Telmisartan-Amlodipine
Telmisartan-amLODIPine 40-5MG
What is Telmisartan-Amlodipine?
Telmisartan-Amlodipine is a generic medication used to treat high blood pressure. The average price of Telmisartan-Amlodipine is around $118 for a supply of 30, 5 mg tablets. Use our Rx.com savings offer to get great discounts on Telmisartan-Amlodipine at participating pharmacies near you.Side Effects
- Chest pain that may spread, trouble breathing, nausea, unusual sweating
- Allergic reaction: Itching or hives, swelling in your face or hands, swelling or tingling in your mouth or throat, chest tightness, trouble breathing
- Confusion, weakness, uneven heartbeat, trouble breathing, numbness or tingling in your hands, feet, or lips
Warnings
- It is not safe to take this medicine during pregnancy. It could harm an unborn baby. Tell your doctor right away if you become pregnant.
- Tell your doctor if you are breastfeeding, or if you have kidney problems, liver disease, angina, heart failure, heart or blood vessel problems, or a recent heart attack.
- This medicine may cause the following problems:Increased risk of heart attack or anginaHigh levels of potassium in the bloodKidney problems
- This medicine could lower your blood pressure too much, especially when you first use it or if you are dehydrated. Stand or sit up slowly if you feel lightheaded or dizzy. Do not drive or do anything that could be dangerous until you know how this medicine affects you.
- Do not stop using this medicine without asking your doctor, even if you feel well. This medicine will not cure your high blood pressure, but it will help keep it in the normal range. You may have to take blood pressure medicine for the rest of your life.
Prescription savings · · · ·
What is Telmisartan-Amlodipine ?
Telmisartan-Amlodipine is a generic medication used to treat high blood pressure. The average price of Telmisartan-Amlodipine is around $118 for a supply of 30, 5 mg tablets. Use our Rx.com savings offer to get great discounts on Telmisartan-Amlodipine at participating pharmacies near you.- Chest pain that may spread, trouble breathing, nausea, unusual sweating
- Allergic reaction: Itching or hives, swelling in your face or hands, swelling or tingling in your mouth or throat, chest tightness, trouble breathing
- Confusion, weakness, uneven heartbeat, trouble breathing, numbness or tingling in your hands, feet, or lips
- Rapid weight gain, swelling in your hands, ankles, or feet
- Fast, pounding, or uneven heartbeat
- Change in how much or how often you urinate
- Lightheadedness, dizziness, fainting
- It is not safe to take this medicine during pregnancy. It could harm an unborn baby. Tell your doctor right away if you become pregnant.
- Tell your doctor if you are breastfeeding, or if you have kidney problems, liver disease, angina, heart failure, heart or blood vessel problems, or a recent heart attack.
- This medicine may cause the following problems:Increased risk of heart attack or anginaHigh levels of potassium in the bloodKidney problems
- This medicine could lower your blood pressure too much, especially when you first use it or if you are dehydrated. Stand or sit up slowly if you feel lightheaded or dizzy. Do not drive or do anything that could be dangerous until you know how this medicine affects you.
- Do not stop using this medicine without asking your doctor, even if you feel well. This medicine will not cure your high blood pressure, but it will help keep it in the normal range. You may have to take blood pressure medicine for the rest of your life.
- Your doctor will do lab tests at regular visits to check on the effects of this medicine. Keep all appointments.
- Keep all medicine out of the reach of children. Never share your medicine with anyone.
Telmisartan-Amlodipine Coupons & Prices
Telmisartan-amLODIPine 40-5MG
Weight-loss medication, prescribed online
Licensed U.S. providers · No insurance needed · Shipped to your door
A telmisartan-amlodipine coupon from Rx.com can lower what you pay at the pharmacy counter for this two-in-one blood pressure tablet, which combines telmisartan (an angiotensin II receptor blocker) with amlodipine (a calcium channel blocker). The brand version, Twynsta, is no longer marketed in the United States, so what you fill today is the FDA-approved generic. Cash prices for the same tablet and quantity can differ a lot from one pharmacy to the next, even between stores a few blocks apart, so it is worth comparing before you fill. Enter your ZIP code above to see today's price near you across our network of more than 60,000 participating pharmacies, then show the free coupon at the counter.
What is telmisartan and amlodipine, and how does it work?
