Warfarin Alternatives in Illinois
Compare generic and therapeutic alternatives to Warfarin (warfarin sodium) available at Illinois pharmacies. Save up to 80% on your prescription — no insurance required.
Top Alternatives in Illinois
Apixaban (generic Eliquis)
therapeutic
DOAC — no INR monitoring, fewer dietary restrictions, higher cost
Avg cash price: $130/mo
Rivaroxaban (generic Xarelto)
therapeutic
Once-daily DOAC — convenient, no monitoring, but more expensive
Avg cash price: $140/mo
Coumadin (brand warfarin)
brand
Brand name — same drug at 8× the cost of generic warfarin
Avg cash price: $80/mo
Illinois Prescription Assistance Programs
Illinois Medicaid (Medicaid Managed Care)
Prescription drug coverage for Illinois Medicaid (HealthChoice Illinois) enrollees including generics and formulary brand medications.
Eligibility: Low-income adults, children, pregnant women, seniors, and people with disabilities meeting income and residency requirements.
Illinois Department on Aging — Benefit Access Program
Connects eligible low-income seniors to prescription assistance programs, Medicare Extra Help enrollment, and pharmaceutical manufacturer programs.
Eligibility: Illinois residents aged 65+ or those with disabilities, with income at or below applicable thresholds. Contact the Illinois Department on Aging helpline at 800-252-8966.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is warfarin still used now that DOACs are available?
Yes — warfarin remains essential for patients with mechanical heart valves (DOACs are contraindicated), certain antiphospholipid syndrome cases, and patients who cannot afford DOACs. It requires regular INR monitoring but is extremely affordable.
How does warfarin compare to apixaban for atrial fibrillation?
DOACs like apixaban are generally preferred over warfarin for AFib due to no monitoring requirements, fewer drug and food interactions, and lower intracranial bleeding risk. Warfarin remains the choice when DOACs are contraindicated.
What foods interact with warfarin?
Foods high in Vitamin K (leafy greens, broccoli, spinach, kale) reduce warfarin's anticoagulant effect. Grapefruit, cranberry juice, and many medications also interact. Consistency of Vitamin K intake matters more than restriction.
How often do I need INR testing on warfarin?
Initially weekly during dose titration, then every 2–4 weeks once stable. Point-of-care home INR testing devices are available for patients who prefer to self-monitor.
What does generic warfarin cost through Script Unlock?
Generic warfarin is among the cheapest anticoagulants — typically $8–$12/month. Script Unlock pharmacies can provide competitive cash pricing for patients on this affordable but high-monitoring medication.