I'm seeing in 360° paxlovision over here.

Test2treat
National Institutes of Health program. Here's a reddit thread about it

I finished the questionairre thing at 5am and had a reply from an actual person in my email at 10am. I'd gotten a prescription from my doctor moments before by that time though so I had test2treat cancel theirs. Also good to know— i got an offer to participate in a survey about the service for $50 compensation several days after.

Dr.B
This one costs $15 for the consultation and may interface with your insurance, I'm not sure. I'm on medicaid which covers pax so I wasn't concerned about it. It's robo livechat format. There's a low income option a little ways in that requires you to volunteer info like your living, housing, and gas expenses in exchange for waiving the $15 consultation fee.

Dr.B took from 6:30am to 9:30am to not only respond but to totally fill a prescription without asking for a confirmation. There wasn't an opportunity to cancel so i have a second pax script on hold at the pharmacy right now.

Either option you should just make sure you check at least one of the paxlovid-qualifying high-risk conditions. You can google the list but the easiest/least commital ones are probably "former or current smoker " and "depression/anxiety" though i doubt you'd need to provide proof for any of them.

I'm 32 and I don't have any of the high-risk conditions except depression/anxiety which i assume every sane person also has. I assume it was the jn.1 variant. I started paxlovid the first day i tested positive and i tested negative for the first time about five hours after my last paxlovid dose, technically very early on day six. That was a few days ago and I'm still testing negative, no rebound. I've had everything except the latest booster, just hadn't gotten around to it yet.

If you're on medicaid you can probably get 8 free at-home tests per month until at least next september. It may take a couple phone calls because no one knows what's going on, probably on purpose. In my case i had to call my pharmacy who told me to call my medicaid provider who told me to call the pharmacy back and actually instruct them what to do (the pharmacist has the ability to write you a prescription for at-home tests to be billed to insurance). Make sure the tests aren't expired too. Pharmacies will absolutely still try to give out expired tests, past even the "extended" dates.

Hopefully some part of this is helpful to someone.