Rite Aid pharmacy in New York
57 Rite Aid locations across 43 cities in New York. Pick a city below for store-level hours and addresses.
Cities with Rite Aid stores
Buffalo
New YorkBrooklyn
New YorkRochester
New YorkNew York
New YorkCanandaigua
New YorkCheektowaga
New YorkWilliamsville
New YorkKingston
New YorkBatavia
New YorkEden
New YorkNorth Tonawanda
New YorkBronx
New YorkBeacon
New YorkEast Syracuse
New YorkSyracuse
New YorkWest Seneca
New YorkAkron
New YorkFlushing
New YorkWoodhaven
New YorkWilliston Park
New YorkLynbrook
New YorkMiddletown
New YorkNiagara Falls
New YorkWappingers Falls
All Rite Aid locations in New York
Rite Aid in New York: what to expect
Rite Aid maintains 57 pharmacy locations across New York, distributed across 43 distinct cities. The chain's footprint in this state mirrors its national pattern: dense clusters in the largest metropolitan areas, lighter coverage in suburban and rural counties, and occasional 24-hour flagship stores attached to high-traffic shopping centers.
Opening hours at Rite Aid stores in New York typically follow the brand's national template — extended weekday hours, slightly shorter Saturday schedules, and noticeably reduced Sunday windows — but specific stores vary based on local demand and labor availability. Stores located inside or attached to a 24-hour grocery operator usually offer the longest pharmacy windows. Standalone stores in residential neighborhoods often close by 9pm or earlier on weekdays.
Prescription transfers and refills
Moving an active prescription between two Rite Aid locations in New York is usually instant — the pharmacy systems share records — but transferring from another chain or an independent pharmacy requires a phone call from the receiving pharmacy to the original store. Allow at least an hour during normal business hours, longer at peak times. Refills can typically be scheduled through the chain's app or website, with text or email notifications when the prescription is ready.
Holiday hours
Rite Aid stores in New York generally observe the major federal holidays with reduced or zero hours. Thanksgiving and Christmas Day are the most likely full-closure days; New Year's Day, Easter, Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day usually run a shortened schedule. The store-level pages linked above include holiday notes wherever we have them, but always confirm by phone the day before.