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Does Target Accept OTC Cards? A Clear Answer for Medicare Members

Written By: Nathan Justice
Reviewed By: William Rivers
Published: July 10, 2026
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No, Target does not accept OTC cards. If you have a Medicare Advantage over-the-counter benefit card, it will be declined at Target registers and on Target.com, because Target has not connected its checkout system to the OTC benefit networks that process these cards. This matters more than it might seem. About 66% of individual Medicare Advantage plans offer an OTC benefit in 2026, according to KFF's analysis of CMS data, and a large share of that money goes unspent each year.

Below, we explain exactly why the card fails at Target, where it does work, and how to make sure your allowance does not expire unused. 

Key Takeaways

  • Target declines OTC cards: Target registers and Target.com cannot process Medicare OTC benefit cards from any major network, so the transaction fails at checkout.
  • CVS inside Target is excluded too: The CVS pharmacies located inside Target stores cannot redeem OTC benefits, even though standalone CVS stores can.
  • FSA and HSA still work: Target accepts Flexible Spending Account and Health Savings Account cards for eligible medical items, just not OTC benefit cards.
  • Plenty of stores accept OTC: Standalone CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Rite Aid, Kroger, and Dollar General widely accept Medicare OTC benefit cards in 2026.
  • Billions go unused yearly: Only about 30% of Medicare Advantage members use their OTC benefit, leaving close to $5 billion unspent each year.
  • Check before you shop: Your plan's catalog or member app lists every approved store and product, which prevents a declined card at the register.

Does Target Accept OTC Cards in 2026?

Target does not accept OTC benefit cards as payment in any store or online. When you swipe a Medicare OTC card at a Target lane, the point-of-sale system cannot read the restricted-spend technology these cards use, so the payment is declined. Target's official accepted payment options list does not include OTC benefit cards.

This holds true across every major OTC network. Cards run by the OTC Network (InComm Healthcare), Optum/Solutran (the S3 card), and NationsBenefits all fail at Target checkout. Target simply has not built the backend connection that lets a register verify each item's eligibility against an approved product list and deduct only the approved amount.

It is worth correcting a common piece of outdated information here. Some older directories and AI-generated summaries still list Target as a participating OTC retailer. That information is wrong as of 2026. If a source tells you to bring your Medicare OTC card to Target, treat it with caution and verify against your plan's own retailer list.

Why Do People Think Target Takes OTC Cards?

The confusion comes mostly from the CVS pharmacy counter inside Target. CVS Health acquired Target's pharmacy and clinic business in 2015, so the pharmacies operating inside Target stores are owned and run by CVS. Because CVS is a major OTC benefit participant, shoppers reasonably assume the CVS counter inside Target can process an OTC card. It cannot.

CVS states this directly. According to CVS's own OTC benefits guidance, in-store OTC redemption (its CVS Flex Benefits program, formerly OTC Health Solutions) is not available at CVS locations inside Target or Schnucks supermarkets. A standalone CVS down the street will take your card. The identical-looking CVS counter inside Target will not.

A second source of confusion is the difference between healthcare card types. Target does accept FSA and HSA cards, which also cover many over-the-counter medical products. Directories that lump FSA, HSA, and Medicare OTC cards together create the false impression that Target handles all of them. It does not. The Medicare OTC benefit card is the one that gets declined.

Which Stores Accept OTC Cards and Which Do Not?

Acceptance depends on which administrator manages your plan's benefit, but the major national chains take most OTC cards. The table below shows where your Medicare OTC benefit card works, where it does not, and the catch to watch for at each retailer.

RetailerOTC Card StatusWhat to Know
TargetNot acceptedRegisters and Target.com cannot process OTC benefit cards. FSA and HSA cards are accepted instead.
CVS inside TargetNot acceptedOwned by CVS, but in-store OTC redemption is blocked at these locations.
Standalone CVSAcceptedLook for blue-tag items. Tell the cashier you are using an OTC benefit before scanning.
WalgreensAcceptedWorks in store and online, and can be combined with store rewards.
WalmartAcceptedWidely accepted for eligible health and wellness items in store.
Rite AidAcceptedAccepted in store for approved OTC products.
Kroger and affiliatesAcceptedIncludes Fred Meyer, Ralphs, and King Soopers.
Dollar GeneralAcceptedA practical option in rural areas; accepts major networks like the OTC Network.

Always confirm first. Acceptance can vary by plan and by individual store. Check the phone number or website on the back of your card before a shopping trip.

How OTC Benefit Cards Actually Work

An OTC benefit card is a prepaid card funded by a Medicare Advantage plan that you can spend only on an approved list of health items. Understanding the mechanics explains why some stores process it and Target does not. Here are the key terms.

OTC benefit card: A preloaded card, funded monthly or quarterly by your Medicare Advantage plan, restricted to plan-approved health and wellness products. Unused balances usually do not roll over.

OTC network administrator: The third-party company (such as InComm Healthcare, Optum/Solutran, or NationsBenefits) that issues the card and manages the list of participating stores.

Restricted-spend technology: The system that checks the Universal Product Code (UPC) of each item against an approved list and deducts only the eligible amount. A store needs this integration to accept the card, and Target does not have it.

At a participating retailer, the register talks to the administrator's database during checkout. Eligible items like aspirin or bandages are deducted from your OTC balance. Ineligible items like cosmetics or electronics are not, so you pay for those with another method. Target's checkout cannot run this verification step at all, which is why the whole OTC card is rejected rather than just the ineligible items.

