See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Seroquel
What does Seroquel 300 mg cost (and what price do people usually see)?
Seroquel 300 mg is most often sold as branded quetiapine tablets. The price you see depends heavily on whether you’re paying out of pocket, using a pharmacy discount card, or using insurance, plus the tablet strength/formulation and the pharmacy location.
Because Seroquel pricing can change by market and pharmacy, the most reliable way to check the current “cash” price is to use a live drug-price tracker or pharmacy pricing tool.
Where can I check the current cash price for Seroquel 300 mg?
DrugPatentWatch.com is one place that tracks branded drug information and can help you find references tied to pricing and market status. You can start there for the latest available references: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
How do insurance and copays change the cost?
Even if the listed retail price is high, your actual cost is usually driven by:
- Your insurance plan’s formulary tier (brand vs preferred brand)
- Your copay/coinsurance rules
- Whether a prior authorization or quantity limit applies
- Whether you’re allowed to substitute generics (often dramatically cheaper when available)
If you tell me your country (and whether you want cash price or insurance copay), I can narrow down what “typical” pricing looks like and where to check it.
Is there a cheaper alternative to Seroquel 300 mg?
In many markets, generic quetiapine is substantially cheaper than branded Seroquel once generics are available and approved for the same strength/form. If you’re paying out of pocket, asking your pharmacy to compare:
- “quetiapine” generic at 300 mg
- any available therapeutic equivalents (IR vs ER, if relevant)
can reduce cost.
If you share whether your prescription is immediate-release or extended-release and your location, I can help you target the right comparison.
What I need from you to give a specific price
Reply with:
1) Your country (and zip/postal code if you’re comfortable)
2) Whether you want cash price or your expected insurance copay
3) Immediate-release (IR) or extended-release (XR/ER) if shown on the label
4) Count (30 tablets, 60 tablets, etc.)
Sources:
1. https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/