To assess patients' opioid prescription usage and pain management satisfaction after fracture surgery. Design : An IRB-approved prospective prognostic cohort study for postoperative fracture patients was conducted. Patients were evaluated by an independent observer at two weeks, six weeks, three months, and six months postoperatively where they were given Detroit Interventional Pain Assessment (DIPA) questionnaires regarding their postoperative pain and opioid usage. Opioid prescriptions were verified by Michigan Automated Prescription System. All patients were divided into major fractures (tibia, femur, acetabulum, pelvis, calcaneus, talus, and polytrauma) and minor fractures (scapula, clavicle, humerus, radius, ulna, scaphoid, carpal/metacarpal, patella, fibula, ankle, and metarsal) and were followed for two years. Single-Center Level One Trauma Center. Patients presenting to clinic over a six month period were invited to participate in this study. Patients who did not consent were excluded. Outcome measures were the amount of prescribed opioids in daily Milligram Morphine equivalents (MMEs), opioid usage, DIPA pain scores, pain management efficiency (percentage of patients reporting no pain or tolerable pain with their regimen). Prescribed MMEs, pain management efficiency scores, and the percentage of patients using opioids were compared across all postoperative periods. For 201 fracture patients, the average age was 47.8 ± 16.3 SD (18-87 years) and there were 116 males (57.8%) and 85 females (42.2%). The percentage of patients using opioids and their daily prescribed MMEs significantly decreased from two weeks (48.2%, 21.6 MMEs) to six months (10.3%, 8.13 MMEs) (P < 0.001). Fifty-one percent of patients were off opioids at two weeks, 64.5% at six weeks, 84.2% at three months, and 89.7% at six months. All opioid prescriptions at six months and two years were prescribed to polytrauma patients who underwent sequential surgeries and these prescriptions originated from outside prescribers. Pain management efficiency scores were worst at two weeks (67.2%) but improved at three months (82.6%). As patients transitioned further from their surgical date, there was a decrease in opioid prescriptions and patient reported opioid usage. Despite the opioid tapering practices by surgeons, polytrauma patients still received prescriptions from outside prescribers for orthopaedic aftercare after three months, signaling the necessity for patients to see outside prescribers for their pain management after this time. Prognostic Level II. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.