You can get yeast infection treatment online in Montana through Bidwell Health for a $45 online visit, with no insurance billing. A Montana-licensed clinician reviews your intake during business hours and, when appropriate, sends a prescription electronically to your local pharmacy. Pharmacy pickup timing varies.
Bidwell Health serves adults physically located in Montana for supported online visits. A clinician licensed for Montana reviews the intake, and treatment is offered only when the online visit fits Bidwell Health's clinical scope.
Montana is geographically enormous with a small population. Pharmacy access is extremely uneven: Billings, Missoula, Bozeman, and Great Falls have multiple chains (Albertsons-Safeway, Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, Costco). Outside those metros, many counties are served by a single pharmacy — often an Albertsons, Smith's (Kroger), or independent. Driving 40-60 minutes to a pharmacy is routine in eastern MT and the Hi-Line.
For rural Montana residents, mail-order pharmacy is often the most practical option — Amazon Pharmacy, Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs, or your plan's mail-order service typically deliver faster than the drive to the nearest pharmacy. For in-person care, major systems are Billings Clinic (Billings), Benefis Health (Great Falls), Logan Health (Kalispell), St. Vincent Healthcare (Billings), Bozeman Health, and Providence St. Patrick (Missoula).
Bidwell Health's Montana yeast infection visit is designed for adults ages 18-64 who are Montana residents or physically located in the state at the time of the visit, who are not pregnant, not immunosuppressed, and whose symptoms fit an uncomplicated episode of vulvovaginal candidiasis: vulvar itching, thick white discharge, and external burning — typically with no fever and no pelvic or abdominal pain. If that fits your situation, the intake takes a few minutes and a clinician licensed in Montana reviews it during business hours.
Classic uncomplicated vulvovaginal candidiasis presents with some combination of vulvar itching, thick white curd-like discharge, vulvar burning, external redness and swelling, and pain with intercourse. CDC and ACOG support empirical treatment of this symptom pattern in non-pregnant adults with classic presentation and no red-flag features. Typical symptoms include:
Per the CDC STI Treatment Guidelines and ACOG, uncomplicated candidiasis in patients with classic symptoms can be treated empirically without a culture or pelvic exam.
Not every vaginal-irritation pattern is yeast, and not every yeast infection is uncomplicated. Contact dermatitis from new products, bacterial vaginosis, and trichomoniasis all mimic yeast symptoms. Recurrent infections, pregnancy, and immunosuppression each shift the management. Don't use this online yeast infection visit if any of the following applies:
If any of those apply, your primary provider, an OB/GYN, or urgent care in Montana is the right path.
Vulvovaginal itching has several possible causes beyond yeast, and each responds to different treatment. Yeast, bacterial vaginosis, trichomoniasis, contact dermatitis from products, and postmenopausal atrophic vaginitis can all present with overlapping symptoms. The distinguishing features are discharge character, odor, and recent product or partner exposure. Here's how they typically differ:
| Condition | Telltale feature | Primary treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Yeast infection (VVC) | Vulvar itching, thick white cottage-cheese discharge, no strong odor | Oral fluconazole or topical azole |
| Bacterial vaginosis | Thin grayish discharge, fishy odor (especially after sex), minimal itching | Metronidazole or clindamycin |
| Trichomoniasis | Yellow-green frothy discharge, often sexually transmitted | Metronidazole or tinidazole, partner treatment required |
| UTI | Burning during urination, urgency, frequency — no discharge | Short antibiotic course |
| Contact/allergic vulvovaginitis | Itching after new soap, detergent, lubricant, or product — no discharge | Remove trigger, consider topical steroid briefly |
| Lichen sclerosus or atrophic vaginitis | Chronic itching, thinning or white patches on vulva, postmenopausal | Topical steroid or local estrogen — in-person evaluation |
Our intake asks the specific questions needed to distinguish these. If your answers suggest something other than uncomplicated candidiasis, we'll say so and refund the visit. For BV specifically, we have a dedicated BV visit in Montana.
