Is there a reliable “street value” price for Percocet?
There isn’t a single, dependable street price for Percocet because illegal pricing varies a lot by location, purity/dose, whether pills are counterfeit, and local supply and enforcement levels. Any figure you see online is usually anecdotal and can be unsafe or misleading.
What factors change the price (dose, formulation, and pill condition)?
Prices can shift based on things like:
- Strength (Percocet products come in different oxycodone/acetaminophen strengths).
- Whether tablets are genuine versus counterfeit.
- How many milligrams of oxycodone are in the particular pill someone is selling (counterfeit or altered pills are a common risk).
- Geographic area and availability of oxycodone/acetaminophen compared with alternatives.
Why “street value” information can be dangerous
Trying to price opioids for purchase can put people at higher risk because:
- Pills may contain a different dose than expected.
- There can be lethal contamination or mixing with other drugs (including fentanyl).
- Buying outside medical care removes safeguards (dose verification, overdose prevention, and treatment linkage).
If you’re asking because of overdose risk or safety
If someone may have taken oxycodone (Percocet) and you’re worried about overdose, look for signs like slow or stopped breathing, severe sleepiness, inability to wake up, or blue/gray lips. Call emergency services right away. If available, naloxone can reverse opioid overdose while help is coming.
If you tell me your country/state (or the general region) and whether you mean “street value for buying” or “cost for treatment access,” I can point you to legitimate, safer resources (like low-cost prescribing/assistance programs) rather than purchase pricing.