You can get UTI antibiotics online in Connecticut through Bidwell Health for a $45 online visit, with no insurance billing. A Connecticut-licensed clinician reviews your intake 7 days a week, including weekends, and when appropriate, sends a prescription electronically to your local pharmacy. Pharmacy pickup timing varies.
Bidwell Health serves adults physically located in Connecticut for supported online visits. A clinician licensed for Connecticut reviews the intake, and treatment is offered only when the online visit fits Bidwell Health's clinical scope.
Connecticut is compact, which means excellent pharmacy coverage statewide: CVS (headquartered in Woonsocket RI, dense presence statewide), Walgreens, Rite Aid, Stop & Shop, and Big Y all carry prescriptions. Most CT residents live within 10 minutes of multiple pharmacy options. Many CT residents commute to NYC — we can only prescribe while you're physically in CT at the time of the visit, so keep this in mind if you're starting a visit during your workday.
Major health systems for in-person care: Yale New Haven Health, Hartford HealthCare, Trinity Health of New England, and Nuvance Health. Connecticut's Data Privacy Act (CTDPA, 2023) gives state residents additional privacy controls over their data — we comply with CTDPA as part of our standard privacy posture.
Bidwell Health's Connecticut UTI visit is designed for adults ages 18-64 who are Connecticut residents or physically located in the state at the time of the visit, and whose symptoms fit an uncomplicated lower urinary tract infection: burning with urination, urgency, frequency, or mild suprapubic pressure — typically starting within the last few days, without fever, without back or flank pain, and without visible blood in the urine. If that fits your situation, the intake takes a few minutes and a clinician licensed in Connecticut reviews it 7 days a week, including weekends.
A classic uncomplicated lower UTI presents with some combination of burning or pain with urination (dysuria), sudden urinary urgency, frequent small voids, mild suprapubic pressure, and cloudy or strong-smelling urine. IDSA 2024 guidelines support empirical antibiotic treatment for this symptom pattern in non-pregnant adults. Typical symptoms include:
Per IDSA guidelines, patients presenting with at least two of these classic symptoms have a greater than 90% likelihood of true UTI and can be treated empirically without a urine culture.
An uncomplicated lower UTI stays in the bladder. When infection moves up to the kidneys (pyelonephritis) or when other factors change the treatment pathway, you need in-person care — a urine culture, physical exam, and sometimes IV antibiotics or imaging that can't be done through a form. Don't use this online visit if you have any of the following:
If any of those apply, urgent care, your primary provider, or emergency care in Connecticut is the right path, depending on severity.
Burning on urination isn't always a UTI. Yeast infection, bacterial vaginosis, trichomoniasis, other STIs, and kidney infection (pyelonephritis) can all mimic lower-UTI symptoms but require different treatment. The distinguishing features — type of discharge, odor, itching, and systemic symptoms like fever or flank pain — determine the correct diagnosis. Here's how they typically differ:
| Condition | Telltale feature | Primary treatment |
|---|---|---|
| UTI (bladder) | Burning with urination, urgency, frequency — no discharge | Short antibiotic course |
| Yeast infection | External itching, thick white discharge, no burning with urination | Fluconazole or topical antifungal |
| Bacterial vaginosis | Thin grayish discharge, fishy odor, minimal itching | Metronidazole or clindamycin |
| STI (chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomonas) | Abnormal discharge, recently symptomatic partner, atypical symptoms | Requires testing; treated per CDC STI guidelines |
| Kidney infection (pyelonephritis) | Fever, flank pain, nausea — systemic symptoms | In-person care, sometimes IV antibiotics |
Our intake asks the specific questions needed to distinguish these. If your answers suggest something other than an uncomplicated UTI, we'll say so and refund the visit. For yeast or BV specifically, we have dedicated yeast and BV visits in Connecticut.
