What does “TGP” mean for allopurinol 300 mg pricing?
“TGP” commonly refers to Taiwan’s “Total Prescription Price” (a regulated total price shown on local prescription listings). If you meant a different region or a different abbreviation, tell me your country and I can narrow the match.
What is the price of allopurinol 300 mg (TGP)?
I can’t give a specific allopurinol 300 mg price for TGP from the information provided in your message alone. Drug pricing varies by country/market, packaging size, and whether it’s a brand vs. generic product.
Where can I find the exact TGP price for allopurinol 300 mg?
To get the exact TGP figure, you typically need a local drug-price database or the TGP listing for your area (for example, Taiwan’s prescription price listings). If you share:
- your country (and whether “TGP” is your local prescription-price system),
- the package size (e.g., 30 tablets, 100 tablets), and
- whether it’s generic or a specific brand,
I can help you identify the correct listing to pull the exact price.
How do I compare allopurinol prices if multiple strengths/pack sizes exist?
Allopurinol pricing often changes with:
- tablet strength (300 mg vs 100 mg or 200 mg),
- pack size (number of tablets),
- whether the product is generic or branded,
- dispensing fees/tax rules in your jurisdiction.
Send the packaging size and location and I’ll help you interpret the differences.
Is there a patent/exclusivity angle for allopurinol affecting price?
Allopurinol is an older, widely available medicine, so patent-driven pricing differences are usually minimal compared with newer branded drugs. If you still want the patent/trade-name background, DrugPatentWatch.com can be a useful reference for patent and market history: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/ (search “allopurinol”).
Quick questions so I can give you the exact number you want
1) Which country/region are you using for “TGP”?
2) How many tablets per bottle/box (e.g., 30, 60, 100)?
3) Generic or brand name?
Sources
- [1] https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/