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How to find a Jan Aushadhi store near you — complete 2026 guide

How to find Jan Aushadhi store 2026 — RTI Wiki citizen guide

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· 2026/04/19 05:02

Quick answer. The Pradhan Mantri Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana (PMBJP) sells the same generic medicines you buy at any chemist — at 50% to 90% lower prices. As of April 2026 there are over 14,200 Jan Aushadhi Kendras across India (target: 25,000 by end-2026). Find your nearest store three ways: (1) janaushadhi.gov.in → “Jan Aushadhi Kendra” → enter PIN code; (2) Jan Aushadhi Sugam app on Play Store / App Store; (3) call the toll-free helpline 1800-180-8080 (8 am – 8 pm). Carry your doctor's prescription — generic equivalent is dispensed by molecule name, not brand name. No insurance needed, no membership card, no income proof.

Mahesh's story — "₹2,500 a month gone, just on diabetes pills"

Mahesh Bhonsle, 58, retired BEST bus driver in Kurla, Mumbai. Diabetic since 2014, also on BP medication. Lives on a pension of ₹19,400 a month plus his wife's tailoring income.

“For nine years I was buying Glycomet-GP 2 (metformin + glimepiride) and Telma-40 (telmisartan) from the local medical store. The bill was ₹2,400-2,600 every month. My grandson showed me a YouTube video about Jan Aushadhi in May 2026. I didn't believe it — same medicine for ₹250 instead of ₹2,500? I went to the Sugam app, found a Kendra at Kurla West railway station — exactly 1.4 km from my house. The pharmacist there is Mrs. Khan. She read my prescription, dispensed the same molecule — metformin 500 + glimepiride 2 mg, 30 tablets — for ₹38. Telmisartan 40 mg, 30 tablets — ₹22. Total bill ₹60. I asked her three times — 'Madam, yeh same medicine hai?' She showed me the strip — same chemical, same dosage, made by Sun Pharma under PMBI label. Now I save almost ₹2,500 every month. In a year that is ₹30,000 — that pays my electricity, gas and DTH together. The only mistake was waiting nine years.

—Mahesh, June 2026

The Pharmaceuticals & Medical Devices Bureau of India (PMBI), the implementing agency under the Department of Pharmaceuticals, reported sales of over ₹1,800 crore in FY 2024-25, translating to citizen savings estimated at ₹10,800 crore (since generic prices are 1/5 to 1/10 of branded equivalents). A 2025 ICMR study on Jan Aushadhi medicines (published in Indian Journal of Pharmacology) found bioequivalence with branded counterparts in over 96% of randomly tested samples.

What is a Jan Aushadhi store — and why is it cheaper?

A Jan Aushadhi Kendra (also called a PMBJP store) is a retail outlet authorised by the Pharmaceuticals & Medical Devices Bureau of India (PMBI) — a public-sector enterprise under the Department of Pharmaceuticals, Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers. It sells unbranded generic medicines under the “Jan Aushadhi” label.

The price gap exists because:

The legal basis is the National Pharmaceuticals Pricing Authority (NPPA) notifications under the Drugs (Prices Control) Order 2013, plus the PMBJP Operational Guidelines 2017 (revised 2024).

The current product basket (April 2026) covers over 2,047 medicines + 300 surgical / consumables — covering diabetes, hypertension, cardiac, respiratory, gastric, cancer (oncology), antibiotics, anti-infectives, vitamins, paediatric syrups, and Ayurvedic / Unani lines.

Step-by-step process

Step 1 — Confirm your prescription is in molecule (generic) name

Indian doctors are required by Medical Council of India (now NMC) regulation 1.5 (2016) to prescribe in generic / molecule names. In practice, many still write brand names (Crocin, Combiflam, Augmentin).

Step 2 — Open the store locator (3 ways)

Option A — Web portal (any device with browser):

Option B — Jan Aushadhi Sugam mobile app (recommended):

Option C — Toll-free helpline:

