Best treatments for agoraphobia
2 products may treat agoraphobia, spanning FDA drug classes such as benzodiazepine. Ranked below by our independent recall-safety rating (rated where FDA data exists) — not medical advice; always consult a professional.
Quick answer: Of the 2 drugs we list for agoraphobia, all are available as lower-cost generics, spanning classes such as benzodiazepine. They’re ranked by each drug’s FDA recall-safety record — not clinical effectiveness for agoraphobia — so confirm the right choice with your prescriber.
| # | Drug | Rating | Type | Form | Class | Generic? | Pharmacy pays | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Not yet rated | Prescription | Tablet | Benzodiazepine | Generic | $1 | View → | |
| 2 | Not yet rated | Prescription | Tablet | Benzodiazepine | Generic | $1 | View → |
Full ranking · 2 treatments
xanax
Boxed warningPrescriptionFDA-sourced
Xanax (Alprazolam) is a benzodiazepine used to treat Agoraphobia, Depressive Disorder, Panic Disorder.
Pharmacy pays
From ~$0.69/30· 8 formsxanax xr
Boxed warningPrescriptionFDA-sourced
Xanax XR (Alprazolam) is a benzodiazepine used to treat Agoraphobia, Depressive Disorder, Panic Disorder.
Pharmacy pays
From ~$0.69/30· 8 formsFrequently asked
- What treats agoraphobia?
- Our catalog lists 2 products that may treat agoraphobia, based on NIH RxClass (MED-RT “may treat”) drug-classification data — not the verbatim FDA label. They're rated where FDA recall-safety data exists.
- What is the best-rated treatment for agoraphobia?
- Ratings appear as FDA recall-safety data accumulates for the products that may treat agoraphobia.
- How are these treatments ranked?
- By our independent score, currently based on FDA regulatory recall-safety data (the methodology blends additional sources as they come online). See the How we rate page.
- What types of drugs treat agoraphobia?
- Treatments for agoraphobia span FDA drug classes including benzodiazepine. Compare every option side by side, ranked by independent rating, above.
Treatment associations are derived from NIH RxClass (MED-RT “may treat”) drug-classification data — not the verbatim FDA label. This is general reference, not medical advice — always consult a licensed professional.