How much does aspirin cost right now?
Aspirin prices vary a lot by form (brand vs. generic), dose (e.g., 81 mg or 325 mg), quantity (bottles or blister packs), and where you buy (retail pharmacy vs. online). With only the question “Price of aspirin,” there isn’t enough information to give a single accurate number.
If you tell me:
- the dose (81 mg “baby aspirin” vs. 325 mg, etc.),
- tablet count (e.g., 30, 100, 365),
- brand or “generic,” and
- your country (and city if you want local pricing),
I can narrow it down to the right price range.
What affects aspirin pricing the most (so you can estimate)
In practice, these factors drive the price you see:
- Generic vs. brand name: generics are usually much cheaper.
- Count and packaging: larger bottles typically reduce the per-pill cost.
- Pharmacy and promotions: store brands and discount programs can change the total.
- Product type: buffered/enteric-coated versions can be priced higher than plain immediate-release aspirin.
Is “aspirin” the same as “ASA” and can that change the price?
Yes—aspirin is often sold as acetylsalicylic acid (ASA). But specific product versions (enteric-coated, buffered, delayed-release) are different formulations and can have different pricing even if the active ingredient is the same.
If you want, I can look up the most relevant price—but I need details
Reply with something like: “generic aspirin 81 mg, 100 tablets, in the US,” and I’ll give a tighter price estimate for that exact product type.