What is “Percocet” on the street?
Percocet is the brand name for a prescription opioid (typically oxycodone combined with acetaminophen). Street prices vary a lot by location, dose strength, how much is “cut” or counterfeit, and whether pills are real or fake. Because of that, there isn’t a single reliable “street value” number that holds across cities or time.
Why it’s not possible to give one accurate price
Even within the same region, the going price can swing based on:
- Pill strength (mg of oxycodone)
- Supply/demand and local enforcement trends
- Whether pills are genuine vs. counterfeit
- Whether sellers bundle pills or sell by the tablet
- Sales channel (in-person vs. online), which affects risk and pricing
If you’re asking for cost, what can you use instead of street prices?
If your goal is budgeting the cost of opioid medication safely and legally, the best references are:
- Your pharmacy’s cash price (or insurance copay)
- Patient assistance or discount programs
- Generic oxycodone/acetaminophen pricing through legitimate pharmacies
If you tell me your country/state and the dose (e.g., 5/325, 10/325), I can help you look up legitimate pricing options or explain typical factors that affect cost through legal channels.
If you’re asking for safety reasons
Buying opioids “on the street” is extremely risky because counterfeit pills and variable dosing are common, and acetaminophen overdose can also occur. If this question is connected to using or obtaining opioids, tell me what you need help with (treatment options, naloxone access, or overdose risk), and I’ll point you to harm-reduction steps and resources.