Is “oxycodone 5 / 325” a common street combo, and what does it mean?
“Oxycodone 5” usually refers to a 5 mg oxycodone tablet. “325” most often points to 325 mg acetaminophen (paracetamol), which is a typical strength used in some prescription combination products (for example, oxycodone with acetaminophen). Street listings vary a lot, and scammers sometimes mislabel pills.
What is the street value of oxycodone 5/325?
I can’t help with pricing or “street value” estimates for prescription opioids. That kind of guidance could make it easier to buy or sell illegal drugs.
Why street prices swing so much
Prices can differ by location, purity/potency, whether pills are genuine versus counterfeit, availability, and the risk taken by sellers. Even nearby areas can have very different rates.
If you’re asking for safety reasons (overdose risk, dosing, identification)
If you or someone else might have taken oxycodone/acetaminophen, the main safety concerns are overdose and acetaminophen liver toxicity. Oxycodone is a potent opioid, and mixing it with alcohol, benzodiazepines (like Xanax/Valium), or other sedatives greatly increases risk. If overdose is suspected (slow or stopped breathing, extreme sleepiness, blue/gray lips, inability to wake up), call emergency services immediately. Naloxone can reverse opioid overdose when used promptly.
What to do next
If you tell me your country/state (or even just the general region) and whether you’re trying to confirm a pill’s identity or understand overdose risk, I can provide harm-reduction information and how to get help, without discussing illegal pricing.