| Name | Yearlaunched | Notes | Sources |
| Caffeine Free Dr. Pepper | 1983 | Uncaffinated version of Dr. Pepper. It was introduced following the success of Pepper Free, its Diet counterpart. | |
| Dr Pepper Red Fusion | 2002 | A cherry-flavored, red-colored variety. It was the first new flavor added to the Dr. Pepper family of beverages in the company's 122-year history. It was released as part of a trend of "variety expansions", which included rival Pepsi Blue and Cadbury-Schweppes' own DnL. Much like with these drinks, Red Fusion was a commercial flop and was discontinued in 2004. | |
| Dr Pepper Cherry Vanilla | 2004 | A cherry vanilla-flavored variety. It was originally released in some areas on October 15, 2004, and was the first in the planned "Soda Fountain Classics" line of beverages from Dr Pepper, a range of drinks designed to taste similar to popular soda fountain drinks from the 1950s. When Dr Pepper Cherry was introduced, Dr Pepper Cherry Vanilla became region-specific and is now only found in select areas. It can also be found in Coca-Cola Freestyle machines that offer Dr Pepper in place of Pibb Xtra. | |
| Dr Pepper Berries and Cream | 2006, 2022 | A berry cream-flavored variety. It was released in most US locations in April 2006 as the second beverage in Dr Pepper's "Soda Fountain Classics" lineup. It was eventually discontinued due to poor sales.[citation needed] but was reintroduced as part of a sweepstakes event in 2022. In Canada, it was sold as a limited edition from September–December 2007, after the limited edition run of its diet counterpart. | |
| Dr Pepper Cherry | 2009 | Dr Pepper with a stronger cherry flavor first released in some areas around February 2009. The beverage tastes similar to Dr Pepper but adds a stronger cherry flavor. | |
| Heritage Dr Pepper | 2009 | A sugar-sweetened version of Dr Pepper, made to represent its formula before switching to high fructose corn syrup by the early 1970s. It first became available around November 2009 as a limited time offering, and was replaced the following year with Dr Pepper Made with Real Sugar. | |
| Dr Pepper Made with Real Sugar | 2010 | A sugar-sweetened version was released to commemorate the drink's 125th anniversary during the summer of 2010 as a permanent variety, replacing Heritage Dr Pepper. This version of the soda featured six collectible 12 oz cans and a 20 oz plastic bottle decorated with Dr Pepper's old slogans and images from the 1960s. When Dublin Dr Pepper was discontinued, Heritage Dr Pepper became its de facto replacement. | |
| Dr Pepper Ten | 2011 | A mid-calorie version of the drink sweetened with a blend of corn syrup, aspartame, and acesulfame potassium, intending on having only ten calories per serving. The product's branding featured a masculine appearance and gunmetal colors, and promotional campaigns that featured the slogan "It's Not for Women", which gained some controversy for its promotional sexism. It was discontinued in 2018 due to low sales. | |
| Dr Pepper Vanilla Float | 2014 | A vanilla ice cream flavor variant that was sold as a limited edition for the summer of 2014. The drink returned in 2017 and has been periodically sold since then. | |
| Dr Pepper Dark Berry | 2019, 2022 | A limited edition berry-flavored variety released in summer 2019 to promote the film Spider-Man: Far From Home. It was later brought back 2022 to promote Jurassic World: Dominion. | |
| Dr Pepper & Cream Soda | 2020 | A cream soda flavored variety. | |
| Dr Pepper Strawberries and Cream | 2023 | A strawberry cream-flavored version of Dr. Pepper that was initially released as a limited edition for Valentine's Day, but became a permanent edition afterward. | |
| Dr Pepper Creamy Coconut | 2024 | A coconut-flavored version of Dr. Pepper. It was sold as a limited edition for the summer of 2024. | |
| Dr Pepper Blackberry | 2025 | A blackberry-flavored variant introduced in February 2025 as a new permanent variety. | |