Mark Cuban: 'No one should have to choose between food, rent, or medicine'

The recently passed Inflation Reduction Act may finally start to rein in prescription drug costs by enabling Medicare to negotiate drug prices for the first time.

Billionaire Mark Cuban took action long before this by investing in Cost Plus Drugs, a company created by Alexander Oshmyansky. The online pharmacy offers prescription drugs directly to consumers at significantly marked-down prices.

“Our mission is to be the fully transparent, low-cost provider of medications for all patients,” Cuban told Yahoo Finance over email. “No one should have to choose between food, rent, or medicine.”

According to Cost Plus Drugs’ website, the online pharmacy “fills and delivers prescriptions at our cost + a fixed 15% margin." The prescriptions are then fulfilled by accredited facilities and shipped to patients nationwide, with the aim of a “seamless consumer experience.”

“By delivering transparency and low costs for drugs, we hope to make health care a little more understandable for everyone,” Cuban said.

How it works

Consumers can access Cost Plus Drugs directly on its website or through employer-sponsored programs.

To use the online pharmacy, consumers simply search for their medication on the Cost Plus Drugs website, ask their doctor to send the prescription to a pharmacy partner, and receive their medications by mail.

There are currently more than 800 of the most in-demand generic medications available, and the online pharmacy is aiming to increase to more than 1,500 generic medications within the next six months. However, it has yet to break into the brand-name market of drugs still under patent.

The company is scheduled to open a 22,000 square-foot fill-finish facility in Dallas in the fourth quarter of 2022 that is designed to “respond rapidly to drug shortages and price hikes.”

Additionally, according to the website, Cost Plus Drugs is “also working with trade name manufacturers to add both single source brands and specialty biologics to our pharmacy.”

The drug with the biggest savings through Cost Plus Drugs is Imatinib, a generic for Gleevec that’s used to treat leukemia. One tablet typically costs $2,502.50 but can be purchased through Cost Plus Drugs for just $14.40 (a difference of $2,488.10).

Other drugs with major savings include Omeprazole-Sodium Bicarbonate (a Proton-pump inhibitor), Dimethyl Fumarate (used to treat multiple sclerosis), Valcyte (an antiviral medication), and Ampyra (a multiple sclerosis drug). Together, these drugs combine for $9,384.67 in savings through Cost Plus Drugs.

Cost Plus Drugs does not currently accept insurance, though Cuban said the company is "working on being able to work with insurers while still maintaining our low pricing."