Cocaine floods your brain with dopamine and crashes it back below baseline within the hour. The cycle is what makes it addictive so fast. Over 70% of cocaine deaths in the US now also involve fentanyl — people snorting powder with zero opioid tolerance are dying from overdoses they never saw coming.
Street NamesA fast-acting stimulant with a well-documented harm profile, made more dangerous every year by what gets mixed into the supply.
Cocaine is a stimulant drug extracted from the leaves of the coca plant (Erythroxylum coca), which grows primarily in South America. It exists in two main forms: cocaine hydrochloride (the white powder most people are familiar with) and crack cocaine (freebase cocaine, made by processing powder with baking soda and water into a smokeable rock). Both are the same drug. The route of use changes how fast it hits and how quickly dependency forms.
Cocaine works by blocking the reuptake of dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine in the brain. Dopamine floods the reward system at levels three times higher than any natural reward, including food, sex, or winning. When the drug clears, dopamine drops below your baseline level. You feel worse than you did before you took it. That drop is the crash, and the crash is what drives the urge to redose immediately.
Cocaine is a Schedule II controlled substance in the US, meaning it has a recognized but extremely limited medical use, specifically as a topical anesthetic in certain ear, nose, and throat surgeries. Outside a hospital, every gram on the street is illicitly manufactured or diverted from pharmaceutical supply chains.
Same drug, radically different experience depending on how it enters your body. Speed to the brain = intensity of high = speed of addiction.
Bars show relative speed — faster to brain means shorter path through nasal/lung tissue to bloodstream. Crack and IV reach the brain almost instantly.
Faster onset = more intense dopamine spike = faster dependency formation. Crack can create compulsive use patterns after just a few sessions.
The full timeline of a cocaine high, from onset through crash, and why the comedown drives immediate redosing.
Cocaine users are dying from opioid overdoses. The cocaine supply is contaminated with fentanyl, and fentanyl does not change how cocaine looks, smells, or tastes.
A bag passed at a party came from a chain of three or four people. Nobody in that chain is a chemist. The fentanyl mixed into the batch does not announce itself. Your friend took some and was fine, but that tells you nothing about your line. Hot spots mean concentration varies within the same bag.
Crack cocaine is processed from powder, so anything already in the powder ends up in the rock. Testing data from harm reduction programs shows fentanyl detected in crack cocaine samples in multiple US cities. Smoking it delivers it to the brain just as fast.
Xylazine (tranq) is a veterinary sedative now appearing in cocaine samples. Narcan does not reverse xylazine, only the fentanyl component. Call 911 even after giving Narcan and even if the person partially wakes up.
Fentanyl test strips work on cocaine powder and crack. One line = fentanyl detected. Two lines = not detected. Results in 2–5 minutes. Available free at most harm reduction programs and for about $1 each online. If it tests positive, do not use alone and have Narcan nearby.
DEA.gov/onepill →Cocaine is one of the most cardiotoxic recreational drugs documented. Young, healthy people with no prior heart history are dying from cocaine-induced cardiac events — because the drug creates heart attack conditions in any coronary artery regardless of age.
In the 60 minutes immediately after using cocaine, your risk of myocardial infarction (heart attack) is 24 times higher than baseline. This applies to people with no prior history of heart disease.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology — Acute Cardiovascular ToxicityCocaine forces the arteries supplying your heart to constrict. Combined with a racing heart, the result is the heart muscle starving while working harder than it ever has.
Acute RiskYour liver produces cocaethylene. It is more cardiotoxic than cocaine alone, has a longer half-life, and is present in the majority of cardiac fatalities.
Combination RiskCocaine disrupts the heart's electrical system, triggering rhythms that prevent effective pumping. Sudden cardiac arrest can occur with no warning.
Acute RiskThe high is gone in 30 minutes. The drug stays in your body for days. And tests do not look for cocaine - they look for what your body turns cocaine into.
Drug tests do not screen for cocaine itself - cocaine clears blood in under an hour. They detect benzoylecgonine (BZE), the metabolite your liver produces when breaking down cocaine. BZE has a half-life of 6-8 hours, accumulates in urine, and stays detectable for days after the high is long gone.
