How much does Dyazide cost (and what affects the price)?
Dyazide pricing varies based on the pharmacy, your location, dosage/formulation, and whether you’re paying cash or using insurance. Retail prices can also differ from discounted cash-card prices, and brand vs. generic availability can change the amount you pay.
To give you the most accurate number, I need one detail: are you asking for the cost of Dyazide brand tablets, and what strength (commonly 37.5 mg/25 mg) and quantity (e.g., 30 vs 90 tablets)?
Is there a cheaper alternative if Dyazide is expensive?
If the brand price is high, comparing cash prices against generic hydrochlorothiazide/triamterene (the active ingredients in Dyazide) is often the fastest way to lower cost. Insurance plans may also have a preferred generic or different copay tiers.
If you tell me your ZIP code and the tablet strength/quantity, I can help you compare what to look for (brand vs generic, copay vs cash price).
What can you do to lower the cost fast?
Common options people use when “Dyazide cost” is the main concern include:
- Asking the pharmacy for the generic price and the brand price side-by-side.
- Checking whether your insurance has a low-copay alternative or prior-authorization requirement.
- Looking for pharmacy discount programs (not the same as insurance).
- Asking your prescriber if a different diuretic combination could be substituted based on your condition.
Will the cost change if insurance covers it?
Yes. With insurance, your out-of-pocket cost is usually a copay or coinsurance rate, which can differ substantially by plan and whether the drug is on a preferred formulary list. Without insurance, you typically pay the full retail cash price.
Quick question so I can narrow it down
What country (and ZIP code, if US), what Dyazide strength, and how many tablets are you trying to buy?