What’s the price of one Percocet tablet?
Percocet (oxycodone/acetaminophen) is sold as prescription tablets in different strengths (for example, 5/325 mg, 7.5/325 mg, 10/325 mg). Price depends heavily on the exact strength, your location, the pharmacy, and whether you have insurance or a discount program.
How much does strength (and quantity) change the cost?
Because Percocet is priced per prescription fill (often dispensed as bottles of 28, 30, 60, etc.), “one tablet” usually isn’t sold at checkout as a single unit. The common way to estimate the cost of one tablet is:
1. Check the total price for the prescription at your pharmacy (or app/online price).
2. Divide by the number of tablets dispensed.
Without your exact strength and your pharmacy/ZIP code, there isn’t one reliable single-number price.
What affects the price the most?
Prices can swing due to:
- Whether you’re paying cash vs. using insurance/copay
- Whether a generic equivalent is available for your exact dosing (often lower cost than brand Percocet)
- Your pharmacy’s negotiated rates and local pricing
- Any cash discount programs (varies by pharmacy)
How to get an exact “per pill” number fast
If you tell me:
- the Percocet strength (e.g., 5/325 mg)
- your ZIP code (or city/state)
- whether you want cash price or with insurance/copay
I can help you figure out what one tablet is likely to cost by using the total price for a typical bottle size and dividing by tablets.
Quick question
What strength is your prescription (5/325, 7.5/325, or 10/325), and what’s your ZIP code (or the pharmacy you use)?