NPPA Caps Prices of 42 Drug Formulations, Covers Pain and Diabetes Meds

The National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority has revised retail prices of 42 drug formulations under the Drugs Prices Control Order. The new ceiling prices apply to commonly used medicines including pain management, antibiotics, cardiovascular drugs, and anti-diabetic medications. Manufacturers must issue updated price lists to the authority and state drug controllers. Retailers are directed to display the revised prices prominently at their premises.

Key Points: NPPA Caps Retail Prices of 42 Drug Formulations

  • NPPA revises prices of 42 drug formulations
  • Ceiling prices exclusive of GST
  • Covers pain, antibiotic, cardiovascular, and anti-diabetic drugs
  • Non-compliance attracts recovery of overcharged amounts with interest
2 min read

NPPA caps retail prices of 42 drug formulations, issues fresh notification

NPPA revises retail prices of 42 drug formulations, including painkillers, antibiotics, and diabetes medicines. New ceiling prices notified under DPCO.

"Manufacturers of these new drugs are required to fix retail prices in accordance with the notified ceiling - NPPA"

New Delhi, May 6

The National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority has revised the retail prices of 42 drug formulations under the Drugs Prices Control Order, according to a notification issued by the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers.

The revised prices will apply to a range of commonly used medicines, including combinations for pain management, antibiotics, cardiovascular drugs, anti-diabetic medicines, and vitamin supplements.

As per the notification, dated April 30, the ceiling retail prices specified are exclusive of Goods and Services Tax (GST), and manufacturers may add GST only if it is actually payable to the government.

Among the formulations covered are combinations such as aceclofenac-paracetamol-serratiopeptidase tablets priced at Rs 10.18 per tablet, atorvastatin-ezetimibe tablets ranging between Rs 21.36 and Rs 32.46 depending on strength, and clopidogrel-aspirin-atorvastatin capsules priced between Rs 6.19 and Rs 8.80 per capsule.

The list also includes antibiotics like cefixime with potassium clavulanate and cefuroxime-based formulations, as well as antidiabetic drugs such as gliclazide with metformin. Prices for certain high-value formulations, including relugolix-based combination therapies, have been capped above Rs 100 per tablet depending on the manufacturer.

NPPA stated that manufacturers of these "new drugs" are required to fix retail prices in accordance with the notified ceiling and must issue price lists in Form V to the authority and state drug controllers.

Retailers and dealers have also been directed to display updated price lists prominently at their business premises to ensure transparency for consumers.

The authority warned that any non-compliance with the notified prices would attract recovery of overcharged amounts along with interest under the provisions of the DPCO, 2013, and the Essential Commodities Act, 1955.

The notification supersedes any earlier price orders for the same formulations and strengths issued prior to this revision.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a diabetic living in Mumbai, this is welcome news. The gliclazide-metformin combo was eating into my monthly budget. Hope pharmacies actually follow these price caps and display them properly. Transparency is key!
A
Arun Y
NPPA is doing its job, but the real issue is that many doctors prescribe expensive branded versions of these drugs. Generic alternatives are much cheaper but not always recommended. Patients are caught in between. Someone needs to address this supply chain.
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Priya S
Finally some relief for common man! My father takes atorvastatin and clopidogrel regularly, and these price caps will save us around Rs 200-300 per month. Not huge but every bit helps with rising costs of everything. 👏
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Michael C
Interesting that they've capped relugolix combos over Rs 100/tablet. Those are for specific conditions and mostly used in corporate hospitals. But why is GST not included? That adds another 5-12% for patients. Needs to be clearer for the layperson.
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Nisha Z
Good step but enforcement is weak in smaller towns. My local pharmacy in Meerut still overcharges for basic antibiotics because "supplier rates are high". NPPA should conduct surprise checks, not just issue notifications. Paperwork alone won't help poor patients.
V
Vikram M

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