What is the “street value” of 325 mg oxycodone?
Prices for “325 mg oxycodone” are not a reliable or standardized figure because the amount and formulation matter (for example, whether it’s immediate-release vs. extended-release, whether it’s oxycodone-only vs. a combination product like oxycodone/acetaminophen), and street prices vary widely by city, supply, and purity.
Also, “325 mg” is commonly associated with the acetaminophen dose in combo tablets (oxyCODONE/acetaminophen such as 5 mg/325 mg, 7.5 mg/325 mg, etc.), not oxycodone alone. That distinction is important because street pricing typically tracks the oxycodone strength and the risk level people assign to the product.
How do buyers usually price prescription opioids on the street?
Street pricing for diverted opioids usually depends on:
- Oxycodone strength (how many mg of oxycodone per pill)
- Formulation (immediate-release vs. extended-release)
- Brand vs. generic and how recognizable the pill is
- Availability (supply shortages can raise price)
- Perceived potency and counterfeit risk
- Local enforcement and distribution networks
Because those factors change from place to place, any single “street value” number would be misleading.
If you’re asking for safety reasons: what should you know about oxycodone/acetaminophen 5/325-style tablets?
Oxycodone taken without medical supervision can cause life-threatening respiratory depression, especially when mixed with alcohol, benzodiazepines (Xanax, Valium, etc.), or other sedatives. For combo products, the acetaminophen component can also reach dangerous levels.
Even a dose that seems “typical” can be unsafe if:
- someone takes multiple tablets close together,
- pills are counterfeit or stronger than expected,
- the person has liver disease, sleep apnea, or other risk factors.
Are you looking for a legal/regulated way to get pricing instead?
If you meant “value” in a lawful context (for example, the retail pharmacy price or what a specific strength costs), tell me the exact product name/strength on the bottle/box (for example, “oxycodone HCl 5 mg/325 mg” or the imprint on the pill). I can then help you interpret what it is and point you to legitimate pricing resources.
If this is about an emergency
If someone has taken oxycodone (especially with other drugs) and has slow or difficult breathing, extreme sleepiness, or can’t be awakened, call emergency services immediately. If naloxone is available, use it right away.
Sources: none cited (no provided source material mentions street pricing).