How much does cetirizine cost (typical retail prices)?
The price of cetirizine depends heavily on which version you mean (tablets vs. liquid), the strength (for example, 5 mg vs. 10 mg), the pack size, and whether you’re buying a brand or a generic. In the U.S., generic cetirizine is usually much cheaper than brand products, but exact “how much” varies by pharmacy and location.
How much is cetirizine for a 30-day supply?
A common way people price cetirizine is by estimating a 30-day supply based on the dose they take:
- If you take 10 mg once daily, you’d typically use about 30 tablets/month.
- If you take 5 mg once daily, you’d typically use about 30 tablets/month.
Your total cost can change based on pharmacy markup, sales, and insurance.
What form is cetirizine—tablets or liquid—and how does that change the price?
Cetirizine pricing often differs by form:
- Tablets (including generics) usually cost less per dose than branded products.
- Oral liquid is often priced differently because it’s sold by bottle size and measured concentration.
If you mean a specific brand (Zyrtec) or strength, what should you check?
If you tell me which product you mean (for example, Zyrtec 10 mg tablets, Zyrtec-D, cetirizine 10 mg generic, or the liquid concentration), I can narrow down what “how much” likely refers to and how to compare prices at pharmacies.
Want the exact price?
If you share:
1) your country (and ZIP code if in the U.S.),
2) the exact product name (Zyrtec vs generic),
3) the strength and form (10 mg tablets, 5 mg/5 mL liquid, etc.), and
4) the quantity (e.g., 30 tablets, 1 bottle),
I can help you estimate the most likely price range you’ll see.