Tapering off Buprenorphine
Also sold as Suboxone, Subutex, Sublocade.
Coming off Buprenorphine is far gentler when the dose comes down gradually, in steps that shrink as you approach zero. This is what a hyperbolic taper looks like for Buprenorphine, why it helps, and how to build one to review with your prescriber.
Why Buprenorphine needs a gradual taper
With regular use the body adapts to Buprenorphine, so lowering it too quickly brings on the opioid withdrawal syndrome. A gradual, supervised taper keeps each step manageable.
Buprenorphine has a long half-life (~24–42 h), so it clears slowly and partly cushions the transition between steps. The drug can feel as though it self-tapers a little, though the last low doses still deserve the gentlest steps.
A partial agonist for opioid use disorder and pain; its long action makes for a smoother, slower taper, but stopping still brings protracted withdrawal, so reduce very gradually and supervised. Safer on breathing than full opioids, but still risky combined with benzodiazepines, sleeping pills, or alcohol.
See a Buprenorphine taper curve
The real engine runs right here. Enter your daily dose to watch a hyperbolic schedule take shape, no signup.
Slow is the point: gradual tapers are why ~70% succeed where cold turkey fails. Your full plan adds safety screening, exact dose recipes, and adapts to your check-ins.
Educational preview, not medical advice. Taper with a prescriber, never stop abruptly.
What your Buprenorphine plan includes
Before any schedule, a short intake flags the situations where you should slow down or check with a clinician, so the plan starts from your actual picture.
A hyperbolic schedule sized to Buprenorphine: the milligram cuts shrink as the dose falls, so the steps get gentler exactly where they need to.
The small end-of-taper doses made reachable. Below the smallest tablet, Subside spells out the practical options (careful splitting of the scored tablet or a compounding pharmacy) instead of leaving you to guess.
Your check-ins feed back into the plan: rough stretches trigger a hold or a gentler pace, and reinstatement (stepping back up to stabilize) is a first-class option, never a failure.
When symptoms show up, the plan reads them against the timing of your last reduction, so you can tell an expected wave from something that needs a different response.
Common questions about coming off Buprenorphine
How long does a Buprenorphine taper take?+
It varies widely with your dose and how long you have taken Buprenorphine, so quoting a single number would be misleading. Subside computes the length from your exact dose and adjusts as you go, larger steps at the top and smaller ones through the sensitive low-dose tail, with holding longer always allowed.
Can I stop Buprenorphine cold turkey?+
Stopping Buprenorphine abruptly brings the opioid withdrawal syndrome, which is intensely uncomfortable but rarely life-threatening on its own. Taper gradually and supervised, and never combine it with other sedatives.
What are common Buprenorphine withdrawal symptoms?+
Withdrawal can include restlessness, sweating and chills, aches, stomach upset, anxiety, and poor sleep. It is very uncomfortable but rarely dangerous on its own, and a gradual taper keeps each step tolerable.
Do I need a doctor to taper off Buprenorphine?+
Yes. Buprenorphine should be tapered with a prescriber who can adjust the plan, authorize the smaller doses, and watch for problems. Subside builds the schedule and tracks how you feel, but it does not replace medical care. If no one is currently guiding your taper, everydaymd® is a telehealth service whose clinicians can supervise and prescribe one.