Step 3 — Visit the store with prescription + photo ID

Step 4 — Verify the medicine before leaving

Step 5 — Save the bill — useful for tax + insurance

Step 6 — Subscribe to repeat-supply for chronic medication

Step 7 — If the medicine is not available, get a Stock-Out Slip

Step 8 — Report fake / overcharging through official complaint channel

Sample fee + price-comparison table

+-------------------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+
| Medicine (typical strip 10s)  | Branded MRP    | Jan Aushadhi   | Saving   |
+-------------------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+
| Metformin 500 mg              | ₹35 (Glycomet) | ₹6             | 83%      |
| Glimepiride 2 mg              | ₹85 (Amaryl)   | ₹14            | 84%      |
| Telmisartan 40 mg             | ₹125 (Telma)   | ₹16            | 87%      |
| Atorvastatin 10 mg            | ₹95 (Lipitor)  | ₹12            | 87%      |
| Pantoprazole 40 mg            | ₹110 (Pan)     | ₹14            | 87%      |
| Amlodipine 5 mg               | ₹40 (Amlong)   | ₹6             | 85%      |
| Paracetamol 500 mg            | ₹35 (Crocin)   | ₹6             | 83%      |
| Azithromycin 500 mg (3 tabs)  | ₹110           | ₹22            | 80%      |
| Insulin Glargine 100 IU vial  | ₹825 (Lantus) | ₹290           | 65%      |
| Cetirizine 10 mg              | ₹45 (Cetzine)  | ₹6             | 87%      |
+-------------------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+
| Sanitary napkin "Suvidha"     | --             | ₹1 / pad       | --       |
| (PMBJP exclusive product)     |                | (₹6 / 6 pack)  |          |
+-------------------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+
| Surgical gloves (pair)        | ₹35-50         | ₹8             | 75%      |
+-------------------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+
| RTI to PMBI for kendra info   | ₹10 IPO        | BPL = free     | --       |
+-------------------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+

Prices above are illustrative as of April 2026 (PMBI price list). Verify on the Sugam app — prices revised quarterly.

Common reasons people get stuck

If stuck — the escalation ladder

Rung 1 — Kendra in-charge / store manager

Rung 2 — PMBI national helpline

Rung 3 — CPGRAMS

Rung 4 — State Drug Controller (for quality / fake drug)

Rung 5 — Right to Information (RTI)

The Pharmaceuticals & Medical Devices Bureau of India (PMBI) is a Section 8 (not-for-profit) company under the Department of Pharmaceuticals — it is a public authority under §2(h)(d) of the RTI Act 2005. So is the Department of Pharmaceuticals itself.

RTI helps here when:

See: RTI in 12 simple steps and All money & scheme RTI guides.

RTI does NOT help here when:

FAQs

Q. Is Jan Aushadhi medicine really the same quality as branded?
Yes — by law and by lab testing. Both are made under WHO-GMP norms; the strip you buy at a Jan Aushadhi store is often manufactured by the same Sun Pharma / Cipla / Lupin plant that supplies the branded version. The molecule, dosage and bioavailability are identical.

Q. Do I need a doctor's prescription for every purchase?
For Schedule H / H1 / X drugs (most prescription medicines including antibiotics, BP, diabetes, cardiac) — yes, mandatory by Drugs & Cosmetics Rules. For OTC products (paracetamol, vitamins, sanitary pads, gloves, ORS) — no prescription needed.

Q. Will my insurance cover Jan Aushadhi purchases?
Yes. Most health insurers and TPAs (Star, HDFC Ergo, Care, Niva Bupa, Reliance General, Bajaj Allianz) accept Jan Aushadhi GST bills for outpatient claim, mediclaim reimbursement, and post-hospitalisation. CGHS and ECHS reimbursement also accept Jan Aushadhi bills since 2023.

Q. Can I order Jan Aushadhi medicines online?
Yes — via the Jan Aushadhi Sugam app's “Order Now” feature (live in 18 cities as of April 2026, expanding) or the partner portals listed on janaushadhi.gov.in. Doorstep delivery in 24-48 hours; cash on delivery available in most metros. Beware of unauthorised sellers on Amazon / Flipkart claiming “Jan Aushadhi medicines” — only the Sugam app and listed partner portals are authentic.

Q. My local doctor refuses to write generic name. What do I do?
NMC Regulation 1.5 (2016) makes generic prescription mandatory but enforcement is weak. Three options: (1) politely ask for both — molecule name in brackets; (2) use Sugam app's brand-to-generic search; (3) consult a public-sector doctor (PHC / govt hospital) — they almost always prescribe in generics.

Q. Is there a Jan Aushadhi store in rural areas?
Yes — over 60% of the 14,200 kendras are in tier-2 and tier-3 towns. The PMBJP target is at least one kendra per Block by end-2026. If your block has none, you can either request the BDO to nominate a location, or apply yourself (educational qualification: B.Pharm or D.Pharm; capital ~₹2-3 lakh).

Q. Can senior citizens get extra discount or home delivery?
There is no separate senior-citizen discount (the price is already 50-90% below market). For home delivery, larger metro kendras have started a free delivery service for senior citizens enrolled in the Repeat Patient programme. Combine with Senior citizen card for additional benefits.

Q. Are Ayurvedic and homoeopathic medicines available?
Yes — PMBJP launched an AYUSH segment in 2024 with select Ayurvedic and Unani products under the Jan Aushadhi label. Range is still small (~120 SKUs). Search for “AYUSH” filter on the Sugam app.

Last reviewed: 26 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. Jan Aushadhi prices and product basket are revised quarterly by PMBI — always verify on janaushadhi.gov.in or the Sugam app. Spotted a stale figure or new helpline? Write to admin@bighelpers.in.