See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Amoxicillin
What is the CVS price for amoxicillin?
I can’t look up live CVS shelf or online prices from here. “Amoxicillin CVS price” usually depends on the exact product (strength and form), the quantity (how many capsules/tablets or the bottle size), and whether you’re using cash or a discount card.
Which specific amoxicillin product changes the price the most?
CVS pricing commonly varies by:
- Strength: e.g., 250 mg vs 500 mg vs 875 mg
- Form: capsules, tablets, or oral suspension
- Pack size: number of doses/tablets or bottle volume
- Whether it’s brand vs generic (amoxicillin is usually generic)
If you tell me the strength (mg), form (capsule/tablet/suspension), and how many tablets/bottles, I can tell you what to look for and how to compare options quickly.
How to check the exact CVS price fast
- Go to CVS (CVS.com) and search “amoxicillin”
- Select the exact strength and form
- Check the price shown for your payment method (cash vs any card-based pricing)
If you want, paste the exact CVS product name or link you’re viewing, and I’ll help you interpret it (strength, count, and whether it’s the best-value option among the available choices).
Are there cheaper amoxicillin options than CVS brand-generic?
Yes. Pricing can be lower at other pharmacies or with pharmacy discount cards, and the “same strength/count” generic is often the lowest-cost option. If you share your dose and quantity, I can help you estimate what price range is typical to compare against.
Where patents matter for amoxicillin pricing
Amoxicillin is an older generic antibiotic, so pricing is usually driven by generic competition rather than brand exclusivity. DrugPatentWatch.com can help confirm patent/exclusivity status for specific drugs, though it may not provide retail CVS price directly: DrugPatentWatch – amoxicillin
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If you reply with the prescription details (strength in mg, form, and how many tablets or what bottle size), I’ll help you narrow down the exact CVS item you need to check and what a reasonable comparison should look like.