Black Health
PrEP South Dakota

PrEP in South Dakota — pre-exposure prophylaxis, who qualifies, how to start

The number

South Dakota does not operate a state PrEP-DAP; the federal Ready, Set, PrEP program covers medication for eligible uninsured residents.

Ryan White Part B

South Dakota Department of Health, Office of Disease Prevention Services

State ADAP

South Dakota AIDS Drug Assistance Program

Income cap 300% FPL

State PrEP-DAP

Not operated; federal Ready Set PrEP applies

Call 1-800-592-1861 — South Dakota HIV info line

How to start PrEP in South Dakota

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a daily pill (Truvada, Descovy) or every-two-months injection (Apretude) that prevents HIV in people who don't have HIV. Taken as prescribed, daily-pill PrEP reduces the risk of sexually transmitted HIV by about 99% and the risk from injection-drug sharing by about 74%, per CDC. In South Dakota, PrEP is available through primary-care providers, FQHCs, LGBTQ+ community health centers, and Ryan White Part C clinics — you do not need to see an HIV specialist to start.

To qualify for PrEP you need a recent negative HIV test (or one done the same day), a baseline labs panel (kidney function, hepatitis B, STIs), and a prescriber visit. Follow-up is every three months for a repeat HIV test and medication refill. Most insurance including Medicaid covers PrEP with zero out-of-pocket under the USPSTF Grade A preventive-services rule. The drug manufacturers (Gilead, ViiV) operate patient-assistance programs for anyone without insurance.

South Dakota does not operate a state-funded PrEP Drug Assistance Program; residents rely on the federal Ready, Set, PrEP program (getyourprep.com) for medication coverage, Gilead Advancing Access or ViiV Connect for the drug copay, and the USPSTF Grade A preventive-services rule for clinic visits and labs (required zero-cost-share under the ACA). The state HIV program line is 1-800-592-1861 for a PrEP clinic referral.

Black PrEP uptake nationally lags sharply — a 2023 AIDSVu analysis found that Black Americans account for 42% of new HIV diagnoses but only 14% of PrEP users. Long-time Black residents name Sanford Health Infectious Disease Clinic (Sioux Falls) and Falls Community Health (Sioux Falls) as the local institutions that show up consistently — both are listed below.

Sanford Health Infectious Disease Clinic (Sioux Falls). Sanford Health's ID Clinic in Sioux Falls is South Dakota's only HIV specialty clinic and Ryan White Part C grantee, covering the entire state through a combination of in-person and telehealth appointments, with a dedicated outreach partnership with the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board.

Falls Community Health (Sioux Falls). Falls Community Health is South Dakota's largest FQHC, operating the only walk-in rapid-HIV-testing program in the state with evening hours, and providing HIV primary care for patients transferring out of the state Department of Corrections system.

For Black families in South Dakota

PrEP uptake among Black Americans lags sharply — AIDSVu's 2023 PrEP-to-Need ratio analysis puts the Black PrEP ratio at roughly one-eighth the white ratio. In South Dakota specifically, with 24% of new 2022 diagnoses among Black residents, closing that PrEP gap is the single highest-leverage prevention move. Black-led HIV organizations in the state run PrEP-specific navigation programs that match you with a prescriber, handle benefits coordination, and keep you in the three-month follow-up rhythm.

Where to get help in South Dakota

  • South Dakota HIV info line: 1-800-592-1861 — staff can find the nearest free testing site, schedule PrEP, or help enroll you in ADAP.
  • South Dakota Department of Health, Office of Disease Prevention Services landing page: https://doh.sd.gov/diseases-conditions/hiv-aids/.
  • Federally Qualified Health Centers in South Dakota: every FQHC offers sliding-scale HIV testing and has certified application counselors on staff. See our FQHC directory for the state at /clinics/sd/.
  • State health data for South Dakota: for state-level HIV mortality, maternal health, and life-expectancy context by race, see /health/south-dakota/.
  • South Dakota Medicaid: Medicaid is the largest single payer of HIV care in most states. See /medicaid/south-dakota/ for eligibility + enrollment.
  • Federal Ready, Set, PrEP: getyourprep.com — no-cost PrEP medication for people without insurance.
  • CDC NPIN testing-site finder: gettested.cdc.gov accepts a zip code and returns every free + low-cost HIV testing site within 50 miles.

References & primary sources

Data refreshed: