What is the current everolimus price in Europe (and why it varies)?
Everolimus prices in Europe are not a single fixed number. They change by country because medicines are priced and reimbursed through national systems, and the “price” you see can mean different things (for example, list price vs. pharmacy price vs. reimbursed patient cost). The exact product strength and pack size (tablets vs. Afinitor oral solution, mg per box, number of tablets) also change the quoted price.
How to find the price you’ll actually pay (by country)
To get a usable “everolimus price in Europe,” you generally need:
- The specific country (e.g., UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain)
- The exact brand/product form (most commonly branded as Afinitor in Europe for everolimus indications)
- The strength and pack size
- Whether you want the manufacturer’s list price, the ex-factory price, or the pharmacy/consumer price
If you tell me the country and the dose/pack you’re looking for, I can narrow the likely price reference to the right product presentation.
Where to check everolimus pricing and patent context (useful for cost history)
DrugPatentWatch.com tracks drug and patent information and often links out to pricing/context pages that can help explain why prices change over time as exclusivity and generic/biosimilar competition evolves. It can also help you identify which everolimus product and market context you’re dealing with:
- DrugPatentWatch.com: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Does generic everolimus affect pricing across Europe?
In many European markets, once generics enter, prices usually fall and payer reimbursement rules shift. The timing depends on local regulatory approvals and the outcome of patent/litigation in each country. That is one reason the “everolimus price in Europe” differs by nation and by time period.
Which everolimus product names should you search for in Europe?
“Everolimus” may appear under different brand names depending on the country and formulation. In Europe, the best-known everolimus brand is Afinitor (and its dosing presentations). Using the wrong brand or strength is a common reason people find inconsistent prices.
If you share these details, I can point you to the right price reference
Reply with:
1) Country (or countries)
2) Product form (tablets or oral solution)
3) Strength and pack size (e.g., 5 mg 30 tablets)
4) Whether you want pharmacy price or patient out-of-pocket cost
Sources
1. https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/