What do people mean by “Neurontin 800 mg street price”?
“Street price” usually refers to the cash cost paid outside insurance, typically reported as a per-pill or per-bottle amount by sellers or online listings. Prices can vary a lot by location, whether the drug is real or counterfeit, and how it’s obtained.
What I can and can’t confirm from the available information
I don’t have any drug-price data (by pill strength, geography, or typical cash-sale market) in the provided materials, so I can’t give a reliable “street price” for Neurontin 800 mg.
How to get a real-world cash price (and why it may differ from “street”)
For a legitimate cash price, the closest reliable sources are pharmacy cash prices and wholesale/market references. If you want, tell me your country (and state/province), and whether you mean “per 800 mg tablet” or “per 30-count,” and I can help you narrow down what price ranges to look for.
If the goal is cost comparison: brand vs generic
Neurontin is the brand name for gabapentin. In many markets, generic gabapentin is much cheaper than the brand, so “street price” may reflect whether sellers are moving brand-labeled product or generics.
Important safety note
Because “street” sales are not standardized, counterfeit tablets and incorrect dosing are real risks with gabapentin. If you’re trying to lower cost, using an approved pharmacy and checking the tablet’s national drug identification number (where applicable) is safer than buying from unverified sources.
If you share your location (country + state/province) and whether you’re looking for per 800 mg tablet or per bottle (and count), I can help you find the closest legitimate pricing approach and what range is typical to expect.