What’s the typical out-of-pocket price for methimazole (no insurance)?
Prices for methimazole without insurance vary mainly by strength (e.g., 5 mg vs 10 mg), tablet count per bottle, and the specific pharmacy. Since you didn’t specify the dose and quantity, I can’t give a single reliable number.
How much does dose and quantity change the cost?
Methimazole is commonly dispensed as tablets in different strengths and bottle sizes. In general, higher strength and larger counts cost more, so two people taking the same daily dose could still pay different amounts depending on how the pharmacy packages the prescription.
Where prices are usually cheapest (and how people find the best cash price)
Without insurance, many shoppers lower the total by using:
- Pharmacy cash prices (compare at your local pharmacies)
- Prescription discount cards or discount programs offered through the pharmacy
- Online price comparison tools (to check the same exact strength and count)
To get an accurate estimate, the key is comparing the same product (methimazole, same mg strength, same tablet count, same form).
If you tell me your prescription details, I can estimate more precisely
Reply with:
1) Methimazole strength (e.g., 5 mg or 10 mg)
2) How many tablets you get (or the days’ supply—like 30-day or 90-day)
3) Your country (and ZIP code if you’re in the US)
Then I can narrow down what you might pay out of pocket and suggest the fastest way to check the lowest cash price.