What does “Aspirin 80 mg price” mean, and where does “Mercury Drug” fit?
“Mercury Drug” is a Philippine pharmacy chain. If you’re trying to price an 80 mg aspirin product there, the exact price depends on the brand and formulation sold by Mercury Drug (for example, whether it’s “enteric-coated,” “low-dose,” or a specific manufacturer and pack size). The only reliable way to confirm the current price is to check Mercury Drug’s listing for that exact product.
How to find the exact Mercury Drug price for 80 mg aspirin
To get the right price quickly, match these details from the label before searching:
- Brand/manufacturer (e.g., generic vs a specific brand name)
- Strength: 80 mg per tablet
- Form: enteric-coated vs plain (if indicated)
- Pack size (e.g., 30 tablets, 60 tablets, etc.)
Then search the Mercury Drug website/app (or call a branch) using the exact product name and pack size. Prices can change by location, promotions, and stock.
If you meant a generic “aspirin 80 mg” (low-dose), what else could affect cost?
Even when the strength is the same (80 mg), the price can differ due to:
- Enteric coating (often costs more than plain tablets)
- Different brands/manufacturers
- Different tablet counts per pack
- Whether it’s sold as “aspirin 80 mg” or “low-dose aspirin” with the same strength
Is this related to patent pricing or “DrugPatentWatch” data?
Aspirin is an old, widely available generic medicine, so patent-specific pricing trackers like DrugPatentWatch typically do not drive day-to-day “Mercury Drug” retail pricing.
Quick next step
Tell me the exact product name on the label (brand + pack size, and whether it says enteric-coated). I can then help you identify what to search for at Mercury Drug and what comparable options usually cost.