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ForumsInternationalAustralian TGA scheduling changes — peptide access 2026 Page 2

Australian TGA scheduling changes — peptide access 2026

AussieAnna Thu, Mar 12, 2026 at 7:57 PM 8 replies 161 viewsPage 2 of 2
FDA_TrackerJim
Senior Member
1,567
7,890
Feb 2024
Rockville, MD
Mar 12, 2026 at 10:47 PM#6

Compounding pharmacist in Queensland here. I want to clarify something — the amendment doesn't ban compounding of these peptides entirely. What it does is require the compounding pharmacy to hold a TGA Manufacturing Licence (GMP) to compound Schedule 4 Appendix D substances.

Currently, compounding pharmacies operate under state pharmacy board oversight, not TGA GMP requirements. The new rules essentially require us to meet the same manufacturing standards as a pharmaceutical company. For a small compounding pharmacy, that means:

  • $200k+ in cleanroom upgrades
  • Full GMP documentation and validation
  • Annual TGA audits

Most small compounders will fold. A few larger operations (Stenlake, National Custom Compounding) might pursue the licence. But the cost will get passed on — expect compounded semaglutide to go from $100-120 to $250+ if it survives at all.

33 16Dr.Martinez, mike_mod, SarahChen_PharmD and 30 others
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paige_pharma
Member
289
1,234
Sep 2024
Omaha, NE
Mar 12, 2026 at 11:04 PM#7

— that's the clearest explanation I've seen. So the net effect is that compounding either dies or becomes almost as expensive as brand-name. Convenient for Novo Nordisk.

I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but the timing of this — right as Novo Nordisk opens their new manufacturing facility in Sydney — is... interesting. They lobbied the TGA heavily during the consultation period. It's all in the public submission documents on the TGA website.

Last edited: Mar 13, 2026 at 12:04 AM
22 19Dr.SurgeonPGH, rachel_ABQ, traveltech_sara and 19 others
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steph_laguna
Member
234
1,123
Nov 2024
Laguna Beach, CA
Mar 12, 2026 at 11:21 PM#8

Alright, the practical summary for Aussie forum members:

  1. Before July 1, 2026: Get whatever compounded supply you can while it's still legal and affordable. Get a valid prescription from your GP.
  2. After July 1: Options are brand-name Wegovy (~$400/month), the AP pathway (if your doctor qualifies), or international sources (risky with new ABF powers).
  3. Long term: Push your federal MP to support the PBAC obesity listing. Write submissions during the next PBAC consultation period.

It's not ideal, but panicking won't help. The regulatory environment was always going to tighten — we just need to adapt.

7 21carl_compliance, DanielChem_CHI, marco_milano and 4 others
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