Even with a Trump Deal, Drug Prices Increase

The drugs with price hikes included medicines to treat cancer, heart failure and Type 2 diabetes. The price of some COVID shots also went up.

Pharmaceutical list prices are the starting point for negotiations with insurers and the middlemen known as pharmacy benefit managers. List prices play a role in which drugs insurers choose to cover and what the patient ultimately pays out of pocket at the pharmacy counter.

Asked about the price hikes and whether they break the terms of the deals, White House spokesperson Kush Desai said the list prices aren’t important and that the specific discounts addressed in the deals are coming to state Medicaid programs and patients who want to pay cash for some prescriptions.

What we know about the deals

Details are hard to come by since the administration’s deal documents haven’t been made public.

During the press conferences, health and White House officials mentioned the companies had made commitments for Medicaid discounts — but that’s something the program already gets, says Dr. Ben Rome, a health policy researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

The deals also included pledges for future drugs to be launched at the same price in other wealthy countries as in the U.S. And some drugs will be made available at a discount to cash-paying customers — that is, those who are uninsured or not using their health insurance — through a new website called TrumpRx.gov.

But those efforts don’t affect prices for a lot of the companies’ products and most health care consumers and insurance plans.

“Those deals probably are not very important in terms of manufacturer drug pricing and the prices paid by most Americans for prescription drugs,” says Rome.

Pfizer, which reached the first deal with the Trump administration in September, raised the prices of 72 products in January, according to 46brooklyn. They include a 15% increase on the price of its COVID shot.

Merck also raised prices on 18 products, including Isentress for HIV and Belsomra for insomnia, according to 46brooklyn’s data.

Some drug prices went down

The negotiations lowered some drug prices paid by Medicare, but many wondered whether that might also lead to lower prices for privately insured patients.

AstraZeneca’s Farxiga and Boehringer Ingelheim’s Jardiance, both used for diabetes and heart failure, and the blood thinner Eliquis, made by Bristol Myers Squibb, also got price drops between 37% and 44%.

When a company decides to lower prices, it’s due to a variety of factors and policies, but 46brooklyn’s Ciaccia says, “Medicare drug price negotiations, I would argue, are the straw that broke the camel’s back.”

Dr. Ben Rome isn’t sure he agrees with that analysis: “It’s hard to sort of pin any one drug or any one situation on any one policy,” he says. “But it’s probably a confluence of factors that have led to some of these drug [companies] making that decision.”

After the first round of negotiations in 2024, Medicare prices for 10 chosen drugs were reduced by 38% to 79%, with those discounts going into effect in January of 2026.

The new report presents a mixed picture of what happened to those drugs outside of Medicare: Four posted big drops in list price this month, four didn’t have price changes and two had price increases.

January sticker price changes for drugs negotiated in Medicare

Medicare drug price negotiations lowered drug prices paid by Medicare, but many wondered whether that might also lead to lower prices for privately insured patients. Here’s how the list prices for those drugs changed in early January.

Drug and useNegotiated Medicare DiscountList price change in January 2026
Januvia (diabetes )−79%No change
Fiasp/Novolog* (diabetes)−76%-75%
Farxiga (diabetes; heart failure; chronic kidney disease)−68%-37%
Enbrel (rheumatoid arthritis; psoriasis; psoriatic arthritis)−67%5%
Jardiance (diabetes; heart failure; chronic kidney disease)−66%-44%
Stelara (psoriasis; psoriatic arthritis; crohn’s disease; ulcerative colitis)−66%5%
Xarelto (prevention and treatment of blood clots; reduction of risk for patients with coronary or peripheral artery disease)−62%No change
Eliquis (prevention and treatment of blood clots)−56%-43%
Entresto (heart failure)−53%No change
Imbruvica (blood cancers)−38%No change

Notes

*Novo Nordisk lowered the price of Fiasp in January 2026. It now matches the price of Novolog, which was lowered in 2024.