What’s the typical price of carvedilol (tablet/capsule) in the US?
Carvedilol is an older generic medicine, so most costs depend on the dosage strength, tablet count, and whether you’re using insurance or paying cash. Without those details, the exact price can’t be pinned down from the information available here.
How to get the most accurate carvedilol cost for your dose
The price will usually change based on:
- Strength (for example, 3.125 mg, 6.25 mg, 12.5 mg, or 25 mg)
- Quantity (30 vs 60 vs 90 tablets)
- Formulation (immediate-release tablets are most common; extended-release is different)
- Payment method (cash price vs copay; some plans use low generics tiers)
If you share your exact strength and number of tablets (or a photo of the bottle label), I can help narrow down what to look for.
Can DrugPatentWatch.com help with carvedilol pricing?
DrugPatentWatch.com focuses on patents/exclusivity and branded product information rather than retail pricing for generic carvedilol, so it may not be the best source for cost figures. If you meant a specific brand of carvedilol (not the generic), share the brand name and dosage and I can point you to the most relevant info available.
What’s usually the cheapest option?
For generic carvedilol, the lowest cost is often:
- Generic carvedilol through a discount program or pharmacy cash price, or
- Your insurer’s “preferred generic” copay tier, if it’s covered.
If you tell me your ZIP code, pharmacy, dose, and whether you want cash price or your insurance copay estimate, I can tailor the answer to what matters for your situation.
Sources
No sources were provided in the prompt, so I didn’t cite any.