Norco Discontinued: What Replaced It | Hydrocodone/APAP

The Norco brand has been discontinued in the U.S. Learn what replaced it, why it was phased out, and where the generic is prescribed today.
Reviewed by Emily Carter, M-RAS, SUDCC II, Founder of the Waismann Method — April 23, 2026
Medical content last reviewed by Dr. Jonathan Reed, M.D., Quadruple Board-Certified Physician and former Medical Director — February 23, 2023
Important Update: The Norco Brand Is No Longer Available
The Norco brand name has been discontinued in the United States. The generic equivalent — hydrocodone/acetaminophen, sometimes written as hydrocodone/APAP — remains widely prescribed. If you or a family member was prescribed “Norco” in recent years, you most likely received the generic version.
The discontinuation followed the FDA’s 2011 decision to limit acetaminophen in prescription combination products to 325 mg per dosage unit, along with the 2014 reclassification of hydrocodone combination products from Schedule III to the more restrictive Schedule II. Other brand-name versions of the same medication — including Vicodin, Lortab, Lorcet, and Hycet — have also been discontinued. Only generic hydrocodone/acetaminophen remains on the market.
What Was Norco?
Norco combined two active ingredients:
- Hydrocodone bitartrate — a semi-synthetic opioid that binds to opioid receptors in the central nervous system to reduce pain perception
- Acetaminophen — a non-opioid pain reliever that enhances analgesic effect but carries liver toxicity risk at high doses
Common dosages were 5 mg, 7.5 mg, and 10 mg of hydrocodone, each combined with 325 mg of acetaminophen. It was prescribed for moderate to moderately severe pain when non-opioid options were insufficient. Its generic equivalent is prescribed in the same strengths today.
Because the Active Ingredients Are Unchanged
The generic hydrocodone/acetaminophen available today has the same active ingredients, the same clinical effects, the same risks of dependence and liver toxicity, and the same withdrawal profile that Norco did. Everything that was clinically true of Norco remains true of the generic.
For comprehensive information on the underlying medication — including pharmacology, dependence and tolerance, withdrawal timeline, treatment approaches, and the full clinical reference — see our main page:
→ Hydrocodone and Acetaminophen: Complete Clinical Reference
For information on other brand names of the same combination, see Vicodin.
If You Need Help Today
The Waismann Method no longer accepts patients. For current treatment:
- SAMHSA’s National Helpline — 1-800-662-HELP (4357) — free, confidential, 24/7
- FindTreatment.gov — official U.S. government treatment locator
- Emergency or overdose: Call 911 immediately. Administer naloxone (Narcan) if available.
Addiction Treatment Options
Emily Carter
Health Writer