How to Use Your OTC Card Without Getting Declined

A declined card at the register is avoidable. Follow these five steps to spend your Medicare OTC benefit smoothly and avoid leaving money on the table.

  1. Find your administrator. Look at the back of your card or your plan's welcome packet to identify whether your benefit runs through the OTC Network, Optum/Solutran, NationsBenefits, or CVS.
  2. Pull up your store list. Use your plan's member app or website to see the exact retailers that accept your specific card. Do not rely on general directories.
  3. Pick a confirmed retailer. Choose a standalone CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, or another store on your plan's list rather than Target.
  4. Check item eligibility. Match your shopping list to your plan's OTC catalog, since approved categories vary. At CVS, look for blue-tag items.
  5. Use the pharmacy counter. Pay at the pharmacy counter rather than self-checkout, and tell the cashier you are using an OTC benefit before items are scanned.

What Can You Buy With an OTC Card?

OTC cards cover everyday medical necessities that do not require a prescription. The exact catalog varies by plan, but most programs cover the same core categories. Common eligible items include:

  • Pain relief: aspirin, ibuprofen, acetaminophen, and topical muscle rubs.
  • Cold and allergy: antihistamines, cough drops, decongestants, and nasal sprays.
  • First aid: bandages, antibiotic ointments, gauze, and medical tape.
  • Digestive health: antacids, laxatives, fiber supplements, and gas relief.
  • Oral care: toothpaste, toothbrushes, denture cleaner, and floss.
  • Vitamins and supplements: multivitamins, calcium, and joint support.
  • Medical equipment: blood pressure monitors, compression socks, canes, and thermometers.

OTC cards generally cannot buy cosmetics, non-FDA-approved alternative medicines, or general household goods, unless your plan specifically adds a grocery or utility benefit. When fall risk is part of the picture, some of these covered items could connect to broader safety planning, such as medical alert systems for seniors.

Alternatives if You Prefer Shopping at Target

You can still buy health products at Target, just not with your OTC benefit card. Target accepts FSA and HSA cards for eligible over-the-counter medical items, and its website has a dedicated FSA/HSA-eligible section to make those purchases easier. If you have one of those accounts through an employer or private plan, you can use it for many of the same products an OTC card would cover.

You can also stretch your dollars with the Target Circle rewards program. Pairing store sales with manufacturer coupons can lower your out-of-pocket cost on health items you would otherwise buy with an OTC card elsewhere. The practical approach for most members is simple: spend the Medicare OTC card at a participating store like Walgreens or a standalone CVS, then use FSA, HSA, or Circle savings for anything extra you pick up at Target.

Why This Matters: Billions in OTC Benefits Go Unused

Knowing where your card works is not a minor detail. It is the difference between using your benefit and losing it. Only about 30% of Medicare Advantage members make full use of their OTC benefit, which leaves close to $5 billion unspent every year, according to data from the Consumer Healthcare Products Association reported by Newsweek.

A declined card at a major store is a real reason people give up. As one Medicare advisory team put it, the benefits are difficult enough to use that billions of dollars go unspent year after year, money that members effectively already paid for through their plans. A single bad checkout experience at a store like Target can be enough to make someone stop trying.

The benefit is also shrinking, which raises the stakes on spending what you have. The share of Medicare Advantage enrollees with an OTC benefit fell to 68% in 2026 from 79% in 2025, per KFF, and average standalone monthly limits dropped about 13% to roughly $23, according to Milliman's 2026 analysis. With less money loaded and fewer plans offering it, every dollar counts.

The Bottom Line on Target and OTC Cards

Target does not accept OTC benefit cards, and neither does the CVS pharmacy located inside Target. Your Medicare OTC card will be declined at both. To avoid wasting an allowance that close to a third of members already leave unspent, plan your OTC trips around participating retailers like standalone CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, or Rite Aid, and confirm eligible items through your plan's catalog before you shop.

As of 2026, OTC benefits are smaller and offered by fewer plans, so spending the full amount before it expires matters more than ever. If you want to understand your wider coverage, including which supplemental benefits your plan includes and how to compare options, start with our complete Medicare benefits guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use my OTC card at the CVS inside Target?

No. The CVS pharmacies inside Target stores cannot process OTC benefit cards, even though CVS owns and operates them. CVS confirms that in-store OTC redemption is blocked at its Target locations. A standalone CVS store will accept your card, but the CVS counter inside Target will not.

Does Target accept the UnitedHealthcare OTC or UCard?

No. Target does not accept the UnitedHealthcare OTC card or the UCard. UnitedHealthcare members can use those cards at Walmart, standalone CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, and many grocery stores instead. Check the MyIncentivesCard portal or your UHC member app for the current list.

Why does Walmart accept OTC cards but Target does not?

Walmart has integrated the restricted-spend technology that OTC networks require, and Target has not. That backend system verifies each item's eligibility and deducts only the approved amount at checkout. Without it, a Target register cannot complete an OTC transaction, so the card is declined.

What payment cards does Target accept for health items?

Target accepts FSA and HSA cards for eligible medical and over-the-counter items, alongside standard credit, debit, and Target gift cards. It does not accept Medicare Advantage or Medicaid OTC benefit cards. Target's website flags FSA/HSA-eligible products in a dedicated section.

Where can I check which stores take my specific OTC card?

The most reliable source is your own plan. Call the number on the back of your card or log in to your plan's member app or website to see the up-to-date list of participating retailers for your benefit. Acceptance can vary by plan, so a general directory is not a substitute for your plan's list.

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Nathan Justice manages community outreach programs and forums that help many senior citizens. He completed a counseling program at the University of Maryland’s Department of Psychology.
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