How can I find the correct clonazepam pill ID?
To identify a clonazepam tablet, you usually need a few physical details and then match them to published pill ID records (which often list the tablet’s imprint code, shape, and color).
Common things to check on your pill:
- Imprint/letters/numbers (this is the most important)
- Color
- Shape (round, oval, etc.)
- Scoring (is it splitable?)
- Any size markings
If you share the imprint exactly as it appears (for example, “0.5 mg: X” or the letters/numbers), along with color and shape, I can help narrow it down.
What does “clonazepam” look like on a pill?
Clonazepam is marketed under different brand names and comes in multiple tablet strengths (and some places also have orally disintegrating forms). Tablets from different manufacturers can look different, even if they’re all clonazepam.
Because of that, pill ID is mainly driven by the imprint code plus strength.
Why imprint matters more than color
Color and shape can repeat across unrelated drugs, including other benzodiazepines. The imprint code is the key identifier used by pill database listings and pharmacy labeling.
If you don’t have the imprint, what should you do?
- Don’t rely on “looks like clonazepam.”
- Take a photo of the tablet and check whether there’s any imprint on both sides.
- If there’s no imprint or it’s unclear, ask a pharmacist to verify it with the National Drug Code (NDC) from your prescription or your medication bottle.
Safety note (important)
Clonazepam is a controlled benzodiazepine. Do not take a tablet you can’t identify, and avoid mixing it with alcohol or other sedatives unless your prescriber told you to.
Tell me your pill details
Reply with:
- Imprint code (exact text/numbers)
- Color
- Shape
- Any score line
- Strength on the bottle (if you have it)
and I’ll help you identify which clonazepam tablet it matches.