A codeine overdose has no single dose cutoff; slow or stopped breathing is the warning sign, and mixing codeine with other sedatives can turn a “normal” dose dangerous.
People ask for a number because numbers feel clear. With codeine, that clarity isn’t real. The same dose can hit two people in two different ways. One person feels sleepy. Another person stops breathing. That gap comes from how codeine is processed in the body, what else is in the person’s system, and plain-old dosing mistakes.
If you’re worried about yourself or someone near you right now, skip the reading and act. If a person is hard to wake, breathing slowly, making gurgling or snoring sounds, or turning gray/blue around lips or fingertips, treat it as an emergency and call your local emergency number. If naloxone is on hand, use it.
Why Codeine Overdose Can’t Be Reduced To One Number
Codeine is an opioid. Opioids can slow breathing. That’s the core danger. People often picture overdose as “too much pill.” Real life is messier. With codeine, dose alone doesn’t tell the whole story.
Codeine Changes In Your Body
Codeine is converted into morphine by an enzyme pathway. Some people convert more than expected. Some convert less. Some convert faster. This matters because the “feel” of codeine can lag behind what’s happening in the lungs. A person can seem okay, then tip into dangerous sedation.
Genetics can play a role in how quickly codeine is converted. Age can, too. So can liver function, kidney function, and drug interactions. That’s why labels and medical references focus on warning signs, not “overdose starts at X mg.”
Mixing Substances Is A Common Trigger
Codeine mixed with alcohol, benzodiazepines, sleep meds, or other opioids can depress breathing far more than codeine alone. People don’t always think of cough syrup, “nighttime” cold meds, or a leftover anxiety pill as part of the picture. They are part of the picture.
Even when taken exactly as directed, codeine can cause serious breathing problems in some people. The FDA labeling for codeine products repeatedly warns about life-threatening respiratory depression, medication errors, and higher-risk groups. FDA prescribing information for codeine sulfate oral solution lays out those risks in plain labeling terms.
Medication Errors Happen Fast
A lot of overdose calls start with a mistake, not a plan. A double dose because the first “didn’t kick in.” A tablespoon used instead of a dosing cup. Two products taken that both contain an opioid. A bottle kept in the wrong spot, then used by the wrong person.
Codeine can also appear combined with other ingredients like acetaminophen. In that case, there are two dangers at once: opioid breathing suppression and liver injury. That combination changes what emergency clinicians worry about and what tests they run.
What A Codeine Overdose Looks Like In Real Time
The fastest way to spot an opioid overdose is to watch breathing and responsiveness. People often fixate on pupils, but breathing comes first.
Breathing And Wakefulness Come First
Warning signs tend to cluster:
- Slow breathing, shallow breathing, or pauses
- Gurgling, choking, or loud snoring sounds
- Hard to wake, can’t stay awake, or can’t respond
- Blue/gray lips or fingertips
- Cold, clammy skin
MedlinePlus lists classic codeine overdose symptoms and what to do next. It’s a solid, plain-language reference if you want a checklist of what clinicians look for. MedlinePlus “Codeine overdose” summarizes the symptom pattern and the urgency.
Less Obvious Signs People Miss
Not every overdose looks dramatic. Some look like “they’re just sleeping.” Watch for:
- Breathing that seems too slow for normal sleep
- Skin that looks pale, ashen, or sweaty
- Very limp body tone
- Vomiting while drowsy (aspiration risk)
If you’re unsure, treat it as an emergency. You don’t need to be 100% certain to call for help.
When Codeine Side Effects Cross Into Danger
Side effects like nausea, constipation, itching, and drowsiness can happen with opioids. The danger line is when drowsiness turns into inability to wake, and when breathing slows down. MedlinePlus’ codeine drug page also lists overdose symptoms in plain terms. MedlinePlus codeine drug information includes that symptom list.
Taking Codeine: Overdose Risk Rises In Specific Situations
Some situations make codeine far more hazardous. This section is about patterns that show up again and again in emergency care.
