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Suboxone and Headaches: What Users Say

Headaches: mentioned by 25 users (3.4%)

Based on user experiences from 729 Suboxone reviews, the following table shows the most commonly mentioned side effects.

All user comments are moderated by Drugs.com. Each review is verified for relevance and screened for inappropriate content. Side effects are user-reported and not clinically verified.

withdrawal 16.0%
insomnia 4.8%
constipation 3.7%
headaches 3.4%
depression 2.7%
nausea 2.6%
sick 2.5%
anxiety 2.3%
sweating 2.3%
pain 2.1%

Reviews for Suboxone

Commonly mentioned side effects
  • Joh...
  • Taken for 2 to 5 years
  • March 20, 2021

For Opioid Use Disorder "I'm writing this to help someone so they don't think they have corona or maybe a health condition. Instead, they could be having symptoms from generic Suboxone because they are totally different from what they should be. I have been on Suboxone films for 4 years without an issue. Dr. Reddy works for me, Sandoz works for me, and of course the name brand worked for me. But there is a very real issue with ALVOGEN brand. I just switched pharmacies due to the hours they were open. I had to be late picking it up and I was barely making it there in time after work. Dr. Reddy has been fine for 2 and a half years, but with Alvogen, let us say I was dope sick in 2 days and it's not right. I'm stuck being sick for a month. I just messaged my doctor when I became dope sick in the grocery store after work last night. I thought that I had COVID or a stomach virus, but I know this feeling very well: leg cramps, sore back, headache. Then I looked online about generic Subs, and there it was, someone going through the same as me which made me realize it was the generic Subs."

2 / 10
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  • Twi...
  • May 27, 2017

For Opioid Use Disorder "My personal experience with Suboxone is good so far. I have been on a prescribed Fentanyl patch 25 mcg/48 hrs. I have dropped to this dose over the last year. (I also left the old patch on.) I have been on opiates for 12 years, full-time prescribed. At my highest prescription, I was using 180 mg of Oxycodone and 180 mg of morphine per day. I have had several adjustments on medicine, including extended-release doses. Five years ago, I was put on 50 mcg of Fentanyl with 3-10 mg of Oxycodone per day for breakthrough. I started leaving my old patches on to increase my daily dose. This last year, I tapered down to 25 mcg patches for 48 hours (still leaving my old patches on). I went to a doctor that prescribes Suboxone. Lucky for me, my insurance pays for Suboxone. He gave me the 8/2 mg strips. I take half a strip twice a day. I was checking every forum to see how long I needed to wait to start the Suboxone. The replies are all very different. Some say 16 hours, most say 24. Others say 48-36-72 hours. Yikes! How do I keep out of precipitated withdrawals? I already have withdrawals every other day on my patch! So, I removed my patch last night around 5 pm. (I already have my Suboxone script at home.) I started feeling withdrawal symptoms coming on around 11 pm. They didn't get super intense. I checked the COWS scale, as many articles suggested, but only scored mild. I had the stretching of limbs symptom, anxiety, so I took half of a strip, which was the suggested dose. I took it at noon today. That's only 19-20 hours. I was in withdrawals, but not the worst I have ever had. I was scared of the precipitated withdrawals I heard about. Ten to fifteen minutes after I took it, I felt a hot sensation wash over me. I thought I would get those withdrawals, but I took a quick bath, laid down for an hour, and I feel pretty good. It took my withdrawals away. I still have some muscle pain, but not the kind that comes from withdrawals. Suboxone stopped the withdrawals right away. No headaches or sick feeling. Not high, but even my regular dose meds haven't made me high for years. So, if you're guessing on when it's okay to take Suboxone after opiates, and Fentanyl seems to be the highest strength, then I say shoot for 24 hours. If you are not in withdrawals at 24, then wait until you are. If you are in withdrawals before 24 hours, then just wait as long as you can. You will know when it's too bad to wait anymore. You know your body. You can always take half the amount prescribed and see how it reacts if you're afraid of precipitated withdrawals. Trust me, it will stop the withdrawals within a half-hour. I have not gotten the precipitated withdrawals so far. Hope this helps someone. Good luck to you!"

