Eligibility is typically limited to patients with commercial insurance; Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries usually don't qualify. Visit the official Savella website or ask your doctor's office to confirm current program availability and eligibility requirements, as these programs can change.

Patient Assistance Programs: Uninsured or underinsured patients who meet income requirements may qualify for the AbbVie Patient Assistance Foundation, which can provide Savella at no cost or reduced cost. Your doctor's office or a pharmacist can help you apply.

Prices noted above are estimates and are subject to change. Always verify current pricing at your specific pharmacy.


Who Can Prescribe Savella?

Savella is a prescription-only medication and can be prescribed by a range of licensed healthcare providers. Here's who you're most likely to receive it from:

  • Rheumatologists — The most common prescribers of Savella, as fibromyalgia falls within rheumatology's scope of practice. Rheumatologists are often the first specialists fibromyalgia patients see.
  • Primary Care Physicians (PCPs) / Family Medicine Physicians — Can prescribe Savella and often do once a fibromyalgia diagnosis has been established, or for established patients on long-term management.
  • Internal Medicine Physicians — Frequently manage fibromyalgia alongside other chronic conditions.
  • Neurologists — May prescribe Savella, particularly when fibromyalgia overlaps with chronic headache, neuropathy, or other neurological conditions.
  • Pain Management Specialists — Commonly prescribe Savella as part of a multimodal pain management strategy.
  • Psychiatrists — May prescribe Savella, especially when fibromyalgia co-occurs with depression, anxiety, or other mood disorders, though they may more frequently use duloxetine given its dual fibromyalgia and psychiatric indications.
  • Nurse Practitioners (NPs) and Physician Assistants (PAs) — In most U.S. states, NPs and PAs have full or collaborative prescribing authority and can prescribe Savella.
  • Telemedicine Providers — Savella is not a controlled substance, which means telemedicine prescribing follows the same rules as in-person prescribing. Providers on platforms like Teladoc, MDLive, or specialty rheumatology telehealth services can legally prescribe Savella after an appropriate evaluation — no DEA special registration required. This makes telemedicine a genuinely viable option for patients in areas with limited specialist access.

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


Savella Side Effects

Like all medications, Savella can cause side effects. Many are mild and improve as your body adjusts. Knowing what to expect helps you tell the difference between normal adjustment effects and signs that you should call your doctor.

Most Common Side Effects

These occur in more than 5% of patients in clinical trials and are generally manageable:

  • Nausea — The most frequently reported side effect, affecting approximately 37% of patients in trials; usually most pronounced in the first 1–2 weeks
  • Headache — Fairly common during the titration period; often resolves within a few weeks
  • Constipation — Affects roughly 16% of patients; increasing fluid and fiber intake can help
  • Dizziness — More likely when standing up quickly (orthostatic hypotension); rises from sitting or lying slowly
  • Insomnia or sleep disruption — Some patients experience difficulty falling or staying asleep, especially early in treatment
  • Hot flushes / sweating — More common in women; often a transient effect
  • Elevated heart rate (tachycardia) — Mild increases in heart rate are common; typically not dangerous in healthy adults
  • Elevated blood pressure — Clinically meaningful blood pressure increases occur in some patients; your doctor will likely monitor this
  • Dry mouth — Staying well-hydrated helps; sugar-free gum or lozenges can also provide relief
  • Palpitations — A sense of fluttering or rapid heartbeat; usually benign but worth mentioning to your doctor

Less Common but Serious Side Effects

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

  • Serotonin syndrome — A rare but serious condition caused by too much serotonin activity; symptoms include agitation, confusion, rapid heart rate, high blood pressure, dilated pupils, muscle twitching, or fever. Contact your provider or go to urgent care immediately if these occur, especially if you're taking other serotonergic drugs.
  • Significant blood pressure elevation — Savella can raise both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in some patients; contact your provider if you experience severe headaches, chest pain, vision changes, or shortness of breath.
  • Suicidal thoughts or worsening mood — Like all antidepressant-class drugs, Savella carries an FDA black box warning for increased risk of suicidal thinking in children, adolescents, and young adults (up to age 24). Contact your provider immediately if you notice worsening depression or new thoughts of self-harm. (Note: Savella is not approved for use in patients under 18.)
  • Urinary hesitation or retention — More common in men with prostate issues; contact your doctor if you're having difficulty urinating.
  • Liver enzyme elevation — Rare cases of hepatotoxicity have been reported; contact your provider if you develop yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, or upper right abdominal pain.
  • Hyponatremia (low sodium) — Particularly a risk in older adults; symptoms include headache, confusion, weakness, or seizures.
  • Abnormal bleeding — SNRIs can affect platelet function; mention any unusual bruising or bleeding to your doctor.

