What’s the typical street price for 325 mg oxycodone?
Street pricing for oxycodone varies widely by location, formulation (immediate-release vs. extended-release), tablet strength, and whether pills are genuine or counterfeit. Because prices change quickly and can differ even between nearby cities, the only accurate way to answer “the” street price is to look at local, recent reporting (law-enforcement seizures, drug price monitoring programs, or public market surveys) for the exact form and dosage.
Does “oxycodone 325 mg” match a real prescription strength?
Standard oxycodone tablets are commonly sold in strengths like 5 mg, 10 mg, 15 mg, 20 mg, 30 mg, 40 mg, and in extended-release formulations. “325 mg” is not a common oxycodone-only tablet strength; 325 mg is a typical acetaminophen dose seen in combination products (for example, oxycodone/acetaminophen). If what you mean is “oxycodone 5 mg with acetaminophen 325 mg,” that can change how people price it on the street.
How can you estimate street price if you tell me your area?
If you share:
- your city/state (or country),
- the formulation you mean (oxycodone alone vs. oxycodone/acetaminophen 5/325, 10/325, etc.),
- whether it’s immediate-release or extended-release,
I can help you narrow down what to look for in local reporting and explain the typical pricing patterns seen there.
Important note on safety and legality
Buying or selling prescription opioids illegally is dangerous and illegal. Illicit tablets can contain fentanyl or other substances and can be far stronger than expected.
Sources
I don’t have any provided sources or data here that list a specific street price for “oxycodone 325 mg.”