9 / 10
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  • Alb...
  • May 13, 2015

For Opioid Use Disorder "I was taking 1000-2000 mg of codeine a day for 2 years. I spent a day reading all the reviews on Suboxone as my doctor wanted to start me on it. I was really worried because there were no bad reviews. I started my first dose of Suboxone two days ago, and I feel amazing. The only side effect is a slight headache. Anyone with an opiate addiction, this is the drug of help."

10 / 10
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55 Report

Frequently asked questions

  • BIG...
  • January 20, 2013

For Opioid Use Disorder "I was addicted to pills for 3 years. It started as a few Vicodin a day to 25 Percocets a day at the end. I have been on Subutex for 2 weeks, and I must say it saved my life. NO CRAVINGS at all! The first few days I had mild headaches, but they went away by day 4. I'm currently taking a total of 8 mg a day, and it is plenty. This is truly a miracle. My wife is happy, and I can play with my son again without popping pills to get out of bed. The only bad thing is my insurance won't cover it, but the $50 a week is a lot less than the $500-600 a week I was spending before. THANK YOU, SUBUTEX!"

10 / 10
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65 Report
  • Jac...
  • Taken for 2 to 5 years
  • February 19, 2022

For Opioid Use Disorder "Personally, I should say no one should ever get on Suboxone. Through personal experience, it was the absolute worst thing I could’ve ever done to my body and my mind. I should’ve just gotten through the little withdrawal of heroin and gone to 12-step meetings and gotten my life back. I am 90 days off of Suboxone and still going through intense physical symptoms every day of my life. My hands and feet are always sweating and discolored, my back always hurts, I get numbness and tingling through my whole body, my head hurts every single day, it is doing weird things to my skin, I have absolutely no sex drive, it literally feels like it destroyed my body and I’m only 23 years old. Suboxone is a trap physically and mentally. If you’re going through withdrawal, use Suboxone for 5 to 7 days and then stay off of it. I’m telling you from personal experience, it just isn’t worth it, the amount of stuff you go through."

1 / 10
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  • Bad...
  • June 20, 2015

For Opioid Use Disorder "I've been on pain meds to treat very serious hip and moderate back issues for 15 years, ~8 years 24/7 and 365 days of the year on them. I've taken literally everything: morphine, fentanyl, Opana, ketamine, etc., and due to moving, I had to find a new pain doc, and he asked me to try Suboxone. I've been on a 24 mg/day dose for 3 days, and it treats my pain 75% as well as the previous methadone/oxy combo I took before this. It makes me feel very out of it, have a hard time thinking clearly, get frequent headaches, have no appetite, no urge to use the bathroom (#1 or 2, even when I need to), and can go from zero to super irritable in an instant. Overall, not working well. P.S.: A medical condition requiring opiates means you're DEPENDENT, not ADDICTED! Big difference, folks!"

5 / 10
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45 Report
  • Cel...
  • September 15, 2013

For Opioid Use Disorder "I'd been taking eight or nine Norcos a day for almost a year when I started Suboxone two days ago. So, my habit wasn't as bad as many here, but it was bad enough that I knew the agony of withdrawal very well. To my surprise, Suboxone has not only erased my withdrawal symptoms almost entirely (with the exception of minor headaches here and there), but it's also helped with craving my old pills at all. But I think the best part has to be feeling my soul lighten again. I was depressed for months and months on those pills. They are, after all, a depressant. Since I started Suboxone yesterday morning, I've felt like myself again. A gray pall of sadness has been lifted. Two things: it tastes dreadful and causes fatigue. Otherwise, great!"

