Chart icon: chart user instructionsUsing our interactive charts

What's in the last 100 samples sold as fentanyl?

How often are drug types found together in confirmed drug checking results?

A given drug sample can have multiple positive results for different drugs. One way to examine these results is to look at how often things are detected together. In the heatmaps below, we present the percentage of samples testing positive for the pair of drugs or drug categories listed, in the most recent 100 samples sold as fentanyl (which means the percentage is the number of samples with that pair). This comparison of the co-presence of two drugs cannot account for the fact that there are often three or more drugs present. The diagonal (where the column name and row name are the same) represents those samples testing positive for only that drug category (these samples may have tested positive for a drug category not listed here). The rows and columns are ordered from largest to smallest share of drug checking samples, alone or in combination. For more details on drug categories named, click here.

“Fentanyl” is a particularly complicated drug category as it almost always has other related compounds present due to manufacturing and distribution processes. For example, if you mouse over the row marked Fentanyl analogues and the column marked Fentanyl, you can see that 8% of these samples involved fentanyl and at least one fentanyl analogue, with or without any other drug mentioned here or any drug not included in the matrix.

If you mouse over the Fentanyl alone cell (Fentanyl row and Fentanyl column), you can see that 17% tested positive for fentanyl and no other category here. If you move along the Fentanyl row (or column) you can see the share of all samples that tested positive for fentanyl itself and that other drug type. For example, 47% of samples had fentanyl and other analgesics, with or without other drug categories present in the matrix. The Other analgesics alone cell indicates that 12 samples sold as fentanyl contained no fentanyl or fentanyl analogues nor anything else presented in the matrix, while the Meth alone cell indicates 7 had only methamphetamine and the Cocaine alone cell that 4 had only cocaine. One sample contained no drug presented in the matrix.

Data notes

Drug testing sites can do little about potential cross-contamination: The container a client used may or may not have been used before. Therefore, any unusual combination may be due to cross-contamination and not represent drugs actually sold together. Results represent a snapshot of the last 100 samples with confirmatory testing results as of 11:15AM PST 15 January 2025.

What's in things sold as...