Compounded tirzepatide in 2026: is it still legal and safe?
A plain-English look at where access stands, why the rules keep moving, and what to ask before starting.
TL;DR
- Compounded tirzepatide is still legally accessible in 2026, but the door is narrower than it was a year ago.
- The compounded version is not FDA-approved — it is prepared by state-licensed 503A pharmacies from FDA-approved active ingredient.
- Pharmacy quality, ongoing litigation, and individualized prescribing are the three things that decide whether your access is durable.
What it is
Compounded tirzepatide is a custom-prepared injectable made at a 503A pharmacy (in plain English: a state-licensed pharmacy that makes patient-specific medications) using tirzepatide active pharmaceutical ingredient. It is not Mounjaro or Zepbound, the FDA-approved branded versions made by Eli Lilly. Think of it like a bakery: the FDA-approved version is the packaged bread on the shelf; the compounded version is the loaf made to order from approved flour. The compounded loaf is real bread, but it does not carry the FDA-approved label.
How it works
Tirzepatide is a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist (in plain English: a molecule that activates two appetite and blood-sugar signals at once). The 503A pharmacy weighs out the API, dissolves it in a sterile diluent, and fills vials for a specific patient under a specific prescription. Access depends on FDA shortage status: when tirzepatide was on the FDA Drug Shortage list, 503A compounding was broadly permitted. The FDA declared the tirzepatide shortage resolved in late 2024, which tightened the rules (FDA Drug Shortage Database, 2024).
Who asks about it
People come to this topic when their branded prescription is denied by insurance, when cost is out of reach, or when they have read that “compounded GLP-1 is going away” and want to know what is actually true. Many are already on a GLP-1 and worried about continuity.
What the research says
The active ingredient itself has strong trial evidence in adults with obesity and type 2 diabetes (NEJM SURMOUNT-1, 2022). Side effects in trials included nausea (about 1 in 4 patients), diarrhea, and injection-site reactions. Compounded versions have not been studied as their own product line. Quality depends on the specific 503A pharmacy, its USP General Chapter 797 compliance, and its certificate of analysis. Compounded GLP-1 products are also the subject of ongoing litigation (Novo Nordisk v. Hims & Hers, Feb 2026), which may further narrow access.
What to know before considering it
Access requires a valid prescription from a licensed clinician after evaluation. Side effects are common. Pharmacy choice matters — ask for the certificate of analysis and the 503A’s USP 797 status. Coverage and price are not directly comparable to branded products. Continuity is uncertain: rules may change quickly.
The Halftime POV
We treat compounded tirzepatide as a real option for the right person under the right supervision — not a shortcut around a branded prescription. The science is solid; the access framework is fluid. Our posture is to be transparent about both, prescribe through licensed clinicians, and tell people clearly when the rules shift.
Related reading:
- Compounded tirzepatide: what it is
- Compounded semaglutide in 2026: is it still legal and safe?
- Novo Nordisk v. Hims & Hers: what the GLP-1 lawsuit means
- 503A vs 503B pharmacies, explained
FAQ
Q: Is compounded tirzepatide still legal in 2026? A: Compounded tirzepatide is legal when made by a state-licensed 503A pharmacy for a specific patient under a valid prescription. Access tightened after the FDA resolved the tirzepatide shortage in late 2024, and ongoing litigation continues to shape who may compound it.
Q: Is compounded tirzepatide the same as Mounjaro or Zepbound? A: No. Mounjaro and Zepbound are the FDA-approved branded tirzepatide products from Eli Lilly. Compounded tirzepatide is prepared at a 503A pharmacy from FDA-approved active pharmaceutical ingredient. The compounded version is not itself FDA-approved.
Q: Is compounded tirzepatide safe? A: It is generally well-tolerated in physician-supervised protocols, but side effects like nausea, injection-site reactions, and gastrointestinal symptoms are common. Quality depends on the pharmacy. Individual response varies.
Disclaimer
This article is educational and is not medical advice. Compounded GLP-1 medications are prepared by state-licensed 503A compounding pharmacies from FDA-approved active pharmaceutical ingredients and are not themselves FDA-approved. GLP-1 therapies are available only with a valid prescription following a licensed clinician evaluation. Clinical outcomes depend on individual factors including baseline health, adherence, diet, and physical activity. Individual results vary. Side effects are common and may include nausea, injection-site reactions, and gastrointestinal symptoms. Compounded GLP-1 products are the subject of ongoing litigation (Novo Nordisk v. Hims & Hers, Feb 2026). Halftime Health is launching soon — join the waitlist to get updates.
Get updates
Halftime Health is launching soon. We’ll share what we learn along the way — the research, the regulations, the real-world trade-offs. Join the waitlist and we’ll email you when we’re live.
Sources
- SURMOUNT-1: Tirzepatide for weight management — NEJM, 2022
- FDA Drug Shortage Database — tirzepatide status
- FDA: Medications containing semaglutide and GLP-1 compounding context
Sources & references
- fda.gov — https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drug-safety-and-availability/medications-containing-semaglutide-marketed-type-2-diabetes-or-weight-loss
- accessdata.fda.gov — https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/drugshortages/