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Cheapest Carvedilol Alternatives

Lower-cost options in the same drug family (blood pressure medications), ranked by average US Medicare Part D spend per dose (calendar year 2024).

What are the cheapest alternatives to Carvedilol?

Among blood pressure medications, the lowest average US Medicare Part D spend per dose is Hydrochlorothiazide at $0.0584 (calendar year 2024, CMS), versus $0.065 for Carvedilol. The full same-class ranking is below. In England the NHS patient charge is a flat £9.90 per item either way. Switching is a clinical decision — information only, not medical advice.

Source:CMS Medicare Part D Spending by Drug·as of calendar year 2024updated yearly (last: )

Not medical advice. The figures on this page are drawn unchanged from public government datasets for general information only. They are not price quotes and not a substitute for professional advice. What you actually pay depends on your country, pharmacy, insurance, manufacturer, dose and region. Always consult a licensed pharmacist or clinician before making any decision about Carvedilol or switching medication.

The US figure is Medicare Part D PROGRAM spending per dosage unit (in US dollars), not a cash price; the UK figure is the patient's flat NHS charge per item (in pounds). They measure different things in different currencies and are shown side by side, never converted into one another.

Blood pressure medications — average US Medicare Part D spend per dose, cheapest first (CMS, calendar year 2024)
RankDrugUS per dose2024 US claims
1Hydrochlorothiazide$0.058418,462,765
2Metoprolol Tartrate$0.059115,912,137
3 (this drug)Carvedilol$0.06515,794,645
4Furosemide$0.081223,553,663
5Amlodipine Besylate$0.084850,204,110
6Atenolol$0.0886,459,376
7Lisinopril$0.088936,247,459
8Losartan Potassium$0.125636,240,406
9Metoprolol Succinate$0.182532,213,092
10Valsartan$0.33724,691,604

A side-by-side comparison of common blood-pressure medicines across drug classes — ACE inhibitors (lisinopril), ARBs (losartan, valsartan), beta-blockers (metoprolol, carvedilol, atenolol), a calcium-channel blocker (amlodipine) and diuretics (hydrochlorothiazide, furosemide). Different mechanisms, same goal of lowering blood pressure. In England, the NHS patient charge is a flat £9.90 per item for any of these.

See Carvedilol on US vs UK

Frequently asked questions

What is the cheapest alternative to Carvedilol?
By average US Medicare Part D spend per dose, the cheapest blood pressure medications option is Hydrochlorothiazide at $0.0584 (calendar year 2024), versus $0.065 for Carvedilol. That is a cost figure, not a clinical recommendation.
Are these alternatives interchangeable with Carvedilol?
Not necessarily. Drugs in one therapeutic class share a broad mechanism but differ in dosing, interactions and suitability. Whether any alternative is right for you is a decision for a licensed pharmacist or clinician.
Would a cheaper alternative cost less on the NHS in England?
Not for the patient: England charges a flat £9.90 per NHS item regardless of the drug (and prescriptions are free in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland). The per-dose cost gap shown here is a US figure.

Is a lower-cost option right for you?

A GeraClinic clinician can review whether a different blood pressure medication is appropriate for you, and issue or renew a prescription where clinically appropriate — online.

Contains public sector information published by U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and licensed under the U.S. Government Works / Public Domain. Source: CMS Medicare Part D Spending by Drug (calendar year 2024, published 2026-06-25).

Contains public sector information published by NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA), NHS England & DHSC and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: NHS prescription charges (England) — NHSBSA / NHS England / DHSC (2026/27 (from 1 April 2026), published 2026-04-01).