Complete dosage information for Methoxetamine — threshold, light, common, strong, and heavy dose ranges across 2 routes of administration.
Full Methoxetamine profileImportant Safety Notice
Dosage information is for harm reduction purposes only. Individual sensitivity varies greatly. Always start with the lowest effective dose and work your way up slowly. Never eyeball doses — use a milligram scale.
Overdose on Methoxetamine can range from unpleasant to life-threatening depending on the dose, route, and whether other substances are involved. **Signs of overdose**: Severe nystagmus, complete unresponsiveness, vomiting (aspiration risk while unconscious), severely depressed breathing, seizures, extremely elevated heart rate or blood pressure. **Critical dangers**: - **Respiratory depression**: Particularly when combined with other depressants - **Aspiration**: Loss of protective reflexes combined with nausea creates choking risk - **Hyperthermia or hypothermia**: Impaired thermoregulation at high doses **Emergency response**: Place the person in the recovery position. Monitor breathing. Call emergency services if breathing is slow, shallow, or irregular; if the person is unresponsive to stimulation; or if seizures occur. Be honest with medical personnel about what was consumed — they are there to help, not to judge.
A common insufflated dose of Methoxetamine is 20–35 mg.
The threshold dose for Methoxetamine via insufflated is approximately 5 mg.
Methoxetamine typically lasts 3–5 hours via insufflated.
Methoxetamine can be taken via insufflated, oral. Each route has different dosage ranges and onset times.