Telmisartan and amlodipine is a fixed-dose combination tablet that is FDA-approved to treat high blood pressure (hypertension) in adults. Lowering blood pressure reduces the risk of cardiovascular events such as strokes and heart attacks. It pairs two medicines that lower blood pressure in different ways: telmisartan is an angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB) that relaxes blood vessels by blocking a hormone signal that tightens them, and amlodipine besylate is a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker (CCB) that relaxes the muscle in blood vessel walls.
It can be used alone or alongside other blood pressure medicines. A doctor may start it as initial therapy in someone likely to need more than one drug to reach their goal, or add it (or switch to it) for a person who is not controlled on telmisartan or amlodipine alone, or who had a dose-limiting side effect such as swelling on one component by itself. It comes as 40/5, 40/10, 80/5, and 80/10 mg tablets. Despite containing amlodipine, this combination is approved only for high blood pressure — it is not approved to treat angina, even though amlodipine on its own is.
What telmisartan-amlodipine costs without insurance, and how to pay less
Because Twynsta is no longer marketed in the U.S., there is no brand-versus-generic decision to make here and no manufacturer savings card for this combination. If you are paying cash, the price you are quoted is set by the individual pharmacy, and those cash prices vary widely from store to store for the exact same generic tablet, strength, and day supply. That variation is the main thing you control, which is why comparing before you fill matters more than it might seem.
Rx.com compares prices at more than 60,000 pharmacies nationwide and gives you a free discount coupon you can use whether or not you have insurance. A few practical tips: check the price for the strength your prescriber wrote, ask about a 90-day supply if you take it long term, and compare the coupon price against your insurance copay, since one is sometimes lower than the other. Enter your ZIP above to see today's price at pharmacies near you.
Alternatives and related blood pressure medicines
If your prescriber is weighing options, several related medicines work on the same pathways. Only your prescriber can decide what fits your situation, but these are the ones most often compared:
- The individual components on their own: telmisartan and amlodipine.
- Other ARBs: olmesartan and losartan.
- Other combination tablets: telmisartan and hydrochlorothiazide (an ARB plus a diuretic), amlodipine and valsartan, and amlodipine and benazepril.
Do not switch products or split a combination tablet into separate pills on your own. Prices differ across all of these, so if your prescriber says more than one option is reasonable, it is fair to ask which is cheapest for you and compare each here first.
Safety information you should know
Telmisartan and amlodipine carries a boxed warning for fetal toxicity: medicines that act on the renin-angiotensin system can injure or kill a developing baby. If you become pregnant, stop the medicine and tell your doctor right away. Other important risks include low blood pressure with dizziness or fainting (especially if you are dehydrated or salt-depleted, such as on a high-dose diuretic), high potassium, and reduced kidney function in people whose kidneys depend on this hormone system, such as those with narrowed kidney arteries, heart failure, or volume depletion. It should not be combined with aliskiren in people with diabetes, and dual blockade with an ACE inhibitor is generally avoided. From the amlodipine part, swelling of the ankles and feet is dose-related, and rarely people with severe blockage in the heart arteries have had worse angina or a heart attack when starting or increasing the dose.
Liver problems and biliary obstruction call for extra caution. Because the lowest available combination tablet is 40/5 mg, the label says initial therapy with the combination tablet is not recommended in people with hepatic impairment; instead, the components are titrated separately (starting amlodipine at the low end of its range, or adding amlodipine 2.5 mg to telmisartan). Telmisartan is not recommended in severe liver impairment.
The most common side effects reported in studies were swelling (peripheral edema), dizziness, and back pain. Tell your prescriber and pharmacist about everything you take, since interactions include lithium (levels can rise), NSAIDs (can blunt the blood pressure effect and strain the kidneys), potassium supplements and potassium-sparing diuretics, digoxin, simvastatin (limit to 20 mg a day with amlodipine), and CYP3A4 inhibitors. This page is general information, not medical advice. Talk with your doctor or pharmacist about your own situation, and read the label that comes with your prescription.
This Telmisartan-Amlodipine information was written and reviewed against authoritative U.S. medical sources — MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine), DailyMed, and FDA prescribing information — and checked for accuracy. It is provided for education and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.
Verify the official label: Telmisartan-Amlodipine on DailyMed (FDA)
Reviewed against FDA labeling · Last reviewed July 2026
Related Drugs
Browse more medications: starting with T · full A-Z directory · by condition · common drugs
Medical disclaimer: This information is provided for general educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a licensed physician, pharmacist, or other qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read here. If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately.