4.8 · 2,340 reviews

Eliquis Bracelet

Speaks for you when you can't.

So paramedics know you're on Eliquis the moment they check your wrist.

Colour: Black & Blue

One size, fits most wrists

If it doesn't fit yours, return within 30 days for a full refund.

Single

£20

One bracelet. For everyday wear.

  • One MediCarry bracelet
  • 30-day returns
  • Free MediCarry Care Kit included
Most popular

Wear + spare

£30

£40

Save 25%

Wear one, keep one ready. For cleaning days, swaps, or peace of mind.

  • Two MediCarry bracelets
  • 30-day returns
  • Free MediCarry Care Kit included
Best value

The set

£45

£60

Save 25%

Three bracelets so one's always within reach. By the bed, in a bag, on your wrist.

  • Three MediCarry bracelets
  • 30-day returns
  • Free MediCarry Care Kit included
  • Free delivery included
Eliquis Keychain

Pair with

Eliquis Keychain

Default Title

£10

Easy 30-day returns
Verified buyer

"When my doctor put me on Eliquis after an irregular heartbeat last year I went looking for something that didn't look like a hospital tag. This is the only thing on my wrist now. I forget I'm wearing it most days, which is exactly what I wanted."

James

Why a bracelet

What a paramedic sees first
decides what comes next.

For you, or for someone you love taking Eliquis, the first ninety seconds at a scene shape every choice that follows. Whether to consider reversal with andexanet alfa. The transport speed. The receiving hospital. The wrist is the first thing paramedics check.

A bump can hide a bleed.

On Eliquis, what looks like a small fall can become a serious bleed in under an hour. Especially the bumps you don't think to mention. Time is the difference. The bracelet buys the minutes.

Phones lock. Wallets get lost.

Medical ID on a phone is a quiet backup, not a primary signal. A locked phone in another room cannot speak. A wrist always can.

Without information, paramedics treat blind.

Eliquis changes every choice. Whether to push reversal. Which treatments are safe. The transport speed. The hospital chosen. Visible information is the cheapest insurance you'll ever wear.

Worn by

For yourself, or for someone you love.

Some buy for themselves, after a recent diagnosis. Some for a father, after a fall. Some for a husband on Eliquis after a clot, a brother on it for life, a friend on the same medication. Same reason every time. The moment when seconds count.

Older man at his kitchen table looking at the bracelet on his wrist

For yourself

After a recent diagnosis, a fall, or because you've been meaning to. The most considered decision of the day.

new on Eliquis · post-stroke · post-clot

Adult son handing the boxed bracelet to his father at home

For your father

Most often: a son, after his father's fall. Worn from the day it arrives.

Post-discharge · long-distance · Father's Day

For your husband, wearing the bracelet daily

For your husband

For the man whose meds you may know better than his own. Often bought paired, one for daily, one for travel.

irregular heartbeat · heart surgery · post-clot

After a scare, a quiet domestic moment, the bracelet on the table

After a scare

After an emergency visit, a close call, or a friend's stroke. The thing you've been putting off, finally not.

Post-emergency · post-fall · post-scare

Before travel, bracelet visible on the wrist alongside suitcase and boarding pass

Before travel

A holiday, a long flight, a road trip with grandchildren. Quietly worn. Quietly ready.

Cruises · long flights · road trips

A quick comparison

How a bracelet compares to the alternatives.

MediCarry Phone No alert
Read at a glanceNeeds unlock-
No battery neededMust be on-
Stays on the bodyOften separates-
Visible to paramedics firstIf they checkTreats blind
Works abroadOften lockedSame risk
30-day returns--
It blends in, until an accident happens

Real reviews

What customers tell us, in their own words.

4.8 average · 2,340 verified reviews

"Six months on Eliquis after an irregular heartbeat and I was beginning to worry about another fall. My daughter sent me this. It's the first thing on every morning."

M

Michael

Verified buyer · 2 months ago

"Got the pair after losing my first one in a hotel room. The spare lives in the drawer. Already pulled it out twice when the daily one was in the wash. Glad I didn't just buy the one."

A

Andrew

Verified buyer · 4 weeks ago

"After the second stroke they put me on Eliquis for life. My wife and I argued about whether I needed one of these. We don't argue any more."

R

Robert

Verified buyer · 3 months ago

"Bought one for Dad. On Eliquis for two years and lives alone. He grumbled when it arrived. He's worn it every single day since."

R

Richard

Verified buyer · 5 weeks ago

"It looks like a watch, not a hospital bracelet. That mattered to me. Worth it for that alone."

D

David

Verified buyer · 6 weeks ago

"Three near-falls this year on Eliquis. If anything happens now, they'll know in seconds — and which reversal protocol to start. Best money I've spent."

E

Edward

Verified buyer · 8 weeks ago

Our promise

Buy with confidence.

30-day returns

Doesn't fit, isn't right, changed your mind? Write to us within 30 days for a full refund.

Free delivery over £40

Free on the set, and any order over £40.

Worldwide shipping

We ship internationally.

Read at a glance

Your condition plus the universal medical alert symbol, clearly shown on the clasp.

Questions

Asked, and answered.

Will paramedics actually look at the bracelet?+

Yes. Paramedics and emergency staff are trained to check the wrist as a first step when assessing an unconscious or unresponsive patient. A visible medical alert is one of the fastest ways to receive correct treatment in the first ninety seconds.

Why does the specific name matter? Isn't "blood thinner" enough?+

For Eliquis (apixaban), the specific medication name speeds the right protocol. Reversal with andexanet alfa is only considered for direct oral anticoagulants like Eliquis — not for warfarin or heparin. The clearer the bracelet reads, the faster the right call gets made.

Why would I buy more than one?+

A few reasons people give us. The strap doesn't last forever. People misplace them on travel or at the gym. Some want one for daily and one for evenings. Others buy a second for a partner, a parent, or a friend on the same medication.

What's it made of?+

A black band with blue thread accents, fastened by a clasp that clicks shut. The clasp shows ELIQUIS in clear engraved type alongside the universal medical alert symbol — so paramedics read both the medication and the alert at a glance.

What size is it?+

One size fits most. If it doesn't fit yours, we'll exchange or refund within 30 days.

Can I shower or bathe with it on?+

Brief contact with water is fine. Towel it dry after a shower or rain. Avoid prolonged submersion in chlorinated pools or salt water.

My phone has my medical info already. Why a bracelet?+

Phones lock, run flat, or get separated from the body in a fall. Medical ID on a phone is genuinely useful, but only if the phone is on, present, and someone actually checks it. The wrist is checked first, every time. The two work together.

How long does delivery take?+

Tracked delivery typically arrives in 5–12 business days, anywhere in the world. £3.99 flat. Free on any order over £40.

What's your returns policy?+

Thirty days from delivery, no questions asked. Write to hello@medi-carry.com and we'll guide you through the return. Refund processed within three working days of us receiving the bracelet back. Return postage is at the cost of the customer.

Wear it before
you need to.

Most customers tell us they wish they'd ordered sooner. None say they ordered too soon.

30-day returns · Free delivery over £40