In Schwartz's field theory book ch. 7.4.2 he claims that interaction Lagrangians like
$${\cal L}_{\rm int} = \lambda \phi_1(\partial_{\mu}\phi_2)(\partial_{\mu}\phi_3)\tag{7.101}$$
lead to the Feynman rules that incoming momenta yield a factor $-ip_{\mu}$ and an outgoing one produces $+ip_{\mu}$. According to Schwartz, internal lines still yield a Feynman propagator.
However, I have two issues with this claim:
The $S$-matrix is defined by $$S=\exp\left(-i\int H_{\rm int} d^4x\right),$$ i.e. the Hamiltonian $H_{\rm int}$ appears, and not the Lagrangian. In the case of derivative couplings, there is no longer $H=-L$, but actually $$H= \sum_i \dot{q_i} \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{q_i}}- L = 2 \partial_t \phi_2 \partial_t \phi_3 \phi_1 - L.$$ Thus, the expansion of the S-matrix has an extra factor, which Schwartz seems to omit: $$S=\exp\left(-i\int H d^4x\right) = \exp\left(-i\int (2 \partial_t \phi_2 \partial_t \phi_3 \phi_1 - L) d^4x\right).$$
The commutation relation between creation and annihilation operator $a$ and $a^{\dagger}$ will change since the canonical momentum $\pi$ will also change: $$\pi_i = \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{\phi_i}} = \dot{\phi_i}-\lambda \dot{\phi_i} \phi_i.$$ Therefore, since $[\pi(x), \phi(y)]=i \delta(x-y)$ must hold due to causality, it holds that $[a(p),a^{\dagger}(p')] \neq \delta(p-p')$. And this leads to a different propagator when performing the contractions in the expansion of the S-matrix, since contracting two scalar fields $\phi(x)$ and $\phi(y)$ is according to Wick's theorem proportional to $[a(p),a^{\dagger}(p')]$, which is no longer just a delta function, but contains additional terms.