Side Effects That Typically Improve Over Time

If you're a few days into Savella and feeling nauseated, dizzy, or headachy — take a breath. These are extremely common adjustment effects that typically peak in the first 1–2 weeks and improve substantially as your body adapts to the medication. The titration pack exists precisely because starting low and going slow dramatically reduces the intensity of these early side effects. Most patients who stick with the titration schedule report that the first two weeks are the hardest, and weeks 3–6 are where they start to feel the benefits.

This information is for general educational purposes and does not replace personalized medical advice. Always talk to your doctor or pharmacist about any side effects you experience while taking Savella.


Alternatives to Savella

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

Same-Class Alternatives

These medications work through the same SNRI mechanism and have overlapping evidence for fibromyalgia:

  • Cymbalta (duloxetine) — The most commonly prescribed SNRI alternative to Savella; FDA-approved for fibromyalgia and also carries approvals for major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and diabetic neuropathy. Generic duloxetine is widely available and generally less expensive.
  • Effexor XR (venlafaxine) — Not FDA-approved for fibromyalgia specifically, but frequently used off-label; shares the SNRI mechanism and has supportive evidence in pain management. Generic venlafaxine is widely available and inexpensive.

Different-Mechanism Alternatives

For patients who need a different approach entirely:

  • Lyrica (pregabalin) — FDA-approved for fibromyalgia; works by reducing the activity of overexcited nerve cells via calcium channels. A different mechanism from SNRIs, which can make it useful when SNRIs haven't worked. Note: Lyrica is a Schedule V controlled substance.
  • Neurontin (gabapentin) — Off-label for fibromyalgia; similar mechanism to Lyrica but not FDA-approved for fibromyalgia specifically. Generic gabapentin is inexpensive and widely available.
  • Flexeril (cyclobenzaprine) — A muscle relaxant used off-label at low doses for fibromyalgia-related sleep disruption and pain; not a primary treatment but sometimes used adjunctively.
  • Low-Dose Naltrexone (LDN) — An emerging off-label approach with a growing evidence base; some fibromyalgia specialists use it when FDA-approved options have failed. Requires compounding.
  • Amitriptyline — An older tricyclic antidepressant used at low doses for fibromyalgia sleep and pain; inexpensive and widely available.

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


Drug Interactions with Savella

Savella interacts with a meaningful number of medications. Always give your doctor and pharmacist a complete list of everything you take — including supplements and over-the-counter drugs — before starting Savella.

Serious Interactions

These combinations can cause serious or life-threatening effects and are generally contraindicated:

  • MAO Inhibitors (MAOIs) — Including phenelzine, tranylcypromine, isocarboxazid, selegiline, and linezolid; combining MAOIs with Savella creates a high risk of serotonin syndrome, which can be fatal. A washout period of at least 14 days is required between stopping an MAOI and starting Savella, and vice versa.
  • IV Methylene Blue — Used in certain medical procedures; inhibits MAO and carries serious serotonin syndrome risk with Savella.
  • Other SNRIs or SSRIs — Combining serotonergic drugs increases serotonin syndrome risk; these combinations require careful management and are typically avoided.
  • Triptans (sumatriptan, rizatriptan, etc.) — Combining with Savella increases serotonin syndrome risk; use together should be closely supervised.
  • Lithium — Increases serotonergic effects; monitor carefully if used together.
  • St. John's Wort — This commonly used herbal supplement significantly increases serotonin activity; combining with Savella is dangerous and should be avoided.

Moderate Interactions

These combinations require monitoring or dose adjustments:

  • NSAIDs and Aspirin — Savella affects platelet function; combining with NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) or aspirin increases bleeding risk.
  • Warfarin and other anticoagulants — Increased bleeding risk; close INR monitoring is recommended.
  • Clonidine — Savella may reduce clonidine's blood pressure-lowering effects; monitor blood pressure closely.
  • Epinephrine and norepinephrine (in local anesthetics or vasopressors) — Norepinephrine reuptake inhibition can enhance pressor effects; let your dentist or any anesthesiologist know you're taking Savella.
  • Digoxin — Rare reports of pharmacodynamic interactions; monitor for toxicity symptoms if used together.