9 / 10
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42 Report

More FAQ

  • jen...
  • Taken for 1 to 6 months
  • August 3, 2015

For Opioid Use Disorder "Suboxone worked a miracle for me. I suffer from hydrocephalus and have a shunt in my brain. For 8 years, I had a neurologist tell me all he could do was treat me for pain. It didn't take long to realize they were addicting. I didn't know anymore if I was treating pain or the addiction. After all, I had an excuse. Then one day it hit me. I had been using the word 'excuse.' I tried to stop cold turkey. But each time, I'd get severe depression, anxiety, RLS, insomnia, headaches. I wasn't aware that my body was opiate dependent until I talked to a different doctor. He took my blood pressure, which was really low, and informed me that it was dangerous to quit like that after so long and suggested I try Suboxone. It works!"

10 / 10
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38 Report
  • Amb...
  • Taken for less than 1 month
  • July 21, 2017

For Opioid Use Disorder "Suboxone nearly killed me. The first time it was ever prescribed to me, I placed one film under my tongue, and within 3 minutes, I started getting a headache, feeling dizzy, and then I started having difficulty breathing. I allowed the film to dissolve and placed the second film under my tongue. The symptoms described above seemed to get worse, and I started noticing hives forming on my neck. Before I knew it, I was covered with hives and could not breathe. My partner gave me liquid Benadryl and rushed me to the doctor. I had to receive steroids and other medications and carried the hives for a few days. I am highly allergic to the Naloxone and artificial sweeteners in the Suboxone and its alternatives. Be careful with this medication!"

3 / 10
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  • Mau...
  • November 14, 2016

For Opioid Use Disorder "My experience taking Suboxone was the complete opposite of what I thought it would be. I always viewed Suboxone as the lesser of two evils between methadone because Suboxone contains naloxone, so you technically can't get 'high.' Not that I have anything against people who choose methadone as their recovery route; I have actually tried methadone in the past to actually get high and, well... I succeeded, lol. When I started taking Suboxone, I got really bad side effects after the first month of taking it. I would severely sweat to the point I wanted to bash my head through a wall. It was so rough on my body. But my maintenance program doctor just said it was 'withdrawals' because when you take the pill every day, I guess you're technically withdrawing from the one you took the day before due to the long half-life on Suboxone. So his idea was to up my dose to 12 mg to see if the sweating would go away (I didn't see the logic in that idea too). Anyway, it didn't, so he tossed me some clonidine, which helped a little. But the side effects kept adding up, such as headaches, severe constipation to the point I had to use daily enemas (not normal), abdominal pains came too along with nausea and vomiting (every day). It just got to the point where my mind and body couldn't be on the medication anymore. I was on it for 7 long months, even trying to wean myself down on my own. That was a struggle too, seeing how the withdrawals from Suboxone are supposedly worse than heroin sickness, which my doctor and counselor kindly reminded me after I was already hooked. It was a messy time in my life. Suboxone gave me severe anxiety, which left me buying benzos off the street just to mellow me out. I went to a weekly Suboxone maintenance program on purpose. To get piss tested weekly and to have a doctor and counselor help me move forward. But instead, I felt I was moving 10 steps back. My only option to get off the Suboxone (which was my choice, obviously) was to get the vivitrol shot and have 3 bad days of sickness but be off Suboxone. It took me a week to build myself up to do it because I was terrified of how bad the sickness was going to be. Choosing the vivitrol shot had to be the best worst idea I have ever made. I did get violently sick after it, but it went away. Plus, my doctor who gave me the shot helped me out with some comfort meds, so it wasn't all that bad. That was in December 2015 that I received the shot and have been clean since. So my advice for any addict who's struggling on which route to take for recovery: just get the shot. They'll give comfort meds for the first couple of days, then after that, you'll be shackle-free from drugs. I'm telling ya, choose vivitrol if you need to detox. For others who take Suboxone for other reasons, such as pain or etc., power to you; but if y'all are struggling out there and want to get sober quick, vivitrol's the answer. Methadone and Suboxone will just make you sicker down the road."

