Typical cash prices for lacosamide without insurance
Lacosamide (the generic version and also some brand options, depending on the product you’re buying) is usually priced by strength and tablet/supply count. Without knowing your exact dose and form, the most accurate answer is to check local pharmacy pricing or an online cash price.
Fastest way to get an exact out-of-pocket price
Prices can vary a lot by:
- Dose (for example, 50 mg, 100 mg, 150 mg)
- Form (tablets vs. oral solution)
- Pharmacy and location
- Quantity (30-day vs. 90-day supply)
- Whether you’re buying the generic or a brand
If you tell me your dose (mg), form (tablet or solution), and the quantity (30 or 90 days), I can help you narrow to what you should expect to pay and what to compare.
How to lower the cost right now
Even without insurance, you can often reduce the price by:
- Comparing multiple pharmacies (big differences are common)
- Using a prescription discount card (if you have one through a pharmacy, employer, or a third-party program)
- Asking the pharmacist whether a lower-cost generic equivalent is available for your exact strength/form
Brand vs generic: what you should check on the prescription
Many people are asking about lacosamide because the generic is commonly available, but “lacosamide” can still be dispensed as different products depending on the prescription. Your cash price depends on whether the pharmacy fills generic lacosamide or a brand.
If you share what the bottle label says (generic lacosamide vs. a brand name), I can help interpret why the price is what it is.
Sources
No sources were provided with your question, and I don’t have enough information (dose, form, and quantity) to cite a specific cash price reliably.