
Yes. Walgreens accepts most Aetna insurance plans, including Aetna Medicare Advantage, commercial, employer-sponsored, individual, and student health plans, but exceptions apply. What changes from plan to plan is your cost because Aetna sorts in-network pharmacies into preferred and standard tiers, and Walgreens often falls into the standard tier, depending on the specific Aetna plan and service area. Aetna's pharmacy network covers more than 65,000 locations nationwide, and for 2026 the company confirmed Walgreens is part of its MedicareA federal health insurance program for people who are 65 or older, certain younger people with disab... Advantage network.
This guide explains coverage by plan type, shows you how to check your own plan in a few minutes, and points to programs that can lower what you pay at the pharmacy counter.
Aetna divides its in-network pharmacies into two groups: preferred and standard. Both preferred and standard pharmacies are in-network, but the medication must also be covered under your plan’s formulary and meet any applicable coverage rules. The difference is price. A preferred pharmacy has agreed to lower negotiated rates, which means a lower copay or coinsurance for you, while a standard pharmacy charges more for the same medication. Medicare.gov explains this tiering for Part D drug coverage.
Aetna is a CVS Health company, and CVS Caremark manages its pharmacy benefits. For many Aetna Medicare plans, the preferred network leans toward chains such as CVS, Walmart, Kroger, Costco, Publix, Safeway, and Albertsons. Walgreens is frequently in the network for those plans but listed as standard, which is the main reason two people with Aetna can pay different amounts for the same prescription filled at different stores.
For a senior on a fixed income, that gap is not small. Filling a maintenance drug 12 times a year at a standard pharmacy instead of a preferred one can add up to real money over a year. If you are an adult child helping a parent compare options, this tier difference is one of the first things worth checking before you settle on a pharmacy.
Yes. For the 2026 plan year, Aetna confirmed that Medicare Advantage members have access to a broad pharmacy network that explicitly includes Walgreens, along with CVS, Walmart, Kroger, Albertsons, and H-E-B, according to CVS Health's 2026 Medicare Advantage announcement. Aetna offers Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug plans in 43 states plus Washington, D.C., reaching 57 million eligible beneficiaries, and estimates 82% of them can access a $0 monthly premium plan.
Inclusion in the network is not the same as the lowest price. Industry analysis from Drug Channels, run by pharmaceutical economist Adam J. Fein, Ph.D., found that for 2026 Walgreens is a preferred pharmacy in six of the eight Part D plans that use preferred networks, with about 12.7 million people enrolled in plans where Walgreens holds that preferred status. So whether your specific Aetna plan treats Walgreens as preferred depends on the plan, not on Walgreens alone.
Plan design also shifts year to year. Aetna's SilverScript Choice plan, for example, moved to an open network for 2025, where preferred and standard distinctions work differently. Jeff Fernandez, president of Aetna Medicare, said the 2026 plans were built around “access, simplicity and care that meets them where they are.” The practical takeaway for you: confirm the current-year tier for your plan rather than relying on what was true last year.
Acceptance and cost depend on the kind of Aetna plan you hold. The table below compares the major Aetna product types, whether Walgreens is generally accepted, the network status you are likely to see, and what to confirm before you fill a prescription.
| Aetna Plan Type | Walgreens Accepted? | Typical Network Status | What to Confirm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicare Advantage (MAPD) | Yes (2026) | Often standard, sometimes preferred | Whether your plan lists Walgreens as preferred, which sets your copay |
| Commercial / Employer | Generally yes | Varies by plan design | Your plan documents or member portal for tier and copay |
| Individual & Family (ACA) | Generally yes | Varies; some use a preferred structure | Whether a preferred network applies in your area |
| Medicaid (Aetna Better Health) | Sometimes | State-specific; can exclude chains | Your state's pharmacy directory before filling |
| Student Health | Yes | Broad national network | Details through your university health plan portal |
Medicaid is the category that surprises people most. Aetna Medicaid plans, sold under the Aetna Better Health brand, set narrower, state-specific networks. Aetna dropped Walgreens from its Illinois Medicaid plan effective December 1, 2020, as reported by Healthcare Finance News. Because Medicaid managed care contracts change and differ by state, a Walgreens that takes Aetna Medicaid in one state may not in another.
You can verify coverage in about five minutes, and doing so before you fill a prescription is the surest way to avoid an unexpected price at the register. Follow these steps:
A few terms come up over and over in Aetna's plan documents. Knowing them makes every pharmacy decision easier.
If your local Walgreens is in-network but listed as standard, you have a few ways to bring your costs down without losing coverage.
Many Aetna plans steer members toward CVS, since CVS is frequently a preferred pharmacy and Aetna is part of CVS Health. For maintenance medications, the CVS Caremark Mail Service Pharmacy delivers a 90-day or 100-day supply to your door, often at a lower price than retail. Other chains that commonly appear in Aetna's preferred networks include Walmart, Kroger, and Albertsons, so comparing two or three nearby preferred options is worth the few minutes it takes.
Cost relief can also come from programs rather than pharmacies. Seniors with limited income may qualify for Medicare Savings Programs and Extra Help, and Extra Help (the Part D Low-Income Subsidy) reduces prescription costs by an average of about $5,700 a year for those who qualify.
Walgreens is included in Aetna’s broad 2026 Medicare Advantage pharmacy network, so coverage is rarely the real question. Cost is. The same prescription can carry a different price depending on whether your plan treats Walgreens as preferred or standard, and that label can change from one plan year to the next. As of 2026, Aetna lists Walgreens in its Medicare Advantage network, but it is often a standard pharmacy, and Medicaid networks differ by state.
Before your next refill, take five minutes to confirm your plan's tier through the Aetna member portal or the number on your ID card, and compare a nearby preferred pharmacy.
For additional ways to reduce medication expenses, read our guide to prescription medication discounts for disabled individuals, including Medicare, Medicaid, state assistance, nonprofit, and manufacturer programs.
Usually not. Because Aetna is a CVS Health company, CVS is often a preferred pharmacy with the lowest copays, while Walgreens is frequently a standard pharmacy on Medicare plans. Both are typically in-network, but the standard tier at Walgreens generally costs more for the same drug. Check your own plan to confirm, since tiers vary.
Yes. Aetna confirmed that its 2026 Medicare Advantage pharmacy network includes Walgreens, alongside CVS, Walmart, Kroger, Albertsons, and H-E-B. Whether Walgreens is preferred or standard under your specific plan determines your copay, so verify your plan's status before filling a prescription.
Most likely because your plans classify Walgreens differently. One plan may list Walgreens as preferred and another as standard, and the standard tier carries a higher copay. Different drug formulary tiers and plan designs can also explain the gap, even when both of you use the same Walgreens.
Often yes. Many Aetna plans allow a 90-day supply at retail pharmacies, including Walgreens, for maintenance medications. The lowest price for a 90-day or 100-day fill is frequently through CVS Caremark Mail Service Pharmacy. Compare the retail and mail-order cost for your drug before deciding.
If Walgreens is out of network, you usually pay full price up front and may file a claim for limited reimbursement, if your plan allows it. The better move is to switch to a preferred in-network pharmacy, such as CVS, or to use Aetna's mail-order service for regular medications.

