| Option | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Basic / standard | $160–$200 |
| Standard with extras | $214–$347 |
| Complex / advanced | $266–$433 |
| Specialized / revision | $400+ |
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| Item | Without Insurance | With Insurance |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly prescription | $300–$600 | $10–$75 copay |
| Doctor visit (monthly) | $150–$300 | $20–$50 copay |
| Generic buprenorphine/naloxone | $80–$200 | $5–$30 copay |
| Telehealth visit (QuickMD, Bicycle Health) | $99–$199 | Covered by some plans |
Generic buprenorphine/naloxone ($80–$200/month) costs 60–75% less than brand-name Suboxone. GoodRx coupons bring the price down further. Telehealth MAT providers (Bicycle Health, QuickMD) offer prescriptions via video visit for $99–$199/month, making treatment accessible without finding a local prescriber. Medicaid covers Suboxone and buprenorphine in all 50 states. SAMHSA's treatment locator (findtreatment.gov) helps find providers accepting new patients. Long-term Suboxone maintenance has a 50–60% success rate for opioid use disorder — significantly higher than abstinence-only approaches. Check your insurance policy or HSA/FSA eligibility before paying out of pocket — many people miss applicable coverage.
The price of suboxone is shaped by insurance coverage, provider type, and geographic location. Patients with high-deductible health plans often pay the full negotiated rate until their deductible is met, making the first procedure of the year significantly more expensive out of pocket than later ones.
Provider choice has the single largest impact on what you actually pay. Academic medical centers and hospital systems charge higher facility fees, while independent practitioners and outpatient surgery centers typically offer lower all-in pricing for the same procedures and outcomes.