If cocaine and alcohol were used together, your liver produces a second detectable compound: cocaethylene. It also appears on cocaine tests and carries its own, slightly longer detection window.
The biggest factor. BZE builds up with repeated use. Chronic users can test positive for 10-14 days in urine vs 2-4 days for a single use.
High ImpactCocaine metabolites can store in fat tissue. Higher body fat percentage can slightly extend detection windows, particularly for chronic users.
Moderate ImpactCocaine is metabolized by the liver and plasma cholinesterase. Impaired liver function significantly slows clearance and extends windows.
High ImpactStaying hydrated helps flush BZE through urine. Aggressively diluting a sample gets flagged - labs check creatinine levels for tampering.
Low ImpactYounger people with faster metabolisms clear cocaine faster. Certain medications and genetic variants slow the relevant liver enzymes.
Moderate ImpactMixing with alcohol produces cocaethylene - an additional detectable metabolite that extends the window and appears as a separate compound.
Moderate ImpactCocaine ODs look different from opioid ODs — but fentanyl contamination means you may be dealing with both at the same time. Know both sets of signs cold.
Fentanyl contamination means a cocaine user can go into opioid respiratory arrest with zero warning. Narcan cannot hurt someone who did not take opioids. If you are unsure what they took, give it anyway — you lose nothing and may save their life.
Say: "Someone is unresponsive after using cocaine — possible overdose." Give your location and stay on the line. Good Samaritan laws in most US states protect you from drug possession charges when you call 911 to save someone's life.
Insert nozzle into one nostril and press the plunger firmly. Roll them onto their side after dosing. Narcan cannot harm someone who did not take opioids. If fentanyl was in the cocaine, Narcan can reverse the overdose within minutes. Give a second dose in the other nostril after 2–3 minutes if there is no response.
For a seizure: do not restrain them, move objects away, time the seizure, place them on their side when it stops. For overheating: move to a cool area, remove excess clothing, apply cool — not cold — water to skin. Cocaine-induced hyperthermia is a medical emergency on its own.
Tilt head back, lift chin, give one breath every 5 seconds. The 911 dispatcher will guide you through this in real time. You do not need training — just follow the instructions on the call.
Narcan wears off in 30–90 minutes. If fentanyl was present in the cocaine, it may still be active in their system after Narcan wears off and they can go back into overdose. Do not leave them alone until EMS arrives regardless of how recovered they appear.
Narcan is over the counter at CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart — no prescription needed in most states. As a cocaine user, carry it. It exists for exactly this scenario. Text your zip code to NEXT (698-211) to find the nearest free Narcan distribution site.
These tools have documented, measurable impact on survival rates. None of them require you to quit first.
Dissolve a small amount of cocaine or residue in water and dip the strip. One line = fentanyl detected. Two lines = not detected. Results in 2–5 minutes. They cost about $1 each and are free at most harm reduction programs. States that legalized them saw measurable drops in overdose deaths.
A negative test only confirms fentanyl was not detected in the specific sample tested, not that the entire batch is clean. Hot spots mean one part of a batch can test negative while another part is loaded. Avoid using alone regardless of test results.
Naloxone nasal spray (Narcan) reverses opioid overdose in minutes. It cannot hurt someone who did not take opioids. With 70%+ of cocaine deaths now involving fentanyl, Narcan is relevant for anyone using cocaine or around people who do.
Carry at least two doses. Keep it somewhere accessible, not buried in a bag. CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart carry it over the counter in most states, no prescription needed.
Call the Never Use Alone hotline before using if nobody else is present. Stay on the line. A trained operator will call 911 with your location if you stop responding. The call is anonymous, free, and available 24/7. It exists specifically so people do not die alone.
Produces cocaethylene, a compound more cardiotoxic than cocaine alone. Most cocaine-related cardiac deaths involve alcohol.
The stimulant can mask the sedative effects. When cocaine wears off, the CNS depressant can take over suddenly.
Mixing cocaine with meth or MDMA multiplies cardiac strain, triggering arrhythmia risk.
