What’s a typical GoodRx price for lamotrigine 50 mg, 30 tablets?
GoodRx prices for lamotrigine can vary by pharmacy, location, and whether the offer is for generic lamotrigine (most commonly) versus a brand product. Because I don’t have live access to GoodRx’s current database in this chat, I can’t quote today’s exact $ price for “lamotrigine 50 mg, 30 tablets.”
If you share your ZIP code (or city/state) and whether you want tablets or extended-release (ER), I can help you figure out what to look for and how to compare the offers you see.
How to make sure the GoodRx coupon matches the right lamotrigine product
When searching GoodRx, the exact match matters:
- Dose: 50 mg
- Form: tablet (not liquid)
- Release type: immediate-release vs ER (if the listing includes ER, that’s a different product)
- Quantity: 30 tablets
If the coupon is for a different strength (25 mg, 100 mg) or a different quantity (like 60 or 90), the per-tablet cost can look cheaper even when the total is worse.
What to compare if different coupons show different prices
When you find multiple lamotrigine offers, compare:
- Total price for 30 tablets
- Price per tablet (divide by 30)
- Whether it’s a “cash price” coupon (GoodRx) or requires additional pharmacy steps
- Whether the pharmacy brand you get is the same manufacturer or a different generic (sometimes pricing differs)
Cheaper alternatives if “50 mg / 30 tablets” looks expensive
If GoodRx shows a high price for that exact strength and quantity, some people save by:
- Using a different pack size (e.g., 60 or 90 tablets) if it’s discounted more heavily
- Using another nearby dose strength (for example, 25 mg tablets split or taken in pairs) only if your prescriber/pharmacist says it’s appropriate for your regimen
Do not change dosing just to chase a cheaper coupon without checking with a clinician or pharmacist.
If you want, I can narrow it to the best current option you can use
Reply with:
1) Your ZIP code
2) Immediate-release or ER (extended-release), if you know it
3) Whether the prescription is for 50 mg tablets exactly (not “dispersible”/other formulation)
Then I’ll tell you the most reliable way to interpret the GoodRx results and estimate whether one coupon beats another on a per-tablet basis.