IDSA 2024 guidelines list three first-line antibiotics for uncomplicated lower UTI in non-pregnant adults: nitrofurantoin (Macrobid), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim), and fosfomycin (Monurol). Your provider selects based on allergies, drug interactions, and local E. coli resistance patterns. Fluoroquinolones are reserved for complicated cases per FDA boxed warnings:
| Medication | Typical dose | Duration | Common side effects | Cash price (course) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrofurantoin (Macrobid) | 100 mg twice daily | 5 days | Nausea, headache, dark urine | Varies by pharmacy |
| Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim DS) | 160/800 mg twice daily | 3 days | Rash (rare), photosensitivity, sulfa allergy | Varies by pharmacy |
| Fosfomycin (Monurol) | 3 g single dose | 1 dose | Mild diarrhea, headache | Varies by pharmacy |
Broader-spectrum antibiotics are reserved for complicated cases and are not used as first-line treatment for uncomplicated lower UTI. Bidwell Health focuses on guideline-supported first-line options when online care is appropriate.
| Factor | Bidwell Health | Urgent care |
|---|---|---|
| Visit cost | $45 online visit; medication paid separately at pharmacy | Often higher cash price for urgent care or retail clinics |
| Wait time | Online clinician review | 1–3 hours in the waiting room |
| Insurance required | No | Usually, or high cash price |
| Time off work | 3 minutes from your phone | Half day, typically |
| Prescription delivery | Electronic to your pharmacy | Paper or e-prescription |
| Follow-up | Secure messaging inside the portal | Schedule a new visit |
For uncomplicated lower UTIs in non-pregnant adults, our clinicians typically prefer narrow, first-line options such as nitrofurantoin (Macrobid) when they are clinically appropriate. The reasoning: Macrobid concentrates in the urinary tract with minimal systemic absorption, which limits unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure. If a patient has a documented allergy, interaction, or safety factor that makes one option inappropriate, the clinician chooses another guideline-supported treatment based on the intake.
Once your Connecticut prescription is routed to your chosen pharmacy, pharmacy pickup timing varies. Start the course as directed and finish the full prescription — even if symptoms clear up after 24 hours. Stopping early raises the risk of recurrence and antibiotic resistance. If symptoms haven't improved within 48 hours, or if new symptoms appear (fever, back pain, nausea, vaginal discharge), message your provider through the portal. We review portal messages throughout the day.
If your intake surfaces any contraindication — red flags, pregnancy, recurrent UTI, or an unclear differential — we'll tell you, refund your visit fee, and direct you to the appropriate in-person option in Connecticut. You won't pay for care you shouldn't receive through online telehealth.
We treat Connecticut residents in every ZIP code — urban, suburban, and rural. Your pharmacy is any licensed pharmacy in the state, so you fill the prescription wherever is closest.
Below: specific detail for Connecticut's largest metros. Our online UTI treatment is available to residents statewide, but patients in these cities most often ask how the pharmacy pickup and provider licensing works locally.
Bridgeport, Fairfield, and Trumbull residents fill at Stop & Shop, CVS, Walgreens, or ShopRite pharmacy. Connecticut has one of the most experienced APRN scopes of practice in the country — our providers can treat you independently. In Bridgeport, we prescribe a short antibiotic course (nitrofurantoin, cephalexin, or TMP-SMX) — filled after your pharmacy processes it at any Fairfield County pharmacy. Our intake screens for red-flag symptoms (fever, flank pain, pregnancy, recurrent infection) that require in-person evaluation — if any surface, we refund and refer you. Start a Bridgeport UTI visit →
New Haven — including Yale University and the Elm City neighborhoods — has CVS, Walgreens, and Stop & Shop pharmacy options within minutes. Pharmacy pickup timing varies. In New Haven, we prescribe a short antibiotic course (nitrofurantoin, cephalexin, or TMP-SMX) — filled after your pharmacy processes it at any South Central CT pharmacy. Our intake screens for red-flag symptoms (fever, flank pain, pregnancy, recurrent infection) that require in-person evaluation — if any surface, we refund and refer you. Start a New Haven UTI visit →
Hartford and West Hartford patients use CVS (headquartered in CT), Walgreens, or Stop & Shop. Our Connecticut-licensed clinicians can treat you across the capital region. In Hartford, we prescribe a short antibiotic course (nitrofurantoin, cephalexin, or TMP-SMX) — filled after your pharmacy processes it at any Hartford County pharmacy. Our intake screens for red-flag symptoms (fever, flank pain, pregnancy, recurrent infection) that require in-person evaluation — if any surface, we refund and refer you. Start a Hartford UTI visit →
Most uncomplicated UTIs can be safely treated through online telehealth. You fill out a short clinical intake, a licensed clinician reviews your case 7 days a week, including weekends, and if treatment is appropriate, a prescription is sent directly to your chosen pharmacy.
