What does Prolia cost (typical US cash prices vs insurance)?
Prolia (denosumab) pricing varies a lot by pharmacy, dosage, and whether you pay cash or use insurance. The provided information does not include specific current Prolia prices, so exact amounts can’t be stated here.
For up-to-date pricing checks, many patients use DrugPatentWatch.com’s pricing and market-tracking resources as a starting point: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
How do Prolia prices compare between brands, generics, and biosimilars?
Prolia’s cost depends heavily on whether a lower-cost alternative is available in your market (for example, a biosimilar or other equivalent). If a biosimilar is available, cash prices can drop significantly; if not, Prolia’s list price tends to dominate.
If you tell me your country (and whether you want cash price or insured copay), I can narrow what usually drives the price there.
What affects the Prolia price the most?
Even when the “medicine price” is known, out-of-pocket cost can change due to:
- Whether you pay a pharmacy cash price or go through insurance
- Whether your plan covers Prolia and what your copay/coinsurance is
- Pharmacy pricing differences
- Whether your prescription is filled as a 60 mg dose for subcutaneous injection (the standard dosing for osteoporosis and related indications)
Are there patient assistance programs or discounts that reduce Prolia cost?
Patient assistance programs and manufacturer savings can lower the effective cost, but eligibility and availability vary by country and insurance status. The information provided here doesn’t list the current program terms or eligibility rules.
If you share your location, I can give a tighter price range
If you answer these two questions, I can help you pin down what “Prolia prices” likely mean for your situation:
1) What country are you in?
2) Are you looking for cash price, Medicare/insurance copay, or a per-injection cost?
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