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TrumpRx Adds Generic Drugs, With Mark Cuban, GoodRx and Amazon
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By The New York Times
Published 30 minutes ago on
May 19, 2026

President Donald Trump departs after delivering remarks during a healthcare event the White House campus in Washington, on Monday, May 18, 2026. Trump announced that TrumpRx, a government website introduced in February, would begin offering generic medications directly to consumers. From left: Dr. Mehmet Oz, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Mark Cuban. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)

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President Donald Trump said Monday that his online drugstore, TrumpRx, was adding more than 600 generic medications to its direct-to-consumer offerings.

At an event at the White House announcing the expansion, Trump was joined by representatives from several companies that will work with the administration on the initiative. Among them was Mark Cuban, the billionaire entrepreneur who has been one of the president’s most vocal political critics. Cuban runs an online pharmacy that specializes in offering low prices for generic drugs.

“We have the same thing, one thing, in common: We want to make people better, and keep them wealthy,” Trump said to Cuban.

Cuban, who opposed the president’s reelection campaign in 2024, on Monday praised what he called a “special partnership,” noting that Americans across the political spectrum want lower drug prices.

TrumpRx, a government website introduced in February, does not sell drugs directly. It is meant to help Americans find the lowest prices for their medications. The prices listed there are for people paying with their own money, though the site advises them to check whether they can pay less by going through insurance.

The other partners announced Monday are Amazon’s pharmacy business and GoodRx, a site that allows consumers to compare prices for their drugs.

With prices rising because of the war in Iran, Trump has been counting on his drug pricing policies to appeal to Americans who are concerned about affordability.

Until now, TrumpRx had mostly listed brand-name products, including the hugely popular obesity drugs and treatments for infertility. Before the announcement Monday, the site listed 74 drugs; all are sold by major brand-name drugmakers, though some have lost patent protection and face generic competition.

About 90% of Americans’ prescriptions are generic drugs. The 602 added to the site Monday include widely used prescriptions like blood pressure medications, antibiotics and statins. Many have prices under $5.

On some of the product pages on the website, users can now pull up a map of their neighborhood that allows them to compare prices across different pharmacies.

Under the new partnership, the TrumpRx site will in some cases direct users to the Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Co. Cuban’s online pharmacy has grown popular by finding a niche with certain generic drugs that, because of pricing games behind the scenes, carry high out-of-pocket costs if people use their insurance.

It began operating in 2022 and now offers more than 2,300 medications. The company marks up drugs by a relatively modest 15% and sends prescriptions to patients through the mail. Before Monday’s announcement, Cuban had repeatedly praised TrumpRx, saying he was open to any good ideas that save Americans money on their prescriptions.

At Monday’s event, a reporter reminded Trump that Cuban had endorsed Kamala Harris in her unsuccessful presidential run in 2024. In response, Trump turned to Cuban and said: “Well, you made a mistake. It was a big mistake.” Cuban, who like the president is a former reality television star, laughed.

Trump added that he has long respected Cuban and that Cuban’s company “is going to do a lot of business with this.”

In recent months, Trump has struck a series of deals with manufacturers, exempting them from his threatened tariffs in exchange for their lowering some of their prices and offering certain drugs directly to consumers through TrumpRx.

A relatively small share of Americans stand to directly benefit from these moves, such as certain older people on Medicare who will soon qualify to pay $50 a month for obesity drugs. But for many Americans struggling with a range of surging costs, the president’s drug pricing moves have not translated into direct savings.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Rebecca Robbins/Doug Mills
c. 2026 The New York Times Company

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