4 / 10
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  • Sou...
  • Taken for less than 1 month
  • November 1, 2013

For Opioid Use Disorder "Ok, started Suboxone 2 days ago, no cravings at all for others. I was taking 5-6 Norcos a day for 8 yrs. One day, got up, said I'm tired of depending on a pill to get me through the day. So, started Suboxone. I'm happy as far as the craving goes, but for some reason, I'm having a hard time staying awake. If I sit down, I fall asleep, my mind feels very scattered, and I had a bad headache today. I hope this is just getting used to the meds. I am only on 2 mg, so I don't think it's too much. Any comments would be appreciated. Thanks."

5 / 10
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30 Report
  • eve...
  • January 18, 2016

For Opioid Use Disorder "For me, I had a terrible time with Suboxone. It relieved the opiate withdrawal a number 3 out of 10. Bones started to creak, teeth started cracking/breaking, insomnia, legs wouldn't stop moving, headaches, backache. It just didn't work for me, doesn't mean it doesn't work. Initially, I felt as though it was just the process of the other opiates leaving my body, but after a month of feeling like rubbish, I relapsed. I could no longer take it, it took a lot more to get relief due to the effects of the sub. After a year and a half of Suboxone and feeling badly all the time, I gave up Suboxone and the second job to pay for it and went back to full-time drugging until I found methadone and have been happily and contentedly clean without any pain since."

2 / 10
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  • Chr...
  • November 6, 2014

For Opioid Use Disorder "I'm an addict, and the first time I took it, it did take away the withdrawal symptoms after about a few days into taking it (8 mg 2 naloxone) tabs once a day. It gave me severe headaches and sometimes made me feel sick. The pros to this medicine are it does keep the withdrawals at bay and is easier to withdraw from than methadone. The cons are the cost for me, with no insurance, is too high, like $400.00 for a month's supply! I know it works for some, but not for me! 5 out of 10."

5 / 10
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  • Ash...
  • September 26, 2011

For Opioid Use Disorder "I had it all. Everything people dream of was mine, but I lost it all when I started doing Roxy's. Once was all it took for me to take as many oxycodone 30s as I could get my hands on for 3 years. I tried to stop by myself, went to rehab, meetings, counseling, everything. During these 3 years, I went from being a loving daughter, sister, and friend to a monster. I have been on Suboxone since 4/20/11, and that was the day my life changed. I feel like a normal person again. There is a price to my happiness, though, I have headaches, am tired very often, and experience extreme constipation from the Suboxone. If that's all I have to go through to be the person I am now, then that's fine. Suboxone literally saved my life."

9 / 10
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  • VIV...
  • July 10, 2009

For Opioid Use Disorder "My husband and I both have been popping pills for years. Hydrocodone, Oxycodone, barbiturates, whatever we could get. After trying to quit cold turkey, or going into a detox center, whatever it was, always failed us... or we failed it. Now we are winning the battle. Hubby went on it about a week ago, and I just started a few days ago. Neither of us had withdrawals from the opioids we were taking, and neither of us has cravings. Thank goodness. So our livers are now getting a much-needed rest, and our money is going where it SHOULD go to now. We both have experienced some headaches on Suboxone, but they aren't that bad, and go away after a bit. It gives me dry mouth really bad. So, remember, this drug is just a tool in the road to recovery."

9 / 10
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20 Report
  • Jos...
  • Taken for 2 to 5 years
  • December 18, 2020

For Opioid Use Disorder "Why does it feel like my head is being electrocuted? I'm not sure if it's the Suboxone or not, but I've quit taking it, and the pain in my head is relieved some, but it's a pressure that comes and goes. Not a good feeling."

4 / 10
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  • kur...
  • November 16, 2008

For Opioid Use Disorder "I have been on Suboxone for almost a year. I was using 80 mg Oxy's for almost 6 months prior to this drug. Suboxone has saved my life, my marriage, my sanity, etc. I do have some side effects, but I am used to them. The side effects are constipation, sweating, and sometimes mild headaches. I also had trouble urinating at first. I am ready to taper the dose. I recommend this medicine to all who suffer with opiate dependence like I do. It truly helped me get in a program without being 'dope sick' first, and it helps with cravings. Good luck to all."

