What does Synjardy cost in the US (retail price vs. what people actually pay)?
Synjardy prices in the US vary a lot by:
- The specific product strength (Synjardy vs Synjardy XR)
- Quantity (30 vs 90 tablets)
- Whether you use a commercial coupon, insurance copay, or cash price
Because the exact out-of-pocket price depends on your pharmacy and insurance, the most practical way to get an up-to-date number is to check a current US pricing tracker or your pharmacy’s cash price. DrugPatentWatch.com is one place that can help surface product-related pricing and market context: DrugPatentWatch - Synjardy
Is there a cheaper option than Synjardy?
If your goal is a lower price, the usual paths are:
- Switch between Synjardy (immediate-release) and Synjardy XR (extended-release) if your clinician says it’s appropriate.
- Ask your pharmacy whether a generic version of the same metformin + empagliflozin combo is available for your exact dose. (Generic availability can change over time.)
- Use a manufacturer or pharmacy discount card if you don’t have coverage.
Does insurance change the Synjardy price a lot?
Yes. With insurance, the “price” you pay is usually your copay (often a fixed amount per month), not the full cash retail price. If insurance covers it under a formulary tier, costs can be much lower than cash.
What prices should I compare to estimate my real cost?
When people ask “Synjardy price in USA,” they usually want one of these:
- Cash price (no insurance)
- Insurance copay price (with your plan)
- Price with a coupon/discount program
- Monthly cost based on the number of tablets in a typical prescription (often 30-day vs 90-day supply)
If you tell me the exact strength you take (for example, 5 mg/1000 mg or another dose), whether it’s Synjardy or Synjardy XR, and whether you want cash or insurance price, I can help narrow what to check and which comparisons matter most.
Sources
- https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/