What does furosemide cost without insurance?
The price of furosemide without insurance depends on (1) whether you want tablets or liquid, (2) the dose strength (for example, 20 mg vs 40 mg), (3) the quantity (30 vs 90 tablets), and (4) your pharmacy’s cash price. Because it’s a generic medicine, prices can vary widely by pharmacy and by whether you use a discount card.
What can you expect to pay for common furosemide strengths?
For many generic versions, cash prices are often relatively low compared with brand-name drugs, but the exact number isn’t the same at every location. If you tell me:
- your dose (e.g., 20 mg, 40 mg),
- form (tablet vs liquid),
- and how many pills you need (like 30 or 90),
I can give a more targeted estimate range and show what to compare at pharmacies.
Where do people usually find cheaper cash prices?
Without insurance, people commonly lower out-of-pocket cost by:
- comparing cash prices at different pharmacies,
- using a manufacturer or pharmacy discount program (if available),
- using a prescription discount card (some reduce the “cash price” to a lower negotiated rate).
Quick ways to get an exact price today
The fastest way is to check the pharmacy’s cash price for your exact prescription details (dose + quantity + formulation). If you want, share your prescription details and your city/zip (or the pharmacies you use), and I’ll help you narrow down what to look for and which options typically come out cheapest.
Sources
No sources were provided with your question, and I don’t have enough information (dose, form, quantity, location/pharmacy) to cite an exact “without insurance” price for furosemide.