Forum Discussion

ForestRiverTeac's avatar
Jul 10, 2013

Vet Prescription Prices

My Lab recently had to have eye surgery and had it done at an opthamology clinic. I expected the surgery to be expensive but what I didn't expect was the incredible price for very small (0.5 ml) bottles of eye drops. One cost $99! I had to refill the $99 bottle so I called Target. The same bottle cost me $32. Another bottle at the vet was $47 and Target's price was $17.

I have to take Jed in for a re-check this Friday and I'm wondering if it's worth it to tell the vet about the incredible price difference. I understand that vets don't do the same kind of high-volume business that a big chain like Target does, but being able to get scripts filled for a third of the cost of the vet's price is staggering.

Hindsight is always 20/20, but I wish I'd been told that I could get his prescriptions filled somewhere else at greatly reduced prices. When you're in the throes of dealing with sudden surgery those kinds of issues just don't come to mind. I'll know better in the future.
  • I would expect the Vet probably pays more that that through his/her supplier than Target or other big retailers sells it for just based on volume. Also shelf life at the Vet may be a problem (low volume) where probably not with big box.
  • In the past few years, there's been a lot of upheaval in the vet meds industry... Places going out of business or being bought out by another.

    Prices have skyrocketed and it's not the vet's fault.

    You do have to shop around. When this trend first started, my old boy needed a glaucoma med that went from less than $20 to over $200. I shopped around and found a small pharmacy that had a bottle from before the price skyrocketed. Luckily that last bottle lasted him the rest of his life.

    But you do have to call around - there is a huge difference in prescrip med prices, be it human or animal.

    I find Costco pharmacy has good prices, and we recently got a prescription for our dog at Sam's club very reasonable compared to other pharmacies. You do not need a membership to go to the pharmacy at Sam's Club or Costco. Also Walmart has a list of $4 prescriptions. And, at CVS, they asked us if we had AAA - apparently some drugs are on a list that you can get a discount on with your AAA card. I never knew that. Unfortunately our dog's med wasn't on the list, but it's good to keep in mind.

    I would mention the price difference to the vet and see if he is willing to give you a prescription to get it elsewhere.
  • Any caring vet should not be opposed to your obtaining medications elsewhere cheaper. I think the vet should be more concerned that the right at home care is administered. Of course, any vet practice has to make money. Stocking and dispensing medications is expensive and a mass marketer obviously could do it cheaper than a small practice. I suspect most pet owners appreciate the convenience of obtaining all medications and instructions at one stop.

    In my home state, heart worm preventative is now available from the mass marketer pharmacies as well as flea preventative. They are discovering a profit center in pet medications and are attempting to seize that market from veterinarian practices. If this catches on, veterinarians will have to raise prices for their professional services to compensate for this loss of income.

    My Golden Retriever takes two allergy medications daily, and the university vet school where I take her offered the pills at some very expensive rate (a price I don't remember) but offered that I can buy them in bulk without a prescription from a pharmacy. I now buy 100 tablets for $8.00!