Potassium Starting Dose Guide — What to Expect & What It Costs
Just prescribed Potassium? Here's what the typical starting dose looks like, how it changes over the first few weeks, what to expect from your body, and what to budget for your first fill at $4/month or less.
Always follow your prescriber's specific dosing instructions. Starting doses vary based on your individual health, age, weight, kidney function, and other medications. This is general guidance only — not medical advice.
Common Potassium doses — from starting to maintenance
Potassium is typically titrated through these standard strengths. Most adults start at the lowest available dose and increase under prescriber supervision:
| Strength | Stage | Cash price /mo |
|---|---|---|
| 99mg | Starting dose | $4+ |
| 200mg | Maximum dose | $8+ |
Cash prices via Script Unlock pharmacy bidding. Lower strengths typically cost less per month than higher strengths of the same Potassium.
Why starting doses of Potassium are lower than maintenance doses
Your prescriber didn't pick the starting dose at random. The titration approach — starting low and increasing gradually — is the safest, best-supported way to use Potassium. Here's why:
- 1Your body adapts to the medicationMost Potassium side effects (nausea, dizziness, GI upset, headache) are dose-dependent and peak in the first 1–2 weeks. Starting low gives your body time to acclimate before reaching the therapeutic dose.
- 2Your prescriber monitors response & tolerabilityStarting low lets your prescriber see how YOU respond to Potassium — not how the average patient responds. They check blood work, blood pressure, or symptoms before deciding to increase.
- 3Minimum effective dose principleNot every patient needs the maximum Potassium dose. Many patients respond fully at the starting dose, especially in the first 2–4 weeks. Titrating up only when needed minimises side effects and cost.
- 4Reduces the risk of adverse reactionsSevere reactions to Potassium — though rare — are far less likely at a starting dose than at maintenance. If you have a sensitivity, it's much safer to discover it at a low dose.
- 5It costs you less while you assessThe starting dose is usually the cheapest dose of Potassium. If you and your prescriber decide Potassium isn't right after 2–4 weeks, you've spent the minimum amount before pivoting.
Starting dose cost vs maintenance dose cost
Cash price for Potassium is roughly proportional to the strength dispensed. Most patients pay less for the first 1–2 months while they're still titrating:
Budgeting tip: if you're starting Potassium, plan for the starting-dose cost in months 1–2, then expect a step up to maintenance. Script Unlock locks in the lowest cash price each month — no membership.
Starting Potassium — what to expect, week by week
Get your first Potassium fill — from $4
Upload your Potassium prescription. Verified pharmacies bid in real time so you pay the lowest cash price — even on the lower starting dose.
Compare Potassium Prices from $4Potassium starting dose — FAQ
What is the typical starting dose of Potassium?+
The typical adult starting dose of Potassium is 99mg, with a usual maintenance dose of 200mg and a maximum of 200mg. Your prescriber will personalise this based on your age, weight, kidney and liver function, other medications, and the condition being treated.
Why are starting doses of Potassium lower than maintenance doses?+
Starting doses of Potassium are deliberately lower so your body can adapt and your prescriber can monitor for side effects. This process — called titration — reduces dose-related side effects and lets the prescriber identify the lowest effective dose for you.
How much does the Potassium starting dose cost?+
Potassium at the starting dose typically costs less than at maintenance dose because you're using less drug per day. Script Unlock cash prices for Potassium start from approximately $4/month at the starting dose, rising to about $6/month at maintenance.
Can I take more than my Potassium starting dose if it isn't working?+
No — do not increase your Potassium dose without prescriber approval. The starting dose is a clinical benchmark, not a minimum. Many patients respond fully at starting dose. If you feel it isn't working after 2–4 weeks, contact your prescriber for an evaluation.
When will my prescriber increase my Potassium dose?+
Most prescribers re-evaluate Potassium at the 4–6 week mark after starting. If your symptoms aren't adequately controlled — and you've tolerated the starting dose — they'll typically titrate up by one step. Follow the schedule your prescriber gives you.