Efavirenz produces 41 documented subjective effects across 6 categories.
Full Efavirenz profileEfavirenz does not announce itself as a psychoactive experience in any conventional sense. It arrives instead as a quiet disturbance in the architecture of sleep and waking. In the first days and weeks of treatment, the most common experience is a strange vivification of the hypnagogic state, that liminal territory between wakefulness and sleep. As you lie in bed, the darkness behind closed eyelids begins to populate itself with unusually vivid imagery. Colors bloom and shift. Faces may appear with uncanny detail and then dissolve. The transition into sleep becomes a corridor of hallucinatory fragments that feel more substantial and persistent than ordinary pre-sleep imagery.
Dreams themselves become extraordinary in their vividness, complexity, and emotional intensity. They are often described as cinematic, as though the sleeping mind has gained access to a more powerful rendering engine. Nightmares are common, and they carry a visceral, embodied quality that can linger well into the morning. Some users report lucid dreaming, where awareness of the dream state coexists with the dreaming itself. Upon waking, there may be a period of confusion in which the dream reality and waking reality seem equally plausible, and the boundary between the two takes several minutes to reassert itself.
During waking hours, the effects are subtler but still perceptible. There is a mild dizziness or lightheadedness that ebbs and flows without clear pattern. Concentration may feel slightly impaired, as though a thin gauze has been drawn between the mind and its objects of focus. Some users describe a gentle derealization, a sense that the world looks faintly artificial or staged, like a set in a play about ordinary life. Colors may appear marginally more vivid, and there is occasionally a barely perceptible wavering at the edges of the visual field. These effects are mild enough that many users learn to ignore them, but they contribute to an overall sense that baseline consciousness has been subtly but persistently altered.
These neuropsychiatric effects typically diminish over the first two to four weeks of treatment as the body adjusts, though some users report that the vivid dreams persist indefinitely. The experience is not sought out recreationally and is generally regarded as a tolerable side effect rather than a desired state. Nonetheless, for those who pass through it, efavirenz offers a curious window into how pharmacological tinkering with neural circuitry can produce perceptual changes that, while modest in scale, are genuinely strange.
A distinct decrease in hunger and desire to eat, ranging from reduced interest in food to complete disinterest or even physical revulsion at the thought of eating. This effect can persist for many hours beyond the primary experience.
Difficulty urinatingDifficulty urinating, also known as urinary retention, is the experience of being unable to easily pass urine despite a full bladder, commonly caused by stimulant, opioid, and anticholinergic substances that affect bladder muscle control.
DizzinessA sensation of spinning, swaying, or lightheadedness that impairs balance and spatial orientation, often accompanied by nausea and difficulty standing or walking steadily.
HeadacheA painful sensation of pressure, throbbing, or aching in the head that can range from a dull background discomfort to a debilitating pounding that dominates awareness. Substance-induced headaches may occur during the acute effects, during the comedown, or as a rebound symptom hours to days after use.
NauseaAn uncomfortable sensation of queasiness and stomach discomfort that may or may not lead to vomiting, often occurring during the onset phase of many substances.
Physical euphoriaAn intensely pleasurable bodily sensation that can manifest as waves of warmth, tingling electricity, or a full-body orgasmic glow radiating outward from the core. This effect is often described as one of the most rewarding physical sensations available through psychoactive substances and is a primary driver of the recreational appeal of many substance classes.
SedationA state of deep physical and mental calming that manifests as a progressive desire to remain still, lie down, and eventually drift toward sleep. Sedation ranges from a gentle drowsy relaxation to a heavy, irresistible pull into unconsciousness where maintaining wakefulness becomes a losing battle against the body's insistence on shutdown.
Serotonin syndromeSerotonin syndrome is a potentially fatal medical emergency caused by excessive serotonergic activity in the central and peripheral nervous systems, typically resulting from combining multiple serotonin-elevating substances, and manifesting as a dangerous triad of neuromuscular hyperactivity, autonomic dysfunction, and altered mental status.
StimulationA state of heightened physical and mental energy characterized by increased wakefulness, elevated motivation, and a subjective sense of vigor that pervades both body and mind. Users often report feeling electrically alive, with a buzzing readiness to move, talk, and engage that can range from a pleasant caffeine-like lift to an overwhelming, jittery compulsion to act.
A visual phenomenon in which a faint, ghostly imprint of a previously viewed image persists in the visual field after the original stimulus has been removed or one has looked away. These lingering visual echoes are significantly more persistent, vivid, and detailed than normal physiological afterimages, often retaining color and form for several seconds or longer and overlaying themselves onto whatever one currently views.
Colour enhancementAn intensification of the brightness, vividness, and saturation of colors in the external environment, making the world appear dramatically more colorful. Reds seem redder, greens seem greener, and all hues appear richer and more distinct than during ordinary perception.
Colour replacementA visual phenomenon in which the colors of objects or the entire visual field are statically replaced with alternative hues — the green leaves of a tree might appear red, a white wall might turn blue, or the entirety of vision might acquire a single-color tint that persists without cycling.
Colour shiftingThe visual experience of colors on objects and surfaces cycling through continuous, fluid transformations, shifting from one hue to another in smooth, seamless loops. A green surface might flow through blue, purple, red, and back to green in a mesmerizing animated sequence.
DriftingThe visual experience of perceiving stationary objects, textures, and surfaces as appearing to flow, breathe, melt, or shift in position. Drifting is one of the most fundamental and commonly reported visual distortions under the influence of psychedelic substances, serving as the perceptual foundation upon which many other visual effects are built. It manifests as a fluid, organic sense of motion embedded in otherwise static visual fields.
External hallucinationA visual hallucination that manifests within the external environment as though it were physically real, ranging from subtle distortions of existing objects to fully autonomous, detailed scenes and entities that appear indistinguishable from reality.
