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How Much Does Vivitrol Cost With Medicare?

Vivitrol (Naltrexone (injection)) costs an average of $1,391 per Medicare Part D claim, with total Medicare spending of $345.0M in the latest year. A generic version is available, which may reduce out-of-pocket costs.

Key Facts: Vivitrol Cost

Medicare Part D avg
$1,391/claim
Likely Part D tier
Tier 4-5 (specialty)
Annual cost/patient
$12,321
Generic available
Yes — Naltrexone (injection)
Manufacturer
Alkermes
Treats
Opioid Dependence
YoY price change
+4.6%

Source: CMS Medicare Part D Spending Dashboard. Tier placement inferred from typical formulary norms — confirm with your specific Part D plan.

Vivitrol Medicare Coverage & Out-of-Pocket Cost

Vivitrol is covered under Medicare Part D, with the program paying an average of $1,391 per prescription fill. Vivitrol typically falls on Tier 4-5 (specialty) of standard Part D formularies. Specialty drugs use coinsurance (25-33% of plan-negotiated price), not flat copays. The 2025 Part D annual out-of-pocket cap is $2,000.

Your actual out-of-pocket cost depends on three factors: (1) formulary tier — your plan's specific placement; (2) deductible status — most plans require you to meet up to a $590 deductible (2025) before copays kick in; (3) coverage phase — initial coverage, then the donut hole was eliminated in 2025, replaced by a hard $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap under the Inflation Reduction Act. Once you hit $2,000 in true out-of-pocket spending, the rest of your Part D drugs are free for the year.

Because generic Naltrexone (injection) is available, the single biggest savings move is asking your pharmacist about generic substitution. Generics typically sit on Tier 1 with copays under $10, vs Tier 2-3 placement for brand-name Vivitrol. Most states allow automatic substitution unless your prescriber writes "dispense as written."

For cash-pay or commercial insurance scenarios, compare prices using GoodRx, SingleCare, or Cost Plus Drugs before filling — discount-program prices sometimes beat Part D copays for lower-cost generics.

Vivitrol is manufactured by Alkermes and prescribed primarily for Opioid Dependence. In the most recent Medicare Part D data, 248,000 claims were filed for 28,000 unique beneficiaries, at an average cost of $1,391 per claim. Average annual cost per beneficiary is $12,321.

Year over year, Medicare spending on Vivitrol has increased by +4.6%. Because a generic version of Naltrexone (injection) is available, patients can often substitute to reduce out-of-pocket costs. Its patent expires 2023-01-31.

Key Data

MetricValue
Avg Cost Per Claim$1,391
Total Medicare Spending$345.0M
Total Claims248,000
Beneficiaries28,000
Generic AvailableYes
Year-Over-Year Change+4.6%

Frequently Asked Questions

Medicare Part D pays an average of $1,391 per claim for Vivitrol. Vivitrol is typically placed on Tier 4-5 (specialty) of standard Part D formularies. Specialty drugs use coinsurance (25-33% of plan-negotiated price), not flat copays. The 2025 Part D annual out-of-pocket cap is $2,000. As of 2025, total annual out-of-pocket on Part D is capped at $2,000 under the Inflation Reduction Act.

Yes. Vivitrol appears in Medicare Part D claims data, with 28,000 beneficiaries filling 248,000 prescriptions in the latest year. Specific coverage depends on your plan's formulary — call the number on your insurance card or check the plan's Summary of Benefits to confirm prior authorization, step therapy, or quantity limit requirements.

Vivitrol (Naltrexone (injection)) costs an average of $1,391 per Medicare Part D claim, with total Medicare spending of $345.0M in the latest year. A generic version is available, which may reduce out-of-pocket costs.

Yes. A generic version of Naltrexone (injection) is available, which typically costs 80-95% less than brand-name Vivitrol. Ask your pharmacist about generic substitution — most state laws allow automatic substitution unless your prescriber writes "dispense as written."

Medicare beneficiaries cannot use manufacturer copay cards (anti-kickback statute), but several options exist: (1) Apply to charity copay foundations like the PAN Foundation, NeedyMeds, HealthWell Foundation, or Patient Advocate Foundation — many cover opioid dependence drugs; (2) Ask your prescriber about therapeutic alternatives in the same drug class that may be on a lower tier; (3) For some drugs, paying cash via GoodRx or Cost Plus Drugs can beat your Medicare copay — always compare before filling; (4) If your income is below 150% of the federal poverty level, you may qualify for the Medicare Extra Help (Low-Income Subsidy) program, which reduces Part D costs to near-zero.

Vivitrol is manufactured by Alkermes. The FDA application number is BLA125057.

Vivitrol (Naltrexone (injection)) is primarily prescribed for Opioid Dependence.

Medicare Part D spending on Vivitrol has increased +4.6% year over year. Total program spending reached $345.0M in the latest reporting year.

Vivitrol (Naltrexone (injection)) costs an average of $1,391 per Medicare Part D claim, with total Medicare spending of $345.0M in the latest year. A generic version is available, which may reduce out-of-pocket costs.

The data source behind this answer is CMS Medicare Part D Drug Spending data. Every figure on the page traces back to that source; the methodology page describes the inputs and the refresh cadence in full detail.

A practical caveat: the headline answer above reflects the most recent CMS Medicare Part D Drug Spending data vintage; underlying data is often revised for months after first publication, and the right reference for any specific decision is whichever vintage is current at the time of the decision. The as-of date is stamped on every page.

Source: CMS Medicare Part D Spending, 2026.