How much does Seroquel cost on the street?
“Street value” for Seroquel (quetiapine) depends heavily on location, tablet strength (for example, 25 mg vs 100 mg vs 200 mg), whether pills are whole or crushed, and whether they’re counterfeit. The provided information does not include any pricing data for illicit sales, so there isn’t a reliable figure to report.
Why street pricing for prescription pills varies so much
Illicit prices for controlled or commonly misused prescription drugs often swing based on:
- The specific strength and formulation being sold.
- Supply (how many diverted tablets are circulating locally).
- Demand (how likely the drug is to be sought for misuse).
- Quality (authentic vs counterfeit).
Is it ever sold legally, and how does that differ from street value?
Legally, quetiapine is dispensed through pharmacies with a prescription and is priced according to pharmacy and insurance terms rather than an illicit market rate. Street pricing is typically tied to diversion and misuse, not legitimate retail pricing.
If your goal is to understand risk or legality, not pricing
Seroquel misuse can be dangerous, and buying prescription medication outside legitimate channels can expose people to counterfeit products and unpredictable dosing. Laws also vary by country and state for possession and sale.
If you tell me your country/state and the tablet strength you mean (e.g., quetiapine 25 mg, 100 mg, or 200 mg), I can help explain what typically drives diversion and misuse risk there, but I can’t provide or verify street “value” pricing without trustworthy sources.