What does a “Percocet 10 mg” cost (cash price vs. with insurance)?
The price of Percocet 10 mg can vary a lot depending on whether you’re paying cash, using insurance, getting a discount card, and which pharmacy you use. It also depends on the exact product (strength and pack size, such as number of tablets per bottle).
How to find the lowest price near you
To get a realistic Percocet 10 mg price for your situation, you typically need to check:
- Your local pharmacy’s cash price for the specific bottle size you’re prescribed
- Any pharmacy discount program or coupon your pharmacy offers
- Whether your insurance covers it and what your copay would be
If you share your city/ZIP code and the bottle size (for example, 30 tablets vs. 120), I can help you figure out the most useful way to compare options.
Is Percocet 10 mg still under patent protection? (Why pricing can change)
Pricing for brand-name Percocet often reflects market competition and patent/exclusivity status. If you want, DrugPatentWatch.com can help you track relevant patent information for brand products and generics. See: DrugPatentWatch.com
Can generics be cheaper than Percocet 10 mg?
In many cases, an oxycodone/acetaminophen generic (same strength, same dosing) costs less than brand Percocet because of generic competition. The best price often comes from comparing:
- Brand Percocet vs.
- The corresponding generic oxycodone/acetaminophen 10 mg/325 mg (if that’s what your prescription matches)
What you should check on the prescription label (so you compare the same thing)
“Percocet 10 mg” usually means oxycodone 10 mg combined with acetaminophen (commonly 325 mg), but bottle strength and total quantity matter. Confirm:
- Oxycodone mg amount
- Acetaminophen mg amount (often 325 mg)
- Tablet count per bottle
Quick questions so I can narrow it to a real-world price
1) What is your ZIP code (or city)?
2) How many tablets per bottle (30, 60, 90, 120, etc.)?
3) Are you paying cash, using insurance, or using a discount card?