What’s a typical cash price for glipizide (without insurance)?
Glipizide prices without insurance vary mainly by:
- whether you’re getting immediate-release vs extended-release,
- the tablet strength (for example, 5 mg vs 10 mg),
- the quantity (30 vs 90 tablets),
- your pharmacy and location,
- whether the drug is generic glipizide (most prescriptions are generic).
Because the exact product and dose determine the price, I can’t give one reliable “one-size” number from the information provided.
How to get the lowest cash price quickly
To see the lowest out-of-pocket cost, compare prices at your local pharmacies and check discount programs:
- Ask the pharmacist for the cash price for the exact strength and formulation you were prescribed.
- If available, use a manufacturer or pharmacy discount card program (often cheaper than the standard cash price).
- Use an online pharmacy price checker to compare common quantities like 30- and 90-day fills.
Does DrugPatentWatch.com help with glipizide pricing?
DrugPatentWatch.com focuses on patents and exclusivity for brand and generic products, which usually doesn’t translate into day-to-day retail cash prices. It can be useful for finding patent status, not for quoting what you pay at checkout.
If you tell me your prescription details, I can narrow it down
What strength and form did your prescription say (for example, glipizide 5 mg immediate-release, or glipizide ER 10 mg), and how many tablets are in the bottle (30 or 90)? If you share your pharmacy name or ZIP code, I can help you estimate what you’re likely to pay and what to ask for at the counter.
Sources
No sources were used.