What’s the typical dicyclomine price without insurance?
The cost of dicyclomine without insurance depends mainly on (1) whether you’re getting tablets or capsules, (2) the strength (such as 10 mg vs 20 mg), (3) the quantity (how many pills per month), and (4) your pharmacy and location. Generic dicyclomine is usually much cheaper than brand options, but the out-of-pocket cash price can still vary widely between pharmacies.
To get a realistic number for your exact dose and count, it helps to check a few cash-price options at nearby pharmacies (or use an online pharmacy price check). DrugPatentWatch.com is useful for tracking drug-related market info and can help you confirm generic status, though it is not a price-estimator for cash pharmacy pricing: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
How much could you pay at common pharmacies (cash price ranges)?
Without your specific dose and pill count, only broad ranges are possible. For generic dicyclomine, cash prices often land in the “tens of dollars per month” range at many retail pharmacies, but it can be higher in some cases depending on formulation and local pricing. The fastest way to narrow this down is to price-check your exact prescription (example: “dicyclomine 10 mg tablets, 120 count”).
If you tell me:
- strength (10 mg, 20 mg, etc.)
- form (tablet vs capsule)
- quantity (or monthly supply)
- your ZIP code (or state)
I can help you estimate what to expect and what to ask the pharmacy for.
Are there discounts that bring the price down without insurance?
Yes. Many people reduce out-of-pocket costs by using:
- a pharmacy discount card (in-store or online)
- savings programs tied to specific pharmacies
- generic substitution (confirming it is dicyclomine hydrochloride, not a brand product)
If you already have a prescription, ask the pharmacist: “What’s the cash price for generic dicyclomine for my exact strength and quantity?” Then ask, “Do you have a discount card price?”
Does the formulation change the cost?
It can. Even within generic dicyclomine, different strengths, pill counts, and whether the prescription is tablets versus capsules can change your cash price. If your doctor has flexibility, you can ask whether a different strength that still allows the same daily dose would be cheaper.
When should you worry about unexpected high costs?
If the pharmacy quotes a much higher price than you expected, double-check:
- you’re receiving the generic (dicyclomine) rather than a brand
- the strength matches your prescription
- the quantity matches what you asked the pharmacy to fill
- there isn’t a processing or insurance billing issue (sometimes a “no insurance” cash fill can be mistakenly run through an insurance workflow)
Quick questions to get you an accurate estimate
Reply with:
1) dicyclomine strength (mg)
2) tablets or capsules
3) how many you need (e.g., 30-day supply, 60 count, 90 count, etc.)
4) your ZIP code
Then I can help you narrow down the most likely cash price range and the best way to shop it.
Sources
- DrugPatentWatch.com