Women Spent 50% More Than Men On Mental Health Medications In 2024

It will be important to mind the gap here—the gap between how much women and men may be spending on mental health prescription medications. A GoodRx analysis estimated that in 2024, women spent around 50% more out of pocket than men did on mental health prescriptions. That’s $5.4 billion for women compared to $3.6 billion for a $1.8 billion difference. Now, there are four possible things that could be driving this difference. And, spoiler alert, none of these Rx-related possible things would be good.

GoodRx Based The Analysis On A Sample Of Prescription Fills In 2024

The analysis was based on a sample of over 250 million prescription fills for mental health medications in 2024. As Tori Marsh, MPH, the senior director of research at Good Rx who led this analysis, explained, “These fills come from a national claims dataset licensed by GoodRx, which captures anonymized retail prescription transactions across payers, pharmacies, and geographies.” Marsh then described how they went from the findings from this sample to the national estimates: “We extrapolated the results using IQVIA’s 2024 Report on the Use of Medicines in the U.S. and IQVIA Longitudinal Access and Adjudication Data.”

Note that this was not a peer-reviewed study published in a scientific journal and did have a number of different limitations, some of which will be discussed later. Therefore, take everything you can get from it with a grain—or maybe multiple grains—of salt. Nevertheless, the findings do raise important questions and call for further studies to figure out, “What’s going on,” in the words of that Marvin Gaye song.

Women Filled More And Spent More On Prescriptions For Different Mental Health Conditions

Marsh and the GoodRx team found that women not only spent more on mental health medications but also filled more prescriptions of such meds. The following graph shows how much more for different mental health conditions:

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2025/10/08/women-spent-50-more-than-men-on-mental-health-medications-in-2024/