See the DrugPatentWatch profile for carvedilol
What’s the typical cost of carvedilol (generic vs. brand)?
Carvedilol is widely available as a generic medicine in many countries, so the price usually depends on whether you’re buying generic carvedilol tablets or a brand-name product, plus your dose strength and tablet quantity.
Because you did not specify your country, dose (e.g., 3.125 mg, 6.25 mg, 12.5 mg, 25 mg), formulation (tablets vs. extended-release), or whether you want “cash price” vs. insurance copay, the exact cost can’t be pinned down from the information provided.
How do dose and quantity affect the price?
Carvedilol cost commonly varies with:
- Dose strength (higher strengths can cost more even within the same tablet count)
- Number of tablets per bottle (30 vs. 60 vs. 90-day supplies)
- Formulation (immediate-release tablets vs. extended-release, when applicable)
- Whether the pharmacy dispenses a multi-generic equivalent (same active ingredient, different manufacturer)
If you tell me your exact dose and which product form you need, I can help you estimate what to expect and what to compare at pharmacies.
Where can you check real-world prices?
For quickest real-world pricing, check your local pharmacy’s “cash” price and compare it with:
- Other chain pharmacies in your area
- Major online pharmacies that show pricing upfront
- Prescription discount cards (if you’re paying without insurance)
Is there a manufacturer or brand-name version?
If you’re specifically asking about a brand-name carvedilol price (instead of generic), tell me the exact brand name shown on your prescription. Brand pricing is often higher than generic carvedilol, and the difference can be large.
How to get the lowest cost
Cost usually drops if you:
- Use generic carvedilol (same dose and formulation)
- Ask the pharmacy for the lowest-price “therapeutic equivalent” they can substitute (when your prescription allows)
- Opt for a longer supply (often better per-pill pricing, depending on pharmacy)
Can you share your details so I can narrow it down?
Reply with:
1) Your country (or state/province)
2) The strength (e.g., 6.25 mg)
3) Immediate-release or extended-release (if you know)
4) Quantity (or “30-day / 90-day supply”)
5) Generic or brand-name (what’s on the prescription)
…and I’ll help you estimate the most likely price range and what numbers to look for at pharmacies.
Sources
No sources were used because no provided information about pricing, location, or product identity is available.