Peptide Library Comparisons Compounded vs approved
Regulation explainer

Compounded vs approved: what the difference really means

Not a head-to-head peptide comparison — the single most important distinction in this whole space, explained plainly.

Quick answer
FDA-approved: means the FDA reviewed a specific product’s safety, efficacy, and manufacturing.
Compounded: means a licensed pharmacy prepares it for a specific need — not FDA-approved, not individually reviewed.
Three separate things: off Category 2 ≠ 503A-compoundable ≠ FDA-approved.
— but quality varies, so provider + accredited pharmacy matter.
vials are a third, riskiest category — not the same as pharmacy-compounded.

The three categories, plainly

Almost every peptide question that trips people up comes down to confusing three different things. Here they are, cleanly separated.1

FDA-approved — a specific manufacturer’s product went through the FDA’s review of safety, efficacy, and manufacturing quality and can be marketed for defined uses. Semaglutide (Wegovy) and tirzepatide (Zepbound) are examples.

Compounded (503A/503B) — a licensed pharmacy prepares a medication for a patient’s specific need. It is not FDA-approved and not individually reviewed for safety and efficacy, though the pharmacies themselves are licensed and inspected.2

Gray-market “research only” — vials sold online with disclaimers, outside the pharmacy system entirely. This is the riskiest category — no clinical oversight, unverified purity.

Side by side

 FDA-approvedCompounded (503A/503B)
FDA reviewYes — safety, efficacy, manufacturingