If you take Xarelto to prevent a stroke or a blood clot, the answer is reassuring: Medicare covers it. The real question for most folks is what it will cost — and in 2026, that picture is shifting in your favor.
What Xarelto treats
Xarelto (the generic name is rivaroxaban) is a blood thinner, also called an anticoagulant. Doctors prescribe it to prevent strokes and blood clots — for example in people with atrial fibrillation (AFib), or to treat and help prevent deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE). It’s a once-daily medication many people stay on long term, which is exactly why coverage and cost matter so much.
I’m here to explain the insurance side, not the medical side. Any question about whether Xarelto is right for you, your dose, or how long to take it belongs with your doctor.
Brand vs. generic
There isn’t a widely available U.S. generic for Xarelto yet, so it’s a brand-only drug for now. That matters for your wallet because generics typically sit on a plan’s lower tiers with smaller copays. Until a generic arrives, Xarelto is usually covered as a brand-name drug, which often lands it on a brand tier.
How Medicare covers Xarelto
Because Xarelto is a pill you take at home, it’s covered under Medicare Part D — your prescription drug coverage. You get Part D in one of two ways: as a standalone drug plan that pairs with Original Medicare, or built into a Medicare Advantage plan.
Original Medicare (Part A and Part B) by itself does not cover drugs you pick up at the pharmacy, so having some form of Part D is what makes coverage for Xarelto possible.
Every plan has its own formulary — the list of drugs it covers — and sorts those drugs into tiers that set your copay or coinsurance. As a brand-name drug, Xarelto is most often placed on a brand tier, which usually means a higher copay than a generic. The exact dollar amount varies from plan to plan and changes each year, so two neighbors can pay different prices for the same prescription. Our Formulary Lookup lets you confirm Xarelto is covered and see which tier it falls on, and the Drug Cost Calculator helps you estimate a full year of out-of-pocket spending.
The 2026 price negotiation and the $2,000 cap
Here’s the genuinely new part. Through Medicare Drug Price Negotiation, the government negotiated prices on the first 10 drugs, and Xarelto is one of them — with the negotiated price effective January 1, 2026.
I want to be straight about what that means at the counter: the negotiation lowers the underlying price of the drug, which is real progress, but it doesn’t set one fixed price everyone pays. What you actually owe still depends on your plan’s tier and where you stand against the yearly cap.
And that cap is the bigger protection. In 2026, Part D has a $2,000 out-of-pocket maximum for the year — the old “donut hole” coverage gap is gone. Once your out-of-pocket spending on covered drugs reaches $2,000, your covered prescriptions, including Xarelto, cost you nothing for the rest of the calendar year. For someone on a steady brand-name drug, that ceiling is predictable and easy to plan around. You can read more in the $2,000 drug cap explained. If a big bill early in the year would be hard to manage, there’s also a free option to spread that $2,000 into smoother monthly payments.
Coverage rules to expect
Even when a drug is covered, plans sometimes add rules to manage how it’s used. With Xarelto, a couple are possible:
- Prior authorization (PA): the plan must approve the drug before it’s covered. Your doctor submits medical documentation to show it’s appropriate.
- Quantity limits: the plan covers only a set amount per fill or period unless an exception is approved.
These rules vary by plan and year, so the safest move is to check the specifics of any plan you’re considering before you enroll.
Coverage exceptions and appeals
If a plan won’t cover Xarelto, places it on a high tier, or applies a rule that gets in your way, you have options. You and your prescriber can request a coverage exception — for example, to cover the drug or move it to a lower tier. Your doctor provides the supporting medical reason, and if the plan denies the request, you have appeal rights and can ask them to reconsider. You don’t have to navigate that alone; that’s part of what I help people with.
Alternatives to discuss with your doctor
If cost or coverage becomes a hurdle, it’s worth asking your doctor whether another option fits your situation. Other anticoagulants include apixaban (Eliquis) — you can read more in does Medicare cover Eliquis — and the older, lower-cost warfarin. Each works a bit differently and isn’t right for everyone, so this is strictly a conversation for you and your physician. I can tell you what your plan covers; your doctor decides what’s medically appropriate.
Questions to ask your doctor
- Is Xarelto the best anticoagulant for my situation, or is another option worth considering?
- Would a different blood thinner work as well for me at a lower cost?
- Are there reasons I should stay on Xarelto specifically?
- If my plan requires prior authorization, can you help submit the documentation?
Picking the right plan comes down to the details — which formulary covers your drugs, on what tier, and at which pharmacy. You can run the numbers yourself with the tools above, and when you’re ready, reach out to me for a no-pressure conversation about which plan covers your medications best. No hard sell — just clear answers so you know what you’ll pay.
Medical & coverage disclaimer: This article is general education — not medical advice or a guarantee of coverage. Whether a specific drug is covered, and what you’ll pay, depends on your individual Part D or Medicare Advantage plan, its formulary, and the plan year, and can change. Always confirm with your plan or a licensed agent, and talk to your doctor about your treatment.