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DrugPrice

Eye Diseases Drug Costs With Medicare

Compare 17 eye diseases drug prices under Medicare Part D, averaging $536.47 per claim. Prices range from $25.00 (Latanoprost) to $1,839.00 (Syfovre) per prescription. 17 of 17 drugs have FDA-approved generics that cost 30-80% less.

Key Facts: Eye Diseases Drug Costs

Cheapest drug
Latanoprost ($25.00)
Most expensive
Syfovre ($1,839.00)
Medicare Part D avg
$536.47/claim
Generics available
17 of 17
Total Medicare spend
$9.4B/yr
Brand-only drugs
0

Source: CMS Medicare Part D Spending, latest reporting year. Costs reflect plan-paid amounts, not patient out-of-pocket.

Eye Diseases Drug Price Comparison

All 17 eye diseases drugs tracked in Medicare Part D, sorted from cheapest to most expensive. Click any drug for Medicare coverage details, generic timelines, and savings options.

DrugGeneric NameMedicare Avg/ClaimGeneric Available?
LatanoprostLatanoprost$25.00Yes
TimololTimolol Maleate$27.00Yes
Dorzolamide-TimololDorzolamide/Timolol$36.00Yes
BimatoprostBimatoprost$66.00Yes
LumiganBimatoprost$94.00Yes
RestasisCyclosporine (ophthalmic)$184.00Yes
VyzultaLatanoprostene Bunod$197.00Yes
RhopressaNetarsudil$206.00Yes
XiidraLifitegrast$229.00Yes
RocklatanNetarsudil/Latanoprost$232.00Yes
LucentisRanibizumab$654.00Yes
VabysmoFaricimab$663.00Yes
EyleaAflibercept$752.00Yes
DurystaBimatoprost (implant)$944.00Yes
BeovuBrolucizumab$1,391.00Yes
IzervayAvacincaptad Pegol$1,581.00Yes
SyfovrePegcetacoplan$1,839.00Yes

Medicare Part D Coverage for Eye Diseases Drugs

All 17 eye diseases drugs in this comparison are dispensed under Medicare Part D. Total Medicare spending reached $9.4B in the latest reporting year, averaging $536.47 per prescription fill.

Your out-of-pocket cost depends on three factors: (1) your plan's formulary tier — generics typically land on Tier 1 ($0-$10 copay), preferred brands on Tier 2 ($30-$50), and specialty drugs on Tier 4-5 (often 25-33% coinsurance); (2) your deductible status — most plans require you to meet up to a $590 deductible before copays apply; (3) the coverage phase — initial coverage, coverage gap, or catastrophic. As of 2025, Medicare Part D caps total annual out-of-pocket at $2,000 under the Inflation Reduction Act.

The 17 drugs with generic availability are usually the most cost-effective starting point — ask your prescriber whether a generic substitution is clinically appropriate.

Drug costs vary dramatically within this category. Syfovre (Pegcetacoplan) at $1,839.00 per claim is 74x more expensive than Latanoprost (Latanoprost) at $25.00 — yet both treat eye diseases. Therapeutic substitution within the same drug class is often the single biggest savings lever, and it requires only a prescriber conversation, not a plan change.

Frequently Asked Questions

Medicare Part D pays an average of $536.47 per claim for eye diseases medications across 17 tracked drugs. Patient out-of-pocket costs depend on your plan's formulary tier, deductible, and whether you've reached the catastrophic coverage phase. Most eye diseases drugs fall on Tier 2 (preferred brand) or Tier 3 (non-preferred brand) of standard Medicare Part D formularies.

The least expensive eye diseases medication is Latanoprost (Latanoprost) at $25.00 per Medicare Part D claim. A generic version is FDA-approved and available — ask your pharmacist about substitution to lower copays further.

Yes. All 17 eye diseases drugs tracked here appear in Medicare Part D claims data, meaning they are dispensed under Part D plans. Coverage details — formulary tier, prior authorization requirements, step therapy — vary by plan. Check your plan's formulary or call 1-800-MEDICARE before filling.

Yes, 17 of 17 eye diseases drugs have FDA-approved generic alternatives. Generics contain the same active ingredient and meet bioequivalence standards, but typically cost 30-80% less. On Medicare Part D, generics usually fall on Tier 1 with the lowest copay.

Three primary strategies: (1) Switch to a generic if available — Tier 1 generics typically cost under $10 per fill on Medicare Part D; (2) Use manufacturer copay assistance for brand-name drugs (commercial insurance only — Medicare beneficiaries can apply for patient assistance foundations like NeedyMeds or the PAN Foundation); (3) Compare cash prices using GoodRx, SingleCare, or Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs — sometimes cash pay beats your Part D copay. Talk to your doctor about therapeutic alternatives in the same drug class.

Cost per claim is the average plan-paid amount per prescription fill under Medicare Part D. Patient out-of-pocket varies by formulary tier and deductible status. Generic availability is based on FDA Orange Book data.

Source: CMS Medicare Part D Spending, 2026.