CDC and ACOG support two first-line treatment patterns for uncomplicated yeast infection — oral fluconazole 150 mg as a single dose, or topical clotrimazole or miconazole for 1, 3, or 7 days. Your provider picks based on your preference for oral vs topical, pregnancy status, and any drug interactions (warfarin, certain statins):
| Medication | Typical dose | Duration | Common side effects | Cash price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fluconazole (Diflucan) | 150 mg oral, single dose | 1 dose | Nausea, headache, abdominal discomfort | Paid separately at pharmacy |
| Clotrimazole (topical) | 1%, 2%, or 10% cream / suppository | 1, 3, or 7 days | Mild burning, local irritation | Varies by product and pharmacy |
| Miconazole (topical) | 2% or 4% cream / suppository | 1, 3, or 7 days | Mild burning | $8–18 OTC |
| Terconazole (topical, Rx) | 0.4% or 0.8% cream / suppository | 3 or 7 days | Local irritation | $30–60 |
Over-the-counter topicals are effective for uncomplicated candidiasis; many patients prefer the convenience of a single oral dose of fluconazole.
| Factor | Bidwell Health | Urgent care |
|---|---|---|
| Visit cost | $45 online visit; medication paid separately at pharmacy | Often higher self-pay visit cost |
| Wait time | Online clinician review | 1–3 hours in the waiting room |
| Pelvic exam? | No — empirical treatment per CDC for uncomplicated cases | Often required |
| Insurance required | No | Usually, or high cash price |
| Prescription delivery | Electronic to your pharmacy | Paper or e-prescription |
| Follow-up | Secure messaging inside the portal | Schedule a new visit |
For uncomplicated vulvovaginal candidiasis in non-pregnant adults, our clinicians typically offer oral fluconazole 150 mg single-dose as first-line when the patient prefers oral therapy and has no contraindications (liver disease, significant drug interactions like warfarin or certain statins). The rationale: one dose, high resolution rate, convenient adherence. For patients who prefer topical therapy, clotrimazole or miconazole are equally effective and available over-the-counter. We do not empirically treat patients with more than four episodes per year, first-time presentations, or any red-flag findings — those cases need in-person evaluation, culture, and potentially suppressive therapy that online care cannot safely deliver.
Once your Montana prescription is routed to your chosen pharmacy, pharmacy pickup timing varies. Fluconazole begins working within 24 hours — you should notice itching and burning starting to decrease within a day or two, with full symptom resolution typically in 3 to 7 days. Topical regimens are completed as directed (1, 3, or 7 days). If symptoms haven't improved meaningfully within 7 days, or if new symptoms develop (fever, abdominal pain, abnormal discharge), message your provider through the portal.
If your intake surfaces any contraindication — pregnancy, recurrent infection, unclear differential, or findings that suggest a different condition — we'll tell you, refund your visit fee, and direct you to the appropriate in-person option in Montana (OB/GYN, primary care, or urgent care as needed).
We treat Montana 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 Montana's largest metros. Our online yeast infection treatment is available to residents statewide, but patients in these cities most often ask how the pharmacy pickup and provider licensing works locally.
