My Prescription Ran Out — What Do I Do Now?
You reached for the bottle and it was empty. You checked the label and the refills say zero. Your doctor's office is closed, or maybe you moved last year and never found a new primary care provider. Your heart rate ticks up a little. What now?
First, take a breath. For the vast majority of chronic, non-controlled medications, running out for a day or two is uncomfortable but not dangerous. There is a clear sequence of steps that resolves most situations within hours — and almost none of them require a trip to the emergency room. Here's the practical playbook.
Step 1: Call Your Pharmacy First
This is the single most useful action you can take, and almost nobody does it. Most retail pharmacies — CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Kroger, HEB, and most independents — have an internal policy for what's commonly called a courtesy fill, emergency supply, or good-faith dispense. The rules vary by state and by chain, but the general pattern is:
- You must have previously filled that exact medication at that pharmacy (so they have your history on record)
- The medication must be non-controlled (no opioids, ADHD stimulants, benzodiazepines, or testosterone)
- The dose must be stable — not something you recently changed
- The pharmacist may release anywhere from 3 days to a full month while you work on getting a new prescription
Some states codify this in law. According to a policy overview maintained by the National Alliance of State Pharmacy Associations (NASPA), more than 40 states now allow pharmacist-initiated emergency refills for chronic medications, though authorized supply length varies from a few days to 90 days.
Call the pharmacy where your medication is already on file, explain that you've run out and can't immediately reach your prescriber, and ask specifically: "Can you dispense an emergency supply under state pharmacy rules?" It costs nothing to ask. If the answer is yes, you've just bought yourself time to handle the rest of this calmly.
Step 2: Try Your Old Doctor — But Know the Odds
If you still live near your former primary care provider, a phone call to the office is worth a try. Many practices will call in a short refill to bridge you to your next appointment. But there are three common situations where this doesn't work:
- You moved and crossed state lines. A physician licensed only in your old state generally cannot legally prescribe to a pharmacy in your new state. Most will decline, and it's not a case of being unkind — it's licensure law.
- You haven't been seen in more than a year. Many practices have an internal policy that they will not refill without a recent visit. The timeline is usually 12 months, sometimes 18.
- Your doctor retired or the practice closed. Your records may be in escrow somewhere, but no one is writing prescriptions from that office anymore.
If any of these apply to you, skip ahead — calling repeatedly won't change the answer.
Step 3: Understand Why the ER and Urgent Care Are Usually the Wrong Call
When the pharmacy option fails and the old doctor is unreachable, a lot of people default to urgent care or, if it's after hours, the emergency room. This is almost always a bad use of money and time for a routine refill.
Urgent care
Cash-pay visits run $150–$300 before you pick up the prescription. Many urgent care clinicians are uncomfortable refilling chronic medications — particularly antidepressants, blood pressure drugs, or anything requiring stable lab monitoring — without access to your records. You may wait 45 minutes in the lobby only to be told they'll give you a 7-day supply and need you to follow up with a primary care doctor anyway.
The emergency room
The ER is worse. A basic ER visit can cost $1,200–$3,000, and EDs are explicitly designed to stabilize emergencies, not refill chronic meds. They will sometimes help, but they will not hide their frustration at being asked. The CDC's National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey consistently shows that prescription-related visits rank among the least appropriate uses of emergency services.
If your only reason to visit the ER is because you ran out of lisinopril or Zoloft — please don't. A telehealth visit costs 1/30th of the ER trip and solves the problem in under an hour.
Step 4: Know When It Actually Is an Emergency
A small number of medications can't safely be skipped, and sudden discontinuation can be genuinely dangerous. If you've run out of any of the following and can't get a refill within 24–48 hours, treat it as urgent:
- Anti-seizure medications (levetiracetam, lamotrigine, phenytoin, valproate) — abrupt stopping can trigger breakthrough seizures
- Heart-rhythm or heart-failure drugs (beta-blockers, certain antiarrhythmics) — rebound tachycardia or hypertension is possible
- Long-term corticosteroids (prednisone, hydrocortisone for adrenal insufficiency) — stopping can trigger adrenal crisis
- Insulin or other diabetes medications if you are type 1 diabetic or insulin-dependent
- Asthma rescue medication if you're actively symptomatic and have no inhaler
- Anticoagulants (warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban) if prescribed for a mechanical heart valve or recent DVT
If any of these describe your situation, go to urgent care or the ER — the cost is secondary. For everything else on the typical primary care medication list, you have time to choose a smarter route.
Step 5: A Decision Tree for What You Take
Ask yourself three questions in order.
1. Is it controlled? (Look at the label — "CII", "CIII", "CIV". Adderall, Xanax, Ativan, Klonopin, testosterone, tramadol, oxycodone, and others.) If yes, telehealth cannot help and a pharmacy emergency fill is rarely allowed. You need an in-person evaluation. Call your state's prescription drug monitoring helpline or see a primary care or psychiatric provider.
2. Is it for a new diagnosis or a dose that's being actively adjusted? If yes — for example, you were just started on a new antidepressant last month and the dose is still being titrated — you need your original prescriber or a new full evaluation, not a refill.
3. Is it a stable, chronic medication you've been taking at the same dose for 3+ months? If yes (thyroid, blood pressure, cholesterol, metformin, stable SSRI, inhalers, etc.), a telehealth bridge-refill visit is usually the fastest and cheapest path. The clinician reviews your history, confirms there are no red flags, and sends a 30–90 day supply to your pharmacy.
Step 6: How a Telehealth Bridge Visit Solves Most Cases
For the broad middle category — stable, non-controlled chronic medications — a telehealth bridge-refill visit exists specifically for this problem. You fill out a detailed questionnaire with your medication name, dose, last fill date, and recent vitals or lab results if you have them. A licensed clinician reviews it, confirms your medication is appropriate to continue, and electronically sends a prescription to whichever pharmacy you choose.
At Bidwell, the visit is $45 flat, reviewed typically within a few hours during business hours, and the prescription lands at the pharmacy electronically — usually ready for pickup within 30–60 minutes of the pharmacy receiving it. We cover common medications like lisinopril, levothyroxine, metformin, atorvastatin, sertraline, lexapro, albuterol, and amlodipine.
The bridge visit isn't a replacement for primary care. It's what the name suggests — a bridge that covers you for 30 to 90 days while you find a new PCP, get back from a move, or recover from an insurance gap. We're transparent about the limits, and if something in your history suggests you need an in-person workup rather than a refill, the clinician will tell you so.
What to Have Ready Before You Start
Whether you call your pharmacy, urgent care, or start an online visit, the same information speeds everything up:
- The exact medication name, strength, and dose frequency
- The pharmacy name, address, and phone number
- Your last fill date (check the pharmacy label or app)
- The condition the medication is treating
- Any recent labs or vitals — a home blood pressure reading for a BP med, a recent A1C for diabetes, a recent TSH for thyroid
- A list of your other current medications
This is the same information a new prescriber would want, and having it in one place turns a stressful scramble into a 10-minute process.
The Calmer Takeaway
Running out of a prescription feels worse than it usually is. For most chronic medications, you have more time than your anxiety is telling you, and you have more options than the ER. Call the pharmacy first, know which of your medications is actually time-sensitive, and treat the bridge-refill visit as a normal tool in the toolbox — not a last resort.
If you want to skip the detective work, a bridge visit takes about 10 minutes to fill out and costs less than a typical copay.