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ForumsInternationalMoving abroad and terrified about getting my meds - help — need advice

Moving abroad and terrified about getting my meds - help — need advice

EndoResFellow Sun, Dec 29, 2024 at 9:10 AM 13 replies 1,530 viewsPage 1 of 3
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EndoResFellow
Member
456
2,345
Sep 2024
Baltimore, MD
Dec 29, 2024 at 10:35 AM#1

Heads up to all Aussies on this forum — the TGA just published the final ruling on the Therapeutic Goods (Standard for Compounded Medicines) Amendment 2026 and it's bad news for anyone using compounded peptides.

Key changes effective 1 July 2026:

  • Semaglutide, tirzepatide, and retatrutide are being moved to Schedule 4 Appendix D — meaning compounding pharmacies can NO longer compound them without a specific TGA approval pathway
  • The "personal importation" exemption under the Therapeutic Goods (Personal Importation) Scheme is being tightened — you'll need a valid Australian prescription AND prior TGA notification for any Schedule 4 peptide
  • Customs (ABF) are being given explicit authority to seize peptides at the border without the new documentation

This basically kills the grey-market peptide scene in Australia. My compounding pharmacy in Melbourne (won't name them) already told me they'll stop making semaglutide after June 30.

26 11robert_kc, dan_philly, MeganSA_TX and 23 others
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pete_manc_UK
Senior Member
1,234
5,678
Mar 2024
Manchester, UK
Dec 29, 2024 at 10:52 AM#2

This has been coming since the TGA consultation paper in late 2025. The Australian Medical Association lobbied hard for this — they argued that compounded semaglutide was "undermining the PBS listing" of Ozempic and Wegovy.

Current PBS situation for anyone not across it:

Ozempic: PBS-listed for T2D only (not obesity). Cost with PBS: $42.50 per script (general) or $7.70 (concession).
Wegovy: TGA-approved but NOT PBS-listed. Private script cost: ~$400-450/month.

So if you're using semaglutide for weight loss (not diabetes), you're currently looking at $400/month brand-name or ~$120/month compounded. After July, that $120 option disappears.

8 19RunnerRach, TrialNerd_Beth, HPLC_Greg and 5 others
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marcus_mpls
Member
234
1,123
Nov 2024
Minneapolis, MN
Dec 29, 2024 at 11:09 AM#3

I spoke to my GP about this yesterday. She said there's talk of a new PBS listing for Wegovy for obesity being considered by PBAC in their July 2026 meeting, but even if approved it wouldn't take effect until 2027 at the earliest.

So we're looking at a 6-12 month gap where compounded is illegal and brand-name is unaffordable for most people. Brilliant planning, TGA.

My doctor also mentioned the Authorised Prescriber (AP) pathway — apparently some endocrinologists are applying to become APs for compounded semaglutide, which would let them prescribe it from approved compounders even after the rule change. But it's a narrow exemption and most GPs won't qualify.

22 3tane_welly, Dr.PathRoch, mona_PHX and 19 others
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mel_PDX
Member
189
890
Dec 2024
Portland, OR
Dec 29, 2024 at 11:26 AM#4

For anyone thinking of stockpiling before July — I just placed what might be my last order with my compounder. They're doing 10mg vials of semaglutide for $95 AUD, which at my dose of 0.5mg/week gives me about 20 weeks per vial.

I ordered 3 vials. That'll carry me through to roughly February 2027, by which time hopefully either the PBS listing comes through or the AP pathway is established.

The vials come with a Finnrick certificate of analysis showing 98.4% purity and endotoxin levels well within USP limits. My compounder switched from Janoshik to Finnrick last year — apparently Finnrick has a faster turnaround for Australian clients.

Last edited: Dec 29, 2024 at 5:26 PM
49 11BiostatsBrad, PeptideSynthNJ, Dr.KarenChen and 46 others
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DebRD_ATL
Senior Member
1,678
7,890
Feb 2024
Atlanta, GA
Dec 29, 2024 at 11:43 AM#5

Good call on stockpiling. Just be aware that even possessing Schedule 4 substances without a prescription can theoretically be an offence under state Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances legislation. In Victoria it's the Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Act 1981, and the penalties are... not trivial.

In practice, no one's getting prosecuted for having personal-use semaglutide in their fridge. But it's worth having a valid prescription on file just in case.

18 23HealthEcon_DC, PedsEndoPhilly, SleepDoc_PDX and 15 others
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