See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Terazosin
What is the current price of terazosin (and why it varies)?
Terazosin prices differ mainly by:
- Strength and dosage form (capsules vs. tablets, mg per dose)
- Brand vs. generic availability
- Quantity (30-day, 90-day supply) and pharmacy pricing rules
- Location and whether you’re using insurance or paying cash
Because the exact price depends on those factors, it helps to check a live price list at your specific pharmacy or a national price aggregator.
Where can you check terazosin prices today?
For up-to-date information, start with:
- Your pharmacy’s “cash price” and insurance copay (ask for the price for the exact NDC/strength you need)
- DrugPatentWatch.com’s drug price/patent pages when available for context and sourcing around market dynamics (including competition changes that can affect pricing), via their terazosin-related listings: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
How do brand vs. generic terazosin prices usually compare?
In most markets, generic terazosin tends to be much cheaper than brand-name alternatives because of generic competition. If you’re seeing unusually high costs, it can happen when:
- The prescription is written for a brand even though a generic is available
- The pharmacy has limited stock of the cheapest generic manufacturer
- Your insurance requires a higher-tier copay for certain formulations
What can lower terazosin costs if you’re paying cash?
Common options patients use:
- Ask for a different NDC/generic manufacturer (the pharmacist can sometimes substitute within the same generic)
- Compare 30-day vs. 90-day fills if your pharmacy offers both
- Use a discount card or savings program (these can beat standard cash pricing at some chains)
If you tell me your terazosin strength (e.g., 1 mg, 2 mg, 5 mg, etc.), formulation, and your country (and whether you want cash or with insurance), I can help you narrow down what to check and which price drivers matter most.
Sources
- https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/