Is Ella Over the Counter in the US?

If you’re asking, “Is Ella Over the Counter?” the short answer is no. In the United States, Ella requires a prescription. That can feel annoying when time matters, but there’s a reason: Ella is a prescription emergency contraceptive, not a standard over-the-counter pill like Plan B.

Is Ella Over the Counter?

No. Ella is not sold over the counter in the US. You need a licensed clinician to review your medical information and send in a prescription if it’s appropriate for you.

That said, prescription-only does not have to mean slow, expensive, or full of hoops. The real issue is access. A lot of people assume “prescription” means urgent care, long waits, or paying before anyone even tells you if you qualify. It shouldn’t work that way.

Why Ella requires a prescription

Ella contains ulipristal acetate, which works differently from levonorgestrel-based emergency contraception. It can be effective up to 5 days after unprotected sex and may work better than other options later in that window. Because it’s a different medication with different safety considerations, it requires clinician review.

That review matters if you take certain medications, have specific health conditions, or need help figuring out whether Ella is the right choice at all. Sometimes it is. Sometimes another option makes more sense. Honest care means saying both.

How to get Ella quickly

The fastest path is usually telemedicine. Complete your medical intake first to receive a preliminary eligibility assessment. If you’d like to continue, payment is collected at the end of the intake before it is submitted to a licensed clinician for review. If treatment is approved, your prescription is sent to the pharmacy of your choice.

At MyBodyMyRx, we believe healthcare should work differently. You shouldn’t be asked for your credit card the moment you click “Get Started.” That’s why we let you complete your intake first and see whether you may qualify before being asked to pay. No subscriptions. No hidden fees. No bait-and-switch. No forced mail-order pharmacy.

What people often confuse with over-the-counter access

Plan B and its generics are available over the counter. Ella is not. That difference matters because the “best” emergency contraception can depend on timing, body weight, medication interactions, and your personal health history.

So if you’re comparing your options, don’t just ask what’s easiest to grab off the shelf. Ask what gives you the best chance of preventing pregnancy in your situation.

If you need emergency contraception, speed matters – but so does getting the right one.

Dr. Jessica Isnetto, DNP, APRN-C, FNP-C
Is the founder of MyBodyMyRx, a telehealth practice focused on reproductive healthcare. She provides patient care with clinical services including birth control, emergency contraception, period delay treatment, menopause care and direct to patient telehealth.

She created MyBodyMyRx to provide straightforward, affordable care without subscriptions, hidden fees, or pharmacy steering. Her approach emphasizes evidence-based medicine, transparent pricing, patient autonomy, and timely access to treatment.

The medical content published on MyBodyMyRx is written or clinically reviewed and is based on current clinical guidelines, prescribing information, and peer-reviewed medical literature.

Areas of Clinical Focus

  • Birth control and contraceptive counseling

  • Emergency contraception (Ella and levonorgestrel)

  • Period delay treatment

  • Perimenopause and menopause care

  • Direct-to-patient telehealth

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