9 / 10
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  • try...
  • August 12, 2009

For Opioid Use Disorder "I can't say enough about this medicine. I became addicted to Vicodin and Percocet over the past year. I thought there was no hope for me. A friend of mine who was addicted to OxyContin was put on Suboxone and told me about it. I found a doctor in my area who prescribed it, and this has changed my life. I take half of an 8 mg pill 3 times a day, and I no longer crave pain pills. It is amazing. I have energy and feel great. Only had the bad side effect of nausea and headaches for the first 2 days. I highly recommend this to anyone with an opiate dependence. It will change your life!"

9 / 10
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  • goo...
  • August 27, 2010

For Opioid Use Disorder "I have been on Suboxone now for exactly a year. I became addicted to pain pills after my doctor started handing them out like they were candy for my cramps. Needless to say, the withdrawals were horrible. I felt like I wanted to jump out of my skin. I didn't want to get out of bed and was just not the person I used to be. The first day I took Suboxone, I felt 100% better. I had some headaches the first couple of days of taking it, but those went away."

10 / 10
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  • Jli...
  • December 18, 2011

For Opioid Use Disorder "Started 8 mg of Suboxone 6 months ago. Tapered down over the last 6 months to 1 mg by cutting the Suboxone 2 mg film in half. Suboxone is amazing and does everything it says. Make sure you do it with a doctor. The withdrawal symptoms are not fun for at least a week, I am on day 5. Chills, flu-like symptoms, anxiety, insomnia, headache, nausea, loss of appetite among symptoms. First day I'm feeling better and haven't used Oxy in half a year. Take some Tylenol, some Ativan. All helped me, now I'm off it."

9 / 10
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12 Report
  • AON...
  • December 15, 2011

For Opioid Use Disorder "I had a miraculous recovery in 1996 from Kaposi's sarcoma when treated with Doxil. This was in the early days of Doxil (and all liposomal chemos) when it was only approved for secondary treatment options. Conventional chemo (AVB) did nothing; Doxil completely eradicated the neoplasms. It also left me with nasty throbbing pain in the arches of my feet, which never completely went away. I was hooked on so many opiates (both for the pain and the mental anxiety relief they provided) that I didn't even realize I was an addict until I ran out of Percocet one dark day. Sixteen years later, the foot pain returned. My doctor prescribed 2mg Suboxone, and I have my life back. Unorthodox, but legal and no longer a junkie. No 'highs,' no pain, and gratitude."

10 / 10
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9 Report
  • Nik...
  • Taken for 2 to 5 years
  • February 6, 2022

For Opioid Use Disorder "I'd taken Suboxone for 4 years and 2 months (this time around). I'll first say that this got me off fetty and all other things mind/emotion numbing. It works. I regret not knowing more myself and trusting the providers. I was started on 16 mg daily. I had massive headaches, insomnia, and nausea (from how terrible they taste). I'll say don't take your doses anytime close to bed - insomnia. Headaches were due to the mg being too high for me. I was always a functioning addict. I always maintained two jobs. That being said, I worked and went to the gym. My brain was stimulated, and I'm (only guessing as I know myself) that I was making my own endorphins. I'm on day 5 with no subs. I'll post my experience so far."

8 / 10
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  • Tur...
  • Taken for 5 to 10 years
  • April 30, 2018

For Opioid Use Disorder "After using Norco, Percocet, Soma, Tizanidine, Morphine IR, ER, Kadian for my chronic pain syndrome, DDD, knee, finger, joint pain. I just started with the Suboxone 2.0-5 mg. I immediately suffered from a headache, shakes, and jittery feelings. Muscles got super tight. X is bad."

5 / 10
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  • sub...
  • April 21, 2009

For Opioid Use Disorder "It sometimes gives me headaches and also made me gain weight. But overall, I gave it a high rating because it changed my life drastically. I no longer am allowing opiates to run my life."

9 / 10
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  • Anonymous
  • October 20, 2009

"The only thing about this pill is it gives me a headache."

10 / 10
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