Billings patients fill at Albertsons Pharmacy, Walgreens, CVS, or Costco. Montana's rural geography means our online service eliminates driving hours that in-person urgent care would require for patients outside town. In Billings, we prescribe oral fluconazole (Diflucan) or topical antifungals as appropriate — filled after your pharmacy processes it at any Yellowstone County pharmacy. Our intake helps distinguish yeast infection from bacterial vaginosis, which uses a separate Bidwell BV visit when symptoms fit online care. Start a Billings yeast visit →
Missoula residents use Albertsons, Walgreens, or Super 1 Foods pharmacy. The University of Montana community often leans on our service for quick access during semesters. In Missoula, we prescribe oral fluconazole (Diflucan) or topical antifungals as appropriate — filled after your pharmacy processes it at any Missoula County pharmacy. Our intake helps distinguish yeast infection from bacterial vaginosis, which uses a separate Bidwell BV visit when symptoms fit online care. Start a Missoula yeast visit →
Great Falls patients fill at Albertsons, Walmart, or Smith's Food & Drug. Our providers are Montana-licensed and can treat patients across the Hi-Line and central Montana. In Great Falls, we prescribe oral fluconazole (Diflucan) or topical antifungals as appropriate — filled after your pharmacy processes it at any Cascade County pharmacy. Our intake helps distinguish yeast infection from bacterial vaginosis, which uses a separate Bidwell BV visit when symptoms fit online care. Start a Great Falls yeast visit →
Three out of four women will have a yeast infection at some point. Most are simple to treat with a single-dose oral prescription. Complete a short intake online, a licensed clinician reviews it, and your Rx is sent to your pharmacy.
Bidwell Health serves adults physically located in Montana for supported online visits. A clinician licensed for Montana 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 Montana, including Costco, Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, Albertsons, and Safeway in Billings, Missoula, and Bozeman, plus Amazon Pharmacy for rural delivery. Pick whichever is most convenient — we don't steer you to a particular one.
Between primary care providers? We also offer bridge refills for chronic medications in Montana for eligible stable, non-controlled medications. Same $45 visit model, one medication reviewed per visit, no required subscription, no controlled substances.
The online visit is $45. That covers clinician review and follow-up messaging about this visit. Medication cost is paid separately at the pharmacy. No required subscription, no insurance billing, no co-pays, no surprise bills. HSA/FSA eligible. If online treatment is not clinically appropriate, the visit fee is refunded.
Yes. Bidwell Health treats uncomplicated vulvovaginal candidiasis for Montana residents through online telehealth — vulvar itching and thick white discharge without fever or pelvic pain. A Montana-licensed clinician reviews your intake following CDC and ACOG guidelines and e-prescribes treatment if appropriate. Pregnancy, recurrent infections, immunosuppression, and first-time presentations require in-person Montana care.
A licensed clinician reviews each intake during business hours. 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. Medication cost is paid separately at your chosen pharmacy and varies by medication, pharmacy, quantity, 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 yeast infections when pregnancy, recurrent VVC (more than four episodes per year), immunosuppression, fever or pelvic pain, thin grayish fishy discharge (likely BV), yellow-green frothy discharge (likely trichomonas), or first-time presentations are involved. Those situations need in-person evaluation.
If your intake surfaces any contraindication — pregnancy, recurrent infection, or findings suggesting a different diagnosis — we decline the visit, refund your visit fee automatically, and direct you to an appropriate Montana in-person option (OB/GYN, primary care, or urgent care).
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 — Montana residents can complete a short online intake. Our licensed clinician reviews symptoms and history, and if a diagnosis of uncomplicated vulvovaginal candidiasis is appropriate, prescribes oral fluconazole to your Montana pharmacy.
If you're pregnant, have recurrent yeast infections (four or more in a year), have diabetes with poor glycemic control, are immunocompromised, or have symptoms inconsistent with yeast (fever, pelvic pain, unusual discharge), our Montana provider will refer you to in-person care.
Most people with uncomplicated yeast feel improvement within 24–48 hours of a single oral fluconazole dose. If symptoms persist beyond 7 days, follow-up is needed — we can help coordinate in-person care in Montana if that becomes necessary.
$45 online visit. Medication cost is paid separately at the pharmacy and varies by medication, pharmacy, quantity, insurance, and discount-card pricing. No required subscription, no hidden fees.
Bidwell Health serves adults physically located in Montana for supported online visits. A clinician licensed for Montana reviews the intake, and treatment is offered only when the online visit fits Bidwell Health's clinical scope.
These short guides explain how no-video visits, pharmacy pickup, and state availability work for Bidwell Health patients.