GeometryThe experience of perceiving complex, ever-shifting geometric patterns superimposed over the visual field or visible behind closed eyelids. Geometry is widely considered the hallmark visual effect of psychedelic substances, ranging from simple lattice patterns and honeycombs at low doses to infinitely complex, self-transforming fractal structures at high doses that can feel profoundly meaningful and awe-inspiring.
Internal hallucinationVivid, detailed visual experiences perceived within an imagined mental landscape that can only be seen with closed eyes, ranging from fleeting imagery and abstract scenes to fully immersive, dream-like environments with autonomous narratives and entities.
Pattern recognition enhancementAn increased ability and tendency to perceive meaningful patterns, faces, and images within ambiguous or random visual stimuli such as textures, clouds, and surfaces.
Perspective hallucinationA hallucinatory phenomenon in which the observer's visual perspective shifts from the normal first-person viewpoint to alternative vantage points — including third-person (seeing oneself from outside), bird's-eye, or omniscient perspectives — during both internal and external hallucinations.
RecursionThe visual field begins to repeat and nest within itself in a self-similar, fractal-like manner, as if reality is being reflected between infinite mirrors. Sections of scenery duplicate and zoom inward or outward in recursive loops that defy spatial logic.
Scenery slicingThe visual field fractures into distinct, cleanly cut sections that slowly drift apart from their original positions before resetting, as if reality has been sliced by an invisible blade into geometric pieces that briefly separate and rearrange.
Settings, sceneries, and landscapesThe perceived environment in which hallucinatory experiences take place, ranging from recognizable locations drawn from memory to entirely novel alien landscapes, ancient civilizations, cosmic vistas, and impossible architectural spaces.
Symmetrical texture repetitionTextures appear to mirror and tessellate across surfaces in intricate, self-similar symmetrical patterns that maintain detail at every scale. Most prominent in peripheral vision on rough surfaces.
TracersMoving objects leave visible trails of varying length and opacity behind them, similar to long-exposure photography. Trails may match the object color or appear in other hues.
TransformationsObjects and scenery undergo perceived visual metamorphosis, smoothly shapeshifting into other recognizable forms over seconds. Patterns morph into faces, animals, and imagery.
Visual acuity enhancementVision becomes sharper and more defined than normal, as though a slightly blurry lens has been brought into perfect focus. Edges appear crisp and fine details become vivid.
Intense feelings of apprehension, worry, and dread that can range from a subtle background unease to overwhelming panic attacks with a sense of impending doom, often amplified by the substance's intensification of one's existing mental state.
Anxiety suppressionA partial to complete suppression of anxiety and general unease, producing a calm, relaxed mental state free from worry. This can range from subtle tension relief to a profound sense of inner peace and emotional security.
ConfusionAn impairment of abstract thinking marked by a persistent inability to grasp or comprehend concepts and situations that would normally be perfectly understandable during sobriety.
DerealizationA perceptual disturbance in which the external world feels profoundly unreal, dreamlike, or artificially constructed, as though experienced through a veil, screen, or foggy barrier separating the observer from reality.
DisinhibitionA marked reduction in social inhibitions, self-consciousness, and behavioral restraint that manifests as increased openness, talkativeness, and willingness to engage in activities one would normally avoid. Users often describe feeling as though an invisible social barrier has been lifted, allowing thoughts and impulses to flow directly into action without the usual filtering process.
Dream potentiationEnhanced dream vividness, complexity, and recall, often occurring as REM rebound after discontinuing REM-suppressing substances.
IntrospectionAn enhanced state of self-reflective awareness in which one feels drawn to examine their own thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and life patterns with unusual depth, clarity, and emotional honesty, often yielding insights that feel therapeutically significant.
PsychosisPsychosis is a serious psychiatric state involving a fundamental break from consensus reality — characterized by firmly held false beliefs (delusions), perception of things that are not there (hallucinations), disorganized thought and speech, and a loss of the ability to distinguish internal mental events from external reality.
WakefulnessAn increased ability to stay awake and alert without the desire to sleep. Distinct from stimulation in that it does not elevate energy above a naturally rested baseline.
Auditory distortion is the experience of sounds becoming warped, pitch-shifted, flanged, or otherwise altered in their perceived qualities without any change to the actual sound source. Familiar sounds may seem alien, stretched in time, or layered with unusual resonances, creating a surreal and sometimes unsettling soundscape that departs significantly from sober auditory perception.
Auditory enhancementAuditory enhancement is a heightened sensitivity and appreciation of sound in which music, voices, and ambient noise become richer, more detailed, and more emotionally resonant. Subtle sonic details that would normally go unnoticed — the texture of a guitar string, the breath between a singer's words, the layered harmonics of a chord — become vivid and captivating.
Auditory hallucinationAuditory hallucination is the perception of sounds that have no external source — hearing music, voices, environmental noises, or abstract sonic phenomena that exist entirely within the mind. These range from faint, ambiguous whispers at the edge of perception to fully formed, complex musical compositions or conversational speech that can feel completely real and externally sourced.
Auditory misinterpretationAuditory misinterpretation is the brief, spontaneous misidentification of real sounds as entirely different sounds — ambient noise interpreted as voices, mechanical hums perceived as music, or random environmental sounds heard as words or familiar patterns.
Efavirenz can produce 9 physical effects including appetite suppression, physical euphoria, stimulation, dizziness, and 5 more.
Yes. Efavirenz can produce 17 visual effects including settings, sceneries, and landscapes, pattern recognition enhancement, symmetrical texture repetition, visual acuity enhancement, and 13 more.
Efavirenz produces 9 cognitive effects including anxiety suppression, disinhibition, introspection, confusion, and 5 more.