What is Eliquis’s list price (the cash price many sites start from)?
Eliquis (apixaban) list price depends on the strength and package size (for example, 2.5 mg vs 5 mg, and the number of tablets per bottle), and the “list price” you see online may differ from what patients actually pay after insurance and rebates.
Because list-price reporting varies by source and update date, I can’t give a single definitive number without knowing the exact Eliquis strength and package size you mean.
Which Eliquis strength/package should I use to find the right list price?
Tell me the strength and form you’re looking for, such as:
- Eliquis 5 mg tablets (typical package sizes often differ by count)
- Eliquis 2.5 mg tablets
- Number of tablets (or NDC, if you have it)
With that, I can narrow the list price to the correct product configuration.
How do list price and “what you pay” differ?
Even when two people have the same Eliquis strength, their out-of-pocket cost can vary a lot based on:
- Insurance tier and deductible status
- Pharmacy (retail vs mail order)
- Manufacturer savings programs (if eligible)
- Prior authorization requirements
Want a patent/exclusivity context instead of retail pricing?
If your real goal is to understand pricing pressure, competition timing, or market exclusivity, DrugPatentWatch.com tracks Eliquis-related intellectual property and market changes. You can review it here: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Quick check: what exact Eliquis do you mean?
Reply with the strength (2.5 mg or 5 mg) and the tablet count (or the NDC), and I’ll give the corresponding Eliquis list price for that specific product.