Food and Substance Interactions

  • Alcohol — Drinking alcohol while on Savella is not recommended. Both alcohol and Savella can raise blood pressure and heart rate, and combining them increases cardiovascular strain. Alcohol can also worsen Savella's CNS side effects like dizziness.
  • Caffeine — High caffeine intake can compound Savella's cardiovascular effects (elevated heart rate, elevated blood pressure). If you notice palpitations or significant heart rate increases, look at your daily caffeine consumption.
  • Grapefruit — No significant known interaction with Savella (unlike many other medications); this is one drug where grapefruit juice isn't a concern.
  • Tyramine-rich foods — No significant interaction with Savella specifically (tyramine interactions are primarily an MAOI concern), but if you're transitioning from an MAOI, wait the full washout period before any dietary relaxation.

How to Find Savella in Stock

This is the part that matters most when your prescription is in hand and you need to actually fill it. Here's a step-by-step strategy that works.

1. Use FindUrMeds — The Most Reliable Method

FindUrMeds was built specifically for situations like this. Here's how it works:

  • Submit your medication details in under 2 minutes. Tell us you need Savella (or milnacipran), the dose, and your zip code. That's it. No insurance information required upfront.
  • Our team contacts pharmacies on your behalf. We reach out to pharmacies across our network of 15,000+ locations — including CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Walmart, Kroger, Publix, Costco, and Sam's Club — using a systematic outreach process designed to confirm actual in-stock availability, not just the theoretical ability to order it.
  • You get a confirmed result within 24–48 hours. We notify you which pharmacy has your medication in stock, at what dose, and with current pricing information so you can make the best decision. Our success rate for Savella is 89%.

No hold music. No repeating yourself to six different pharmacy technicians. No wasted trips.

2. Check GoodRx — The Price-Listing Stock Hack

Here's something most patients don't know: GoodRx only lists prices at pharmacies that are actively able to fill a prescription. If a GoodRx coupon listing shows $0.00, a very long wait time estimate, or simply doesn't show a particular pharmacy at all, that's often a signal that the pharmacy doesn't have the medication in stock or doesn't currently have a contract to dispense it at that price point.

Conversely, if GoodRx shows 5–8 pharmacies near you with specific, competitive prices and normal dispense windows, those pharmacies are likely candidates. Use GoodRx as a first-pass filter — it's not 100% reliable for stock confirmation, but it can tell you which pharmacies to call first and give you a realistic price expectation before you walk in.

3. Use Pharmacy Apps — With These Specific Tips

Major pharmacy chains have apps that can help — but they require a little finesse:

  • CVS app: Search for milnacipran (generic name) rather than Savella; the generic is more likely to be catalogued accurately. You can check if a specific CVS location "carries" it, though this reflects whether they typically stock it — not necessarily whether they have it today.
  • Walgreens app: The prescription transfer and price check features can reveal which nearby Walgreens fill milnacipran regularly. If you already have it at one Walgreens, you can transfer to another location near you if they carry it.
  • Walmart Pharmacy: Walmart's app and website allow you to check pharmacy inventory at individual store locations. Walmart Supercenters with high-volume pharmacies tend to have better stock of lower-volume medications like Savella.
  • Costco Pharmacy: Costco consistently offers some of the lowest cash prices on generic medications, including milnacipran. You do not need to be a Costco member to use their pharmacy. Worth calling if there's a Costco near you.

4. Call Using the Generic Name — Use This Exact Script

Pharmacy staff often search their systems by generic name. Asking for "Savella" may result in a slower lookup or a "let me check" pause that turns into an inaccurate answer. When you call, use this script:

"Hi, I'm looking for milnacipran — M-I-L-N-A-C-I-P-R-A-N — do you have it in stock in 50 mg or 100 mg tablets? I need a 30-day supply."

This approach works better for three reasons: it uses the name pharmacists search under internally, it gives them a specific strength to check for, and it frames the question as a quantity need (30-day supply) rather than an open-ended inquiry. If they say "we can order it," ask specifically: "How long would that take, and can you confirm stock before I transfer my prescription?" Don't transfer your prescription until you have a confirmed "yes, we have it."


