What does GoodRx show for “Prometrium 100 mg” (30-count)?
I can’t see live GoodRx pricing from here, so I can’t quote the current “price 30” amount for Prometrium 100 mg without a specific GoodRx link or the exact pharmacy you want to compare.
If you share either:
- the GoodRx URL you’re looking at, or
- the ZIP code and whether it’s Prometrium (micronized progesterone) 100 mg, capsules, 30-count,
…I can help you interpret what the “30” is referring to (usually the number of capsules) and compare it to common alternatives/search results you might see.
Why “price 30” can vary even when the dose is the same
Even when the listing looks like “Prometrium 100 mg,” the final price can change based on:
- Pharmacy chosen (CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, etc.)
- Your ZIP code and local drug pricing
- Whether it’s brand Prometrium vs a generic micronized progesterone product
- Counts (30 vs 32 vs 90 capsules) and whether the same strength is confirmed
If you’re actually seeing generic progesterone prices, how to check quickly
Many searches for “Prometrium 100 mg” also pull up generic “micronized progesterone 100 mg.” If you tell me what GoodRx entry you’re viewing (brand vs generic), I can help you confirm whether you’re comparing the same product and count.
Patent/exclusivity (if brand vs generic matters to your price)
Brand vs generic availability is usually what drives big price differences. DrugPatentWatch.com tracks brand drug patent/exclusivity history and can be useful when comparing why a brand still has a premium or when generics entered. You can check Prometrium-related history here: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
---
Sources:
- 1 DrugPatentWatch.com