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GLP-1 compounding 2025 — the legal landscape after the shortage list.

On February 21, 2025, the FDA declared the semaglutide shortage resolved. That single regulatory action changed who can compound what, under which authority, and for how long. The Outsourcing Facilities Association sued. The court denied the injunction. The legitimate compounding lane is now much smaller — but it still exists, and the distinction matters.

How this article was built: FDA notices, the Declaratory Order, the Outsourcing Facilities Association complaint, the court ruling on the preliminary injunction, and the public-facing positions of major compounding and pharmacy organizations. This is a fast-moving regulatory area and this article reflects the state of the record at the publication date. Not legal advice and not medical advice.
Compounding pharmacy laboratory — semaglutide tirzepatide vials
The 2025 regulatory reset redefined who can compound a GLP-1, and under what authority.

Background: why compounding existed in the first place

Under section 503A of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, state-licensed pharmacies may compound drug products for an individually identified patient pursuant to a valid prescription. Section 503B authorizes registered outsourcing facilities to compound at larger scale without patient-specific prescriptions, subject to FDA inspection and current good manufacturing practice (CGMP) standards. Both pathways have always existed alongside the commercial drug supply chain. They are not in themselves loopholes.

Critically, both 503A and 503B compounders are generally prohibited from producing a drug that is "essentially a copy" of a commercially available FDA-approved product. The principal exception: when the FDA-approved product appears on the agency's official drug shortage list, compounders may produce essentially copies during the shortage period to mitigate patient access problems [FDA compounding policy].

Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) was placed on the FDA drug shortage list in 2022 amid unprecedented demand. Tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound) followed in 2023. For roughly two years, both molecules existed in a compounding gray zone where 503A pharmacies and 503B outsourcing facilities could legitimately produce versions of these molecules, sold predominantly through telehealth platforms at significantly lower prices than the branded products. By 2024, the compounded GLP-1 supply was a multi-billion-dollar parallel market.

February 2025: the shortage resolution

On February 21, 2025, FDA updated its drug shortage database and issued a formal Declaratory Order stating that the shortage of injectable semaglutide products had been resolved across all dose strengths [FDA shortage resolution Feb 2025]. The agency announced explicit enforcement-discretion windows during which compounders could wind down inventory:

After those dates, compounding "essentially a copy" of branded semaglutide became a violation of the FD&C Act regardless of prescription pattern or facility classification. Tirzepatide followed a parallel trajectory — its shortage status was resolved in October 2024 and the comparable wind-down periods completed in early 2025 [Buchanan Ingersoll briefing 2025].

The shortage list was the legal scaffolding on which the compounded GLP-1 market was built. When the FDA removed semaglutide from that list, the scaffolding came down — and most of the market built on it had to come down with it.

503A vs 503B — what the distinction means

For consumers trying to evaluate a compounded product, the distinction between 503A and 503B is more than legal trivia.

503A pharmacies are state-licensed and regulated primarily by state boards of pharmacy. They compound for an individually identified patient based on a valid prescription from a licensed prescriber. Quality oversight varies between states; FDA's direct authority is more limited than for manufacturers. The 503A pathway is designed for genuine personalization — a patient who cannot tolerate an ingredient in the commercial formulation, who needs a non-standard concentration, or whose dosing requires modification a manufacturer cannot accommodate.

503B outsourcing facilities register with FDA, are subject to CGMP standards comparable to those of branded manufacturers, and undergo direct FDA inspection. They can produce at scale and ship to clinicians without patient-specific prescriptions in some circumstances. Quality oversight is substantially more rigorous than 503A. The trade-off: 503Bs are more capital-intensive to operate and are correspondingly fewer in number.

During the shortage period, both pathways produced compounded GLP-1s. Much of the consumer-facing telehealth supply ran through 503A pharmacies. Some was produced by 503B facilities. The regulatory consequences of the February 2025 resolution applied to both, with the wind-down dates noted above.

The OFA lawsuit and the April ruling

On February 24, 2025 — three days after the FDA's Declaratory Order — the Outsourcing Facilities Association (OFA) filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas seeking to vacate the shortage resolution and reinstate the compounding pathway. The OFA argued that the FDA's determination was arbitrary and capricious and that real-world supply pressures had not in fact resolved [OFA complaint 2025].

On April 24, 2025, the district court denied the OFA's motion for a preliminary injunction [Court order April 2025]. The practical effect: FDA's enforcement-discretion timeline proceeded as published. After May 22, 2025, both 503A and 503B compounding of "essentially a copy" semaglutide became sanctionable. A parallel litigation track on tirzepatide had already produced a comparable result. The legal terrain that existed in 2024 — large-scale compounding of GLP-1s for the general weight-loss market under shortage-list authority — is effectively closed.

Compounding is not banned. The shortage-list pathway is closed, but the underlying 503A authority for genuine patient-specific personalization remains. Examples of where compounded GLP-1 products may still be produced legitimately:

The honest read: the legitimate personalized-compounding lane is narrower than the marketing of many telehealth platforms suggests. FDA has stated its enforcement priorities focus on products that are essentially copies of branded GLP-1s, products sold without legitimate prescriber oversight, and products with quality or safety problems [FDA compounder clarification 2025].

Why this matters for patient safety

The compounded-GLP-1 market expanded rapidly between 2023 and 2024. FDA received and published multiple adverse-event notifications related to dosing errors with compounded formulations — particularly because compounded products were sometimes supplied at different concentrations than the branded pens patients were familiar with, and unit conversions (units vs milligrams vs milliliters) caused real harm [FDA adverse events compounded GLP-1]. The enforcement actions in 2025 are partially a response to that safety record.

What patients on compounded GLP-1s should do

We are not your prescriber. With that caveat, a few practical observations for patients who started on a compounded product during the shortage period:

What we won't tell you

We will not tell you which compounding pharmacy to use. We will not link to research-chemical sources. We will not tell you that compounded GLP-1s are categorically unsafe — many were produced under legitimate authority by reputable facilities — nor that the branded products are categorically the better option for every patient. The right answer for any individual patient depends on access, cost, formulation tolerance, and a prescriber relationship.

Disclosure
This article is editorial. It is not sponsored, contains no affiliate links to prescription drugs, compounded products, or telehealth platforms. Where Wellness Radar publishes sponsored content, paid partnerships, or affiliate links, they are clearly labeled at the top of the article. See our revenue model for the full breakdown.

References

  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA's human drug compounding progress report and policy framework (503A and 503B). FDA Compounding Quality Center of Excellence. 2023.
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Declaratory order: resolution of the semaglutide injection drug shortage. FDA. February 21, 2025.
  3. Foley & Lardner LLP. GLP-1 drugs: FDA removes semaglutide from drug shortage list. Client briefing. February 2025.
  4. McDermott Will & Emery. Semaglutide shortage resolved. Health law insights briefing. February 2025.
  5. Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC. FDA's removal of semaglutide and the evolving tirzepatide decisions: what compounders need to know. 2025.
  6. Outsourcing Facilities Association v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief. U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. February 24, 2025.
  7. U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Order denying plaintiffs' motion for preliminary injunction in Outsourcing Facilities Association v. FDA. April 24, 2025.
  8. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA clarifies policies for compounders as national GLP-1 supply begins to stabilize. FDA Drug Alert. 2025.
  9. Alston & Bird. FDA resolves semaglutide shortage: next steps for community pharmacies, telehealth companies, and other providers. March 2025.
  10. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Adverse-event notifications associated with compounded GLP-1 receptor agonist products. FDA. 2024.
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