What’s the typical street price per milligram for fentanyl?
Street pricing for fentanyl isn’t stable because it depends on the amount being sold, how the drug is cut, and local enforcement and supply conditions. As a result, public estimates are usually given per “pill” or per “gram,” not per milligram, and direct per‑mg numbers can vary widely.
Why it’s hard to convert “street prices” to cost per milligram
Fentanyl sold on the street is often cut with other substances and may come as:
- Powder (price per gram is more commonly reported)
- Pressed pills (price per pill)
- Mixed forms (price set by “deal size” rather than mg content)
Because the marketed amount of fentanyl in a gram of street powder or a pill can differ a lot, “$/mg” can swing substantially even within the same city.
Where does fentanyl pricing usually get reported (and what you can use to estimate $/mg)?
If you find a report that lists a price for fentanyl powder (commonly per gram), you can estimate a per‑milligram figure like this:
- $/mg = ($ per gram) ÷ 1,000
But any estimate depends on how the report defines the product (pure fentanyl versus street-mixed powder).
If you tell me your location and the form (powder vs pills), I can help convert it
If you share what you’ve seen (for example, “$X per gram” or “$Y per pill”) and your region, I can convert that to an approximate cost per milligram and explain the assumptions behind the calculation.
Important safety note
Prices and potency vary widely in illicit fentanyl, and even tiny doses can be dangerous. If this question is related to a safety or overdose concern, seek local harm‑reduction resources and keep naloxone available where possible.
Sources
I don’t have any provided sources with specific $/mg street-price figures for fentanyl in your prompt, so I can’t cite an accurate per‑milligram number without risking guesswork.