US drug overdose deaths dropped for third straight year in 2025, CDC data shows

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Drug overdose deaths in the US fell nearly 14% in ​2025, the US ​Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showed on ‌Wednesday, marking a third consecutive year of declines.

Here are some details:

  • Nearly 69,973 people died ​from drug overdose in the ​U.S. in 2025, compared with 81,313 ⁠deaths estimated a year earlier, according ​to provisional data from the U.S. ​Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
  • The wide availability of a medication called naloxone, a potent ​overdose antidote, has significantly contributed ​to the drop, according to experts.
  • Deaths involving opioids ‌fell ⁠to an estimated 44,564 in 2025 from 55,296 a year earlier, the CDC estimates showed.
  • Synthetic opioids, including Fentanyl, ​are the ​single largest ⁠contributor to overdose deaths in the country.
  • While most states ​across the nation showed declines ​in ⁠overdose deaths, New Mexico, Arizona and Colorado had increases of 10% or ⁠more ​compared to the same ​period in 2024, the report said.