Kids And Teens
Children are at higher risk for dangerous breathing effects. Some pediatric uses of codeine have been restricted because unpredictable metabolism can lead to dangerously high opioid effect. If a child has access to codeine in the home, locked storage matters.
Older Adults
Older adults can be more sensitive to sedating drugs and may clear them more slowly. Falls, confusion, and breathing suppression become more likely when opioids mix with sleep meds or anxiety meds.
Sleep Apnea And Lung Disease
If a person already struggles with breathing during sleep, an opioid can tip the balance. The person may already have low oxygen events at night. Add codeine and those events can stack up.
Liver Or Kidney Issues
Slower clearance can make effects last longer than expected. That’s one reason “it felt fine earlier” doesn’t guarantee safety later.
Alcohol And Sedatives
This is one of the biggest drivers of overdose deaths across opioids. The mix can suppress breathing with less warning. If someone has been drinking, codeine is a bad combo.
Doubling Up On Products
People take a prescription pain tablet, then a cough syrup, then a “nighttime” cold medicine. They think they’re treating separate problems. The body just sees sedatives stacked together.
Redosing Too Soon
Opioids can have a delayed peak in sedation, especially when taken by mouth with food in the stomach. Redosing because “it’s not working” is a common setup for trouble.
Street Or Counterfeit Pills
Anything that isn’t pharmacy-dispensed can contain unexpected opioids. Even if someone thinks they’re taking something else, the body may be getting an opioid dose strong enough to stop breathing.
Below is a simple way to scan the biggest risk multipliers without turning this into a math problem.
| Risk Factor | Why It Changes Overdose Odds | Practical Safer Move |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol use | Stacks sedation and breathing suppression | Don’t mix; if mixed, treat heavy sleepiness as urgent |
| Benzodiazepines or sleep meds | Compound sedation and slow breathing | Tell the prescriber about all sedatives before taking codeine |
| Sleep apnea or lung disease | Baseline breathing is already fragile | Ask a clinician for an opioid-free plan when possible |
| Older age | Higher sensitivity and slower clearance | Start low only under medical direction; watch for excessive sleepiness |
| Kidney or liver impairment | Drug effects can last longer | Use only with clinician oversight; avoid extra doses |
| Medication dosing errors | Double dosing and wrong measuring tools are common | Use a dosing syringe/cup; write down dose time |
| Multiple products containing opioids | Hidden stacking across cough, pain, and cold products | Check active ingredients; avoid overlapping opioid products |
| Opioid-naïve person | Lower tolerance makes standard doses hit harder | Extra caution with sedation; don’t mix with other sedatives |
| Ultra-rapid metabolism (genetic) | Faster conversion to morphine can spike opioid effect | Follow label warnings and clinician guidance closely |
How Much Codeine Constitutes An Overdose? Safer Framing
If you were hoping for a clean threshold, here’s the safer truth: overdose is defined by effect, not a universal dose. When codeine slows breathing enough to drop oxygen, that’s overdose territory. It can happen from a dosing mistake, from mixing substances, or from a body that processes codeine in an unexpected way.
So instead of chasing a number, use a decision rule that works in the real world:
- If a person can’t stay awake or can’t be awakened, treat it as an emergency.
- If breathing is slow, shallow, irregular, or stopped, treat it as an emergency.
- If skin is cold and clammy, or lips/fingertips look blue/gray, treat it as an emergency.
That approach matches how emergency clinicians think. It also matches public health guidance that centers on rapid recognition and response, not home dosing math.
What To Do If You Suspect A Codeine Overdose
Overdose response is a skill. You don’t need medical training to do the first steps. You do need speed and focus.
The CDC lays out clear steps for what to do when you think someone is overdosing, including staying with the person and using naloxone when available. CDC “What to Do If You Think Someone Is Overdosing” is a straightforward reference you can follow under stress.
Use Naloxone If It’s Available
Naloxone reverses opioid overdose. It can restore breathing by blocking opioid effects. If you’re around opioids in any setting, having naloxone nearby can save a life.
SAMHSA explains opioid overdose reversal medications and the basics of access. SAMHSA “Opioid Overdose Reversal Medications” covers naloxone and related options in a public-facing way.