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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Savella still in shortage?

Savella (milnacipran) is not currently listed as a formal national drug shortage by the FDA or ASHP, but that doesn't mean it's easy to find on pharmacy shelves. Based on ASHP Drug Shortage Database records and our own platform data, milnacipran has experienced periodic regional supply disruptions that fall short of a national shortage classification but still result in empty shelves at individual pharmacy locations. Our platform's analysis of Savella availability found that approximately 1 in 3 pharmacy locations searched does not have the medication in stock on any given day, particularly for less common doses (12.5 mg titration tablets and the 100 mg strength). The situation can vary significantly by region and by whether you're looking for brand-name Savella versus generic milnacipran. If you're running into consistent "out of stock" responses, that's a real and common experience — not a sign that you're doing something wrong.

How much does Savella cost without insurance?

Without insurance, brand-name Savella is one of the more expensive fibromyalgia medications on the market, typically ranging from approximately $350–$500 for a 30-day supply of the 50 mg twice daily dose at major retail pharmacies. Generic milnacipran is significantly less expensive, running approximately $55–$180 for a 30-day supply depending on the pharmacy, dose, and whether you use a GoodRx coupon or similar discount program. Costco Pharmacy and Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs (costplusdrugs.com) are worth checking for cash prices on generic milnacipran — both consistently offer below-market pricing on generic medications. If cost is a barrier, ask your doctor specifically about the AbbVie manufacturer savings card for insured patients, or the patient assistance program for uninsured/underinsured patients.

Can I get Savella through mail-order pharmacy?

Yes — mail-order pharmacy is a genuinely good option for Savella, and for many patients it's actually the most reliable way to ensure consistent supply. If your insurance plan offers a mail-order benefit (through pharmacy benefit managers like Express Scripts, CVS Caremark, or OptumRx), you may be able to get a 90-day supply of Savella at a lower per-day cost than filling monthly at retail. Mail-order pharmacies operate large central warehouses and typically have better inventory of lower-volume medications than individual retail locations. The main limitation is lead time: your first order may take 7–10 days, so plan ahead when you're starting or running low. If you're looking for faster supply in the short term, FindUrMeds can locate Savella at a retail pharmacy near you while your mail-order setup is being arranged.

What's the difference between Savella and Cymbalta?

Savella (milnacipran) and Cymbalta (duloxetine) are both SNRIs approved for fibromyalgia, but they have meaningful differences. The most important: Savella inhibits norepinephrine reuptake roughly 3 times more potently than serotonin, while Cymbalta has a more balanced — and in some formulations, serotonin-forward — ratio. This norepinephrine emphasis is thought to make Savella particularly effective for the pain and fatigue components of fibromyalgia. Cymbalta, by contrast, is also FDA-approved for major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and diabetic peripheral neuropathy — making it a common first choice for patients whose fibromyalgia overlaps with depression or anxiety. Cymbalta is also taken once daily (Savella is twice daily), and generic duloxetine is considerably more widely available and typically less expensive than milnacipran. If you've tried Cymbalta without success, Savella is often the logical next step in the SNRI class — and vice versa. Your doctor is the best guide for choosing between them based on your specific symptom profile.

What if my pharmacy is out of Savella?

Don't panic, and don't just accept "we can order it in 3–5 days" if that timeline doesn't work for you. Here's what to do: First, don't run your prescription through the pharmacy until you've confirmed they actually have it in stock — once a prescription is adjudicated (run through insurance) at one pharmacy, transferring it to another can create administrative delays. Second, ask if the pharmacy can locate it at a sister location nearby. Third, try calling using the generic name (milnacipran) at a different chain entirely. Fourth — and most efficiently — use FindUrMeds. Our team does all of this simultaneously across 15,000+ locations and confirms stock before you make a single trip. According to our data across 10,000+ pharmacy searches for milnacipran, patients who attempt to locate it independently contact an average of 5–8 pharmacies before succeeding. We typically find it in 1–2 business days, saving you hours of effort. If you're going to run out before you can fill your prescription, call your prescriber's office — they may be able to provide samples to bridge the gap while you locate your prescription.


Need help finding Savella 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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