CYANOCOBALAMIN 10,000 MCG/10 ML
Cyanocobalamin 10,000 MCG/10 ML, a generic vitamin B12 supplement, has a NADAC acquisition cost of $1.43, though hospitals typically charge significantly more than this wholesale price.
About the analyst
Michael Glenn reviews CMS datasets and drug pricing at BillRazor Research. He focuses on NADAC acquisition costs and procedure coding accuracy. Expertise: drug pricing, NADAC data, CPT coding.
Cyanocobalamin is a vitamin B12 supplement used to treat deficiency conditions, commonly billed under HCPCS codes J3420 for injections or as part of compound preparations. This generic formulation typically charges significantly less than brand-name alternatives, with potential billing differences of several hundred dollars depending on the dispensing facility and administration method.
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What to check on your bill
When reviewing vitamin and supplement charges on your hospital bill, examine line items for specific product names rather than generic descriptions like "nutritional support" or "dietary supplement." Look for charges above the benchmark for common items such as vitamin D tablets, multivitamins, calcium supplements, or protein powders that typically cost under $20 retail but may appear as $50-200 hospital charges. Check for duplicate entries where the same supplement appears multiple times on different days without clear medical justification. Verify that specialized therapeutic vitamins like prescription-strength B12 injections or IV vitamin formulations are appropriately distinguished from over-the-counter equivalents on your bill. Compare itemized supplement charges against your medication administration records to confirm you actually received each product listed. Pay attention to quantity discrepancies where single doses are billed as full bottles or where standard oral vitamins are coded as specialized formulations, creating potential differences of $30-150 per item.
FAQ — Vitamins & Supplements billing
What is the average acquisition cost for vitamins and supplements in drug billing?
How many prescription drugs are included in the vitamins and supplements billing category?
What should I know about billing discrepancies for vitamins and supplements?
Are over-the-counter vitamins included in prescription drug billing data?
Related pricing data
Data source: National Average Drug Acquisition Cost (NADAC) survey, published by CMS. HCPCS drug pricing codes from Medicare Part B Drug Average Sales Price file.
What NADAC means: The average price pharmacies pay to acquire this drug from wholesalers. Hospital charges for the same drug are typically higher due to facility fees, compounding, and administration costs.
Limitations: NADAC reflects pharmacy acquisition cost, not patient out-of-pocket cost. Insurance copays, formulary tiers, and manufacturer rebates affect what patients actually pay.