Bidwell Health serves adults physically located in Connecticut for supported online visits. A clinician licensed for Connecticut reviews the intake, and treatment is offered only when the online visit fits Bidwell Health's clinical scope.
We send prescriptions to any licensed pharmacy in Connecticut, including CVS (headquartered in Rhode Island but dominant in CT), Walgreens, Stop & Shop pharmacy, Walmart, and Costco. Pick whichever is most convenient — we don't steer you to a particular one.
Between primary care providers? We also offer 90-day bridge refills for chronic medications in Connecticut — SSRIs and SNRIs, antihypertensives, statins, levothyroxine, asthma controllers, GERD meds, and others. A bridge refill covers non-controlled medications you've been stable on for at least three months. Same $45 visit model, one medication per visit, no required subscription, no controlled substances.
The online visit is $45. That covers licensed clinician review, your electronic prescription if clinically appropriate, and any follow-up messaging about this visit. No required subscription, no insurance billing, no co-pays, no surprise bills. HSA/FSA eligible. If we can't safely treat your case through online telehealth, your visit fee is refunded automatically.
Yes. Bidwell Health treats uncomplicated lower UTIs for Connecticut residents through online telehealth — burning with urination, urgency, and frequency without fever or back pain. A Connecticut-licensed clinician reviews your intake, applies IDSA guidelines, and e-prescribes antibiotics if appropriate. Male patients, recurrent UTI, pregnancy, fever, or flank pain require in-person Connecticut care.
A licensed clinician reviews each intake 7 days a week, including weekends. When treatment is appropriate, your prescription is e-prescribed to your chosen pharmacy. Pharmacy pickup timing varies. Weekend and holiday turnaround can run longer.
The online visit is $45. Antibiotics are paid separately at your Connecticut pharmacy and vary by medication, quantity, pharmacy, insurance, and discount-card pricing. No insurance billing, no required subscription.
Every intake is reviewed by a licensed U.S. provider. Clinician credentials are public, independently verifiable, and matched to the state where you are requesting care.
We don't treat UTIs when any of the following apply: fever over 100.4°F, flank or back pain (possible kidney infection), visible blood in urine, nausea or vomiting, pregnancy, recurrent UTI, history of stones or urologic surgery, immunosuppression, or male patients. Those situations require in-person evaluation and often a urine culture.
If your intake surfaces any contraindication — red flags, pregnancy, recurrent UTI, or an unclear differential — we decline the visit, refund your visit fee automatically, and direct you to an appropriate in-person Connecticut option (urgent care, primary care, or emergency care as needed).
No. Bidwell Health is cash-pay only. The visit fee covers the clinical review and, if appropriate, the prescription. You can pay with HSA/FSA funds. Because we don't bill insurance, your visit doesn't appear on your explanation of benefits or family insurance claims — which many patients prefer for privacy reasons.
Yes. Bidwell Health serves Connecticut through online telehealth. A licensed clinician reviews your intake and sends a prescription to your chosen Connecticut pharmacy if treatment is appropriate.
We can route prescriptions to any Connecticut-licensed pharmacy, including CVS, Walgreens, Stop & Shop, ShopRite, Big Y, Price Chopper, and most local independents. You pick the one that's most convenient for you.
No. We treat uncomplicated lower UTIs in otherwise healthy adults. If you have fever, back or flank pain, are pregnant, or have recurrent UTIs (more than three in a year), the clinician may recommend in-person care in Connecticut.
$45 online visit. Medication cost is paid separately at the pharmacy and varies by medication, pharmacy, quantity, insurance, and discount-card pricing. No insurance billing, no required subscription.
Yes. Bidwell Health clinicians are licensed for care in Connecticut. Credentials are independently verifiable through the relevant state licensing board.
These short guides explain how no-video visits, pharmacy pickup, and state availability work for Bidwell Health patients.