wellrank.ai

What happened with the FDA and compounded GLP-1s, and who is still operating legally?

PerplexityvalidationCollected Jul 10, 2026, 09:40 UTC

Verbatim response from Perplexity

The FDA has ended the long-standing shortage of semaglutide and tirzepatide, triggering a crackdown on mass-compounded GLP-1s that are essentially copies of commercially available FDA-approved drugs; compounding is now legally permitted only for specific patients with documented medical needs requiring non-standard doses, forms, or unique indications that are not commercially available [1][2][3]. Companies that continue to mass-produce or market compounded GLP-1s as generic alternatives (such as Hims & Hers and similar telehealth/compounding pharmacies) are facing legal action, seizure, and injunctions for violating FDA policies and making misleading claims [5][7][8].

Who is still operating legally:

  • Legitimate, state-licensed pharmacies and outsourcing facilities that compound GLP-1s strictly under Section 503A or 503B of the FD&C Act for individual patients with a bona fide need for non-standard formulations (e.g., non-standard doses, gummies, sprays, or added ingredients like B12 only if medically justified and not for mass marketing) [1][2][3].
  • No companies are legally permitted to routinely compound or mass-market GLP-1s that are essentially copies of Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or Zepbound once the shortage has ended [3][4][10].

Recommended legal alternatives for patients:

  • FDA-approved injectables: Ozempic and Wegovy (semaglutide) from Novo Nordisk, and Mounjaro and Zepbound (tirzepatide) from Eli Lilly are the only legally guaranteed, FDA-reviewed options for weight loss and diabetes [2][3][6].
  • Patients should obtain these through licensed prescribers and legitimate pharmacies (e.g., CVS, Walgreens, or local independent pharmacies) that verify supply and do not sell unapproved compounded versions.

Brands to avoid for compounded GLP-1s:

  • Hims & Hers, Ro, Brief, and other telehealth platforms that advertise mass-compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide as "generic" or "equivalent" to FDA-approved drugs are now operating illegally and may be subject to FDA enforcement [5][7][8].

The FDA has explicitly stated it will not take action only against compounders filling four or fewer prescriptions per month of essentially copied compounded drugs, but any mass production or marketing is prohibited [2]. Patients seeking weight-loss treatment should prioritize FDA-approved medications over compounded versions to ensure safety, efficacy, and regulatory compliance [3][6][9].

Brands mentioned in this answer

Sources the engine cited

These pages drove this recommendation. Winning placement here is how brands move the answer.

Is this answer wrong about your brand?

AI engines repeat outdated pricing, wrong ingredients, and misread positioning every day. Tell us what this answer gets wrong and we will include a correction review in your free AI Visibility Audit.

This answer is reproduced verbatim from the engine's API at collection time and may contain errors or outdated claims. It is presented as evidence of what AI engines tell buyers, not as medical or purchasing advice.

Is your brand missing from this answer?

Get your AI Visibility Audit: every buyer intent question you are losing, who wins them, and the sources that decide the answer.