28 Mar 2026

Why compounded semaglutide was banned in Australia

Before October 2024, some compounding pharmacies produced cheap semaglutide replicas. The TGA shut this down over safety concerns. Here's the full story.

What was compounded semaglutide?

Compounding pharmacies were producing their own versions of semaglutide — the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy — at a fraction of the brand-name cost. Patients could get compounded semaglutide for $100–150/month compared to $400+ for Wegovy. It was popular, and many people felt it was essentially the same product.

The critical difference: compounded medications are not subject to TGA manufacturing standards. They don't undergo the rigorous quality testing, stability studies, or batch-by-batch verification that licensed pharmaceutical manufacturers must complete.

Why did the TGA ban it?

The TGA cited several concerns that led to the October 2024 ban:

  • Contamination risks: Compounding pharmacies don't operate in the same controlled environments as pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. The risk of microbial or chemical contamination is higher — particularly concerning for an injectable medication.
  • Inconsistent dosing: Without standardised manufacturing processes, the actual amount of semaglutide in each dose could vary. Under-dosing means the medication doesn't work; over-dosing increases side effect risk.
  • No stability data: TGA-approved medications have proven shelf-life data. Compounded versions may degrade at unknown rates, potentially becoming ineffective or harmful.
  • Adverse events: The TGA received reports of adverse events associated with compounded GLP-1 products, though specific numbers haven't been published.
  • No clinical evidence: While brand-name semaglutide has data from 15,000+ trial participants, compounded versions have zero clinical trial data.

Is the ban permanent?

The TGA has given no indication it will reverse the ban. As TGA-approved options become more available and potentially PBS-subsidised, the regulatory position is likely to strengthen rather than soften.

What are your options now?

TGA-approved medications only:

  • Wegovy ($400–460/mo) — same ingredient as what was compounded, at a verified dose with proven safety data
  • Mounjaro ($350–500/mo) — different molecule, higher average weight loss
  • Budget options — Duromine (~$100/mo) or Xenical (~$80/mo) for lower-cost alternatives

The lesson

Cheap isn't always safe, especially with injectable medications. The compounding ban was a patient safety measure, even though it made access harder for budget-conscious patients. The real solution is PBS subsidisation — which is now pending for Wegovy.

Full compounding ban guide →

Ask our AI advisor