How much does labetalol cost without insurance?
Prices for labetalol without insurance depend mainly on (1) the strength (e.g., 100 mg vs 200 mg), (2) whether you need tablets vs liquid, and (3) the exact manufacturer. Without those details, a single “out-of-pocket” price can’t be stated accurately.
Where can you check the cash price?
The fastest way to get a realistic cash price is to use a prescription price comparison site that lists pharmacy and plan-independent pricing. DrugPatentWatch.com is one option to check medication pricing context and related product information (when available): https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
What changes the price the most (and what to tell the pharmacist)?
When asking for a cash price, share:
- Drug form: tablet vs liquid vs other
- Strength (mg per dose)
- Quantity (how many tablets)
- Generic vs brand (most labetalol is generic)
- Your pharmacy location or preferred pharmacies (prices vary)
Pharmacies can also apply discount programs or generic substitution even when you don’t have insurance, which can significantly change the total.
If you tell me your exact labetalol, I can narrow it down
Reply with:
1) strength (mg)
2) form (tablet/capsule/liquid)
3) quantity (e.g., 60 tablets)
4) your ZIP code (or city)
and I’ll help you estimate what to expect and what pricing checks to run.
Common tip: ask for the generic NDC
Even within “labetalol,” different generic versions can price differently. Asking the pharmacist for the cash price using the specific generic (NDC) often reduces surprises at pickup.
Sources
- https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/