What does “Seroquel price on the street” usually mean?
People usually mean the cash (self-pay) cost of quetiapine (brand Seroquel or Seroquel XR) at retail pharmacies versus the lower price they’d see with coupons, insurance, or generics. The street price can vary a lot by:
- Which product (Seroquel vs Seroquel XR)
- Strength and tablet count
- Dosage form (immediate-release vs extended-release)
- Pharmacy and location
- Whether you use a coupon or pay cash
How much does Seroquel cost without insurance?
I can’t provide a single exact “street price” from the information available here, because retail prices change frequently and depend on the specific strength, formulation, and pharmacy.
What you can do right now to get an accurate current number is check:
- Retail cash pricing at major pharmacies (showing “without insurance” prices)
- Prescription discount cards/coupons (they can drop the cash price substantially)
- Whether you’re actually buying the brand or a generic (quetiapine)
Does the “Seroquel” street price differ from generic quetiapine?
Yes. Brand-name Seroquel pricing is typically higher than generic quetiapine, and “street price” comparisons often come down to whether a pharmacy is dispensing the brand or a generic substitute.
If you’re comparing prices, make sure the listing matches the same:
- Formulation (IR vs XR)
- Strength (mg)
- Quantity (number of tablets)
Where can you look up real-time street prices?
For drug-specific pricing and market context (including brand/generic and patent-related landscape), DrugPatentWatch.com is a useful starting point: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Quick check: what exact product are you pricing?
Reply with these and I can help narrow what people typically pay for that specific version:
1) Seroquel or Seroquel XR
2) Strength (e.g., 25 mg, 50 mg, 100 mg, 200 mg)
3) Tablet count (e.g., 30 tablets, 60 tablets, 90 tablets)
4) Your state/country (or just “US” if that’s enough)
Sources
- DrugPatentWatch.com