Last Updated:
January 30th, 2026
Mephedrone addiction: Signs, symptoms and side-effects
Mephedrone, known as “meow meow” or “M-Cat”, exploded onto Britain’s club scene in 2009. You could buy it legally from headshops, marketed as plant food, and it felt safer than cocaine because it wasn’t illegal yet. That changed in April 2010 when several deaths forced the government to make mephedrone a Class B drug, and possession now means up to five years in prison. But while mephedrone abuse did drop significantly after the ban, there are still people in Britain who use it and become addicted. It is important to know just how dangerous mephedrone addiction and abuse can be to keep yourself safe.

What is mephedrone addiction?
Mephedrone is a form of novel psychoactive substance addiction where mephedrone use continues despite physical, emotional, or social consequences. Mephedrone enters your bloodstream fast when you snort it, and this then supercharges your brain with dopamine and serotonin at the same time. It can feel somewhere in between cocaine and ecstasy, but only lasts about an hour before you crash hard.
And that is where the trap is. Mephedrone comedown hits fast enough to make you want more immediately, but not so bad that you stop completely. People can end up taking it again and again for entire weekends, and barely sleeping. Tolerance can develop remarkably quickly, and over a weekend, huge amounts of mephedrone are often taken.
After regular mephedrone abuse, your brain stops making enough dopamine on its own. That means if you don’t take mephedrone, you become dopamine-deprived, which creates withdrawal symptoms like intense cravings, anxiety, and deep depression. It is very common to relapse at this point because these feelings are just too much.
When this becomes a pattern, mephedrone abuse becomes firmly part of your daily routine. Dealing with stress, work, school, relationships, or anything else can become very hard if you’re not high. Eventually, you are completely addicted, unable to stop, even though it’s clear you are in trouble.
How to identify mephedrone addiction signs
Mephedrone addiction develops quickly because of how fast you want to redose. Many people are in addiction denial because they just can’t believe they can become addicted that fast. But these mephedrone addiction signs mean you need to get help:
- You’re using mephedrone all the time, not just on nights out or at parties.
- You binge on mephedrone for days straight with no sleep.
- You’re buying grams or even ounces at a time.
- You want more mephedrone within 20 minutes of your last dose.
- Your nose bleeds constantly from snorting mephedrone.
- You hide how much you’re using from people who care.
- You call in sick to work repeatedly after using.
- You’re spending hundreds of pounds you can’t afford.
- You’ve tried stopping, but can’t manage it.
Why is mephedrone addictive?
Mephedrone hits your brain’s pleasure systems harder than most drugs, but the real problem is how fast you peak, crash, and become tolerant. This creates days-long binges of ever-increasing amounts, which make mephedrone dependence almost inevitable. But several other factors are tied to mephedrone addiction:
It used to be legal, so people think it’s safer
Until 2010, you could buy any amount of mephedrone you wanted from shops and online. Being legal made people think the government had checked it was okay. Even now, years after the ban, many people still wrongly treat it as less dangerous than other illegal drugs.
Mephedrone side-effects and addiction dangers
Regular mephedrone abuse does serious damage that gets worse the longer you use and the more you take. Some of the worst damage which contributed to the ban includes:
What does mephedrone addiction recovery involve?
You need professional help to stop mephedrone because the depression and cravings make it nearly impossible to quit alone. Inpatient drug detox gives you professional planning and monitoring when you stop, particularly for depression, exhaustion, and anxiety. Some people in mephedrone detox feel suicidal, and they may need medication to help with these extreme reactions to withdrawal.
New psychoactive substance rehab then works on the anxiety, social pressure, or whatever else pushed you to mephedrone misuse and dependency. There are rehab programmes up and down the country, but the best provide:
- A wide range of therapies
- Individual and group therapy and counselling
- Inpatient care
- Relapse prevention planning
- Aftercare and alumni services
Long-term recovery from mephedrone also needs ongoing treatment, and for you to hold yourself accountable. This may mean avoiding certain people or social scenes, joining local support groups and NA meetings, and creating a lifestyle plan that you stick to.
Real recovery starts with a single decision that you don’t want to be a prisoner to mephedrone addiction anymore. Once you decide that, Recovery.org can help with all the rest. Contact us to find the right treatment programme and begin your healing journey.
Frequently Asked Questions
(Click here to see works cited)
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- FRANK. “Mephedrone.” Talk to Frank,
https://www.talktofrank.com/drug/mephedrone. - City Addictions. “London Mephedrone ~ from legal high to Class B.” City Addictions, https://www.cityaddictions.co.uk/mephedrone-journey-from-legal-high-to-class-b/.
- Winstock, Adam R et al. “Mephedrone, new kid for the chop?.” Addiction (Abingdon, England) vol. 106,1 (2011): 154-61.
doi:10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03130.x - Release. “Mephedrone (4MMC): chemsex, effects, risks and overdose.” Release, 23 May 2019,
https://www.substancemisuseresources.co.uk/harm-reduction-information/mephedrone-information-for-human-consumption-free. - Capriola, Michael. “Synthetic cathinone abuse.” Clinical pharmacology : advances and applications vol. 5 109-15. 2 Jul. 2013,
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