Stay With The Person
People can slip back into overdose after naloxone wears off, or they can vomit while drowsy. Staying close until emergency services arrive is part of keeping them alive.
If the person is breathing but very sleepy, place them on their side to reduce choking risk. If they’re not breathing, the dispatcher can guide you through rescue breathing or CPR based on what’s appropriate in your area.
| Step | What You Do | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Call emergency services | Use your local emergency number and say “possible opioid overdose” | Gets trained help moving fast |
| Check breathing and wakefulness | Try to wake them; watch chest rise and count breaths | Guides urgency and dispatcher instructions |
| Give naloxone if available | Use as directed for the product you have | Can reverse opioid breathing suppression |
| Position on side if breathing | Roll them onto their side with mouth angled downward | Reduces choking risk if vomiting occurs |
| Start rescue breathing/CPR if instructed | Follow dispatcher guidance for your training level | Keeps oxygen moving until help arrives |
| Stay until help arrives | Keep watching breathing; be ready for another naloxone dose | Overdose can return as drugs outlast naloxone |
Safer Use Habits That Cut Down Dosing Mistakes
If codeine is prescribed, safer use starts before the first dose. A few simple habits can prevent the common “oops” scenarios.
Write Down Dose Time
Use your phone notes or a sticky note on the bottle. Record the time and the amount. That alone prevents accidental redosing.
Use The Right Measuring Tool
If it’s a liquid, use a dosing syringe or cup that came with the medication. Kitchen spoons vary. That variation turns into unintended dose changes.
Keep A Single “Sedating Meds” List
Make a short list of anything that causes drowsiness: sleep meds, anxiety meds, antihistamines, alcohol. If codeine is in the picture, those items matter. Share the list with the clinician who prescribes the pain or cough medication.
Store It Like A High-Risk Medication
Lock it up, or at least keep it out of sight and out of reach of kids, teens, and visitors. Many household poisonings start with easy access.
Don’t Share Prescription Opioids
A dose that seems “mild” to one person can shut down another person’s breathing. Sharing also hides medical context that changes safety, like sleep apnea, other sedatives, or kidney disease.
When To Get Medical Help Even If The Person Wakes Up
If someone had a scary episode—hard to wake, slow breathing, naloxone used—medical evaluation still matters. Opioid effects can outlast the first recovery. Also, some products combine codeine with other drugs that cause their own damage.
If the exposure involved a mix of substances (alcohol, benzodiazepines, sleep meds, other opioids), the risk stays elevated even after the person seems more alert. Emergency clinicians can monitor breathing and treat complications that aren’t visible at home.
What To Tell The Emergency Team
Clear information saves time. If you can, bring the bottle or take a photo of the label. Then tell the team:
- What was taken (name on the label, strength, form)
- When it was taken
- Whether alcohol or other sedating meds were involved
- Any naloxone given and how many doses
- Any breathing problems you saw (slow breathing, pauses, blue lips)
You don’t need perfect details. Give what you have. The goal is speed and accuracy.
If You’re Asking Because You’re Worried About Your Own Use
That worry deserves a straight answer: if codeine use feels out of control, or you’re using it to cope, get medical help. A primary care clinician, a pharmacist, or an urgent care team can talk through safer pain options, tapering plans, and treatment choices.
If you feel at risk of harming yourself, call your local emergency number right now. If you’re in the U.S., you can call or text 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. If you’re outside the U.S., look up your country’s crisis number and call it now. You deserve immediate help.
References & Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Codeine Sulfate Oral Solution Prescribing Information.”Label warnings on respiratory depression, medication errors, and higher-risk groups.
- MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine).“Codeine overdose.”Lists overdose symptoms and urgent response steps for suspected poisoning.
- MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine).“Codeine: Drug Information.”Summarizes safety warnings and overdose symptom patterns in plain language.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“What to Do If You Think Someone Is Overdosing.”Step-by-step actions for suspected opioid overdose, including naloxone use and staying with the person.
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).“Opioid Overdose Reversal Medications (OORM).”Explains naloxone and other reversal medications and basic access information.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.