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Urinary Health · April 2026 · 5 min read

Can you get a UTI prescription without seeing a doctor?

Short answer: yes — if "seeing a doctor" means sitting in a waiting room. You can't legally get antibiotics from a vending machine, but you can absolutely be evaluated and prescribed through async telehealth without ever physically meeting your provider. Here's how that actually works, and where it doesn't.

What async telehealth is (and isn't)

"Async" means you fill out a structured clinical intake on your phone or computer. A licensed medical provider — usually a physician or nurse practitioner — reads it, evaluates your symptoms against validated clinical criteria, and decides whether to prescribe. You and the provider never need to be on a call at the same time. Most async UTI visits are reviewed within a few hours.

It's different from a video visit (where you're on camera with the provider) and different from a chatbot (which is software, not a clinician). Async telehealth is real clinical decision-making by a real licensed human, just not in person and not in real-time.

Why it works for UTIs specifically

UTIs are one of the best-studied conditions for async care. A 2025 study in JAMA Network Open compared async-treated and in-person-treated uncomplicated UTIs and found equivalent clinical outcomes, with significantly higher patient satisfaction and lower total cost in the async arm. That's because UTI diagnosis is heavily history-based: the pattern of symptoms (burning, urgency, frequency), combined with risk factors and a safety screen, is often enough for a confident diagnosis in otherwise-healthy patients.

What it can't treat

Async isn't appropriate for every UTI. You need to see someone in person if you have:

A well-designed intake form will identify these cases and route you to in-person care rather than prescribe.

What you'll pay

At Bidwell Health, a full async UTI visit is $45. That includes the clinical review and the prescription. No subscriptions, no insurance, no follow-up billing. Most urgent care visits for a UTI run $150–$250 before insurance; a primary care visit plus copay is often similar.

Is it safe?

For appropriately selected cases: yes. The risk of async care is that a complicated case gets treated like an uncomplicated one. A well-designed intake form is the entire safety mechanism — it has to screen aggressively, and reject cases that need more workup. If a service is prescribing antibiotics to anyone who clicks the button, that's not async care, that's malpractice with extra steps.

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Clinically reviewed by our Chief Clinical Officer, an AANP board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner.
Last reviewed: April 15, 2026
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