President Trump recently launched a significant expansion of TrumpRx.gov, the White House’s drug-price transparency platform, adding over 600 generic medications to the site. The update includes real-time price comparisons from Amazon Pharmacy, Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs, and GoodRx, providing users with direct access to competitive cash prices for prescription drugs without intermediaries.
The administration emphasized that TrumpRx.gov now offers Americans a clearer way to compare cash prices against insurance copays and identify savings opportunities. By integrating discounts from multiple providers, the platform aims to eliminate hidden pharmacy benefit manager markups and give patients immediate visibility into medication costs. Common medications like atorvastatin, clopidogrel, lisinopril, and metformin are among the new generic drugs featured on the site.
A White House fact sheet clarified that the expanded list of generics operates separately from discounts on high-cost branded medications under President Trump’s Most-Favored-Nation drug price agreements. The platform functions as a search engine for prescription pricing, allowing users to input their medication and instantly compare cash-pay options across participating providers.
The inclusion of Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs—despite his campaign activities supporting Kamala Harris—highlights the administration’s focus on practical affordability over political alignment. Trump described the expansion as nearly seven times larger than the initial platform and noted it has already attracted more than 10 million visits since launch. Experts stress that while the tool primarily benefits uninsured or underinsured patients, it also empowers insured individuals by revealing potential savings through direct price comparisons.
This initiative underscores a shift toward transparency in an industry long criticized for obscuring pricing details. As President Trump stated, consumers deserve “one source where they can check whether they are getting the lowest possible price on a prescription.”