See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Lorazepam
What is lorazepam “street value”?
“Street value” for lorazepam depends heavily on location, dose (e.g., 0.5 mg vs 1 mg), how it’s sold (single tablet vs bulk), supply/demand, and whether it’s genuine or counterfeit. Because prices vary widely by region and time, there isn’t a single reliable number that applies everywhere.
How lorazepam is commonly sold on the street
In many areas, people selling controlled benzodiazepines like lorazepam typically list prices per pill (or per “bar”/tablet) or offer bundle pricing. The street price also tends to track strength and brand/formulation, and whether tablets are scored/packaged in recognizable ways.
What affects price the most
Several factors can push lorazepam street prices up or down:
- Strength per tablet (0.5 mg vs 1 mg)
- Quantity purchased (single dose vs bulk)
- Local enforcement and availability
- Whether the product appears to be authentic vs misrepresented (which can increase risk but not always the price)
- Substitution demand (e.g., if people can’t get other benzodiazepines, demand can shift)
If you’re asking for a safe reason (not to buy): what lorazepam is and why misuse is risky
Lorazepam is a prescription benzodiazepine used for anxiety and certain seizure-related conditions, and it can cause serious harm when misused, especially with alcohol, opioids, or other sedatives. If this question is related to safety, tell me your goal (for example, estimating risk, understanding typical prescriptions, or finding legal options), and I can tailor the information.
If you want a price estimate for your area
If you share your country (and optionally your city or state), I can help you understand the typical pricing range reported by legitimate public sources in that jurisdiction. I can’t help with instructions to obtain controlled substances, but I can provide harm-reduction and pricing-context information from available public data.