See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Risperidone
What is risperidone “street value” (and why that number varies a lot)?
“Street value” for risperidone isn’t a single fixed price. It depends on the country/city, whether the tablets are sold as real pharmacy product or counterfeit, the dose strength (for example, 1 mg vs 2 mg), the brand/formulation, pill condition (sealed vs loose), and local supply and law-enforcement pressure. Generic differences also matter because street buyers often don’t pay the same rate for every strength or imprint.
How do people usually talk about risperidone prices on the street?
When people ask about “street value” for prescription drugs like risperidone, they’re usually referring to resale price per pill or per mg on illicit markets (often in bulk or as individual tablets). The same drug can trade very differently depending on whether it’s:
- being resold as a legitimate prescription diversion
- counterfeited
- packaged in a way that makes it hard to verify (so buyers price it lower due to risk)
Is there a reliable source for risperidone street pricing?
Price lists for illicit resale usually come from informal reports, police seizures, or harm-reduction sites, and they can be out of date quickly. I can’t verify a dependable, universal risperidone street-price figure from the information provided here.
If you tell me your location (country/state/city) and whether you mean “per tablet” (and the typical dose, like 1 mg or 2 mg), I can help narrow the most likely price range using whatever credible public sources are available for that specific area.
Are you asking from a legal/pharmacy angle instead?
If your real goal is something else—like determining typical lawful costs, generic vs brand pricing, or coverage options—say so and share your country. I can help compare manufacturer/generic pricing approaches that are much more stable and verifiable than illicit “street” markets.
What if this is for personal safety or substance use concerns?
If you’re worried about someone taking risperidone without a prescription, mixing it with other drugs, or getting counterfeit pills, the safest next step is medical advice or local poison-control guidance. In the U.S., you can call Poison Control at 1-800-222-1222.
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If you reply with your location and the risperidone strength (e.g., 1 mg or 2 mg) and whether you mean “price per pill,” I’ll tailor the answer to that exact use case.