HackerOne · Bug Bounty

GoodRx Bug Bounty Program

Complete guide to GoodRx's bug bounty program on HackerOne. View in-scope assets, reward amounts, response times, and tips for finding vulnerabilities.

Program Overview

GoodRx runs a bug bounty program on HackerOne. The program has 3 in-scope assets and is managed by HackerOne's triage team.

3
In-Scope Assets
6h
Avg Response
85%
Efficiency
9d
Avg Bounty Time
10d
Avg Resolve

In-Scope Assets

AssetTypeMax SeverityEligible
com.goodrxGOOGLE_PLAY_APP_IDCriticalBounty
com.goodrx.iphoneAPPLE_STORE_APP_IDCriticalBounty
www.goodrx.comURLCriticalBounty

Out-of-Scope Assets

  • com.goodrx.doctors
  • com.goodrx.doctors
  • com.goodrx.gold
  • com.goodrx.gold
  • investors.goodrx.com
  • sso.identity.goodrx.com
  • support.goodrx.com

Tips for Hacking GoodRx

  1. Read the policy — Understand what's in scope, out of scope, and any specific testing restrictions before you start.
  2. Enumerate the attack surface — Use subdomain enumeration and directory bruteforcing to map all accessible endpoints.
  3. Focus on high-impact bugs — Look for SQL injection, SSRF, and IDOR vulnerabilities first.
  4. Test authentication flows — Check for OAuth misconfigurations and CSRF in login/signup flows.
  5. Write clear reports — Include steps to reproduce, impact assessment, and suggested remediation. Use Burp Suite to capture evidence.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I start hacking GoodRx?

Sign up on HackerOne, read the program policy carefully, review the in-scope assets listed above, and start testing. Always stay within scope and follow responsible disclosure guidelines.

Does GoodRx pay bounties?

Yes, GoodRx offers monetary rewards for valid security vulnerabilities.

What types of vulnerabilities does GoodRx accept?

GoodRx accepts reports for vulnerabilities found in their 3 in-scope assets. Common accepted vulnerability types include XSS, SQL injection, SSRF, IDOR, authentication bypass, and RCE. Check the program policy for specific exclusions.