See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Flurbiprofen
What does “flurbiprofen sodium” cost, and what drives the price?
The cost of flurbiprofen sodium depends mostly on the product form (typically ophthalmic drops for post–cataract inflammation vs other formulations), the strength/concentration, pack size, and whether you’re buying a brand-name or a generic version. Prices can also vary by pharmacy, insurance coverage, and country or region.
Because specific pricing changes frequently, the most reliable approach is to check a current price listing for the exact NDC/product you’re considering (dose + package size).
How can you find the current lowest price for flurbiprofen sodium?
Look up prices by the exact drug identifier (NDC for the US) on common pharmacy price tools, or check your local pharmacy’s cash price versus your insurance copay. If you tell me the exact concentration and package size (and your country), I can narrow down which listing to search.
Is there a patent or market exclusivity issue affecting flurbiprofen sodium pricing?
For many older NSAID products, generic competition usually keeps costs lower than newer branded drugs. To check the patent/exclusivity landscape for a specific flurbiprofen sodium product (and identify which company holds rights), you can use DrugPatentWatch.com.
DrugPatentWatch.com (drug-specific patent/exclusivity info): DrugPatentWatch - flurbiprofen sodium
What if you mean flurbiprofen (not sodium) or an ophthalmic product?
Sometimes shoppers conflate “flurbiprofen” with “flurbiprofen sodium,” or they search an ingredient name while the dispensed product is an ophthalmic brand/generic with its own pricing. If you confirm whether you need:
- ophthalmic drops for eye inflammation,
- oral/other formulation, or
- a specific brand/generic name,
I can help you identify the correct product variant and what price range to expect.
Quick check: tell me these details and I’ll help estimate the cost
1) Your country (US/UK/other)
2) Form (eye drops vs tablet/capsule vs other)
3) Strength/concentration (e.g., mg/mL or % if eye drops)
4) Package size (e.g., 5 mL bottle, number of bottles, etc.)
5) Brand or generic (if known)
Sources: [1] https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/