The electrochemical sensing of Clonazepam in samples of unprocessed saliva is reported using commercially available reduced graphene oxide screen printed electrodes (rGO SPEs). The rGO electrodes were modified with self‐assembled lubricin (LUB) antiadhesive coatings that function as a size‐selective molecular sieve which partitions small molecule analytes from large fouling molecules at the electrode‐fluid interface. By mitigating the adverse effects of protein fouling, these LUB coatings enable direct, reliable, and quantitative electrochemical measurements of clonazepam concentrations in untreated saliva which was not possible with uncoated rGO electrodes in identical tests. The proposed assay design, which is suitable for disposable, point‐of‐care diagnostics, requires no sample pre‐treatment and shows a linear detection response over a concentration range of 25‐250 nM with a correlation coefficient of (R 2 =0.987) and a limit of detection (LoD) of 16.67 nM. The swab based sample acquisition method paired with the antifouling properties of the LUB coatings provide a cost effective and practical biosensing platform for assessing electroactive drug concentrations in saliva in a point‐of‐care setting.