Cocaine increases anxiety, which can turn a psychedelic trip into a severe psychiatric crisis.
Street cocaine purity varies enormously. Use a smaller amount first and wait 15–20 minutes before any more. Hot spots in powder also apply to cocaine itself, as one part of the bag can be far more concentrated than another.
Real reporting from major outlets. This is the current state of the cocaine supply and overdose crisis in America.
CDC provisional data shows the largest single-year overdose drop on record, yet cocaine's share of total deaths kept climbing, driven by fentanyl contamination reaching people with zero opioid tolerance.
NIDA confirms cocaine-involved deaths have tripled since 2015, with fentanyl contamination of the cocaine supply identified as the primary driver, not increased cocaine use itself.
CDC provisional data shows fentanyl deaths declining significantly, while stimulant deaths including cocaine remain elevated and are not tracking the same downward trend.
DEA lab testing confirms fentanyl is appearing in cocaine samples across all major US distribution hubs, in some cases added intentionally to increase potency and accelerate dependency in users with no opioid tolerance.
NIH-published research confirms cocaine's direct cardiotoxic mechanisms, with researchers noting that cardiac events frequently occur in young adults with no prior heart history.
SAMHSA data shows contingency management outperforms all other behavioral interventions for stimulant use disorders, making it the leading evidence-based approach in the absence of any FDA-approved medication for cocaine.
CDC and state-level data confirm that fentanyl test strip legalization produced measurable overdose death reductions within the first year, with programs now distributing strips specifically to cocaine users, the fastest-growing fentanyl overdose segment nationwide.
All articles link to published reports from CDC, NIDA, DEA, and peer-reviewed journals. Updated as new data becomes available.
Cocaine recovery is harder than opioid recovery in one specific way. But the tools that work are well-documented and people recover every day.
Unlike opioid addiction, which has Suboxone and methadone as highly effective medications, there is no FDA-approved drug for cocaine use disorder. This is not a dead end. Behavioral therapies for cocaine have some of the strongest outcome data in addiction medicine. The tools exist. They just require showing up.
Contingency management rewards verified negative drug tests with vouchers, prizes, or cash incentives. It sounds almost too simple. The data is not. CM consistently produces the strongest outcomes of any behavioral intervention for cocaine use disorder across dozens of randomized controlled trials, with better retention, longer periods of abstinence, and higher rates of completing treatment than any other standalone approach. Available through many addiction treatment centers and VA facilities.
CBT targets the thought patterns, triggers, and automatic responses that drive cocaine use. You learn to recognize high-risk situations before they happen and build actual coping strategies that do not involve using. Skills from CBT have documented durability. People maintain gains long after therapy ends, which is unusual in addiction treatment. Available in-person, telehealth, and through some free apps and online programs.
Topiramate, modafinil, and disulfiram are being studied off-label for cocaine use disorder. A cocaine vaccine that triggers an immune response against the drug is in clinical trials. None have FDA approval for this use. If you are already in treatment, ask your prescriber about off-label options. Some show enough promise that physicians will consider them case-by-case, especially for cravings management.
Intensive outpatient (IOP) lets you stay in your life, including work, school, and family, while attending structured treatment sessions multiple times per week. Residential programs remove you from the environment entirely for 30–90 days and provide round-the-clock support. The right level of care depends on your use pattern, home environment, and whether previous outpatient attempts have worked. A SAMHSA counselor can assess which level fits without judgment.
1–2 sessions per week. You keep your job, your home, your routines. Works best for early-stage use or as a step-down from IOP. CBT and CM are typically delivered here.
9–20 hours of structured treatment per week. You sleep at home but treatment is a significant daily commitment. Best for people with a supportive home environment who need more structure than weekly sessions.
24/7 structured support in a treatment facility for 30–90 days. Removes you from the environment and people tied to use. Highest level of care, best when home environment is a relapse trigger or previous outpatient has not worked.
SAMHSA connects you to a counselor who can go through options with you, whether that is harm reduction, outpatient, or just information. Free, confidential, available in English and Spanish, 24 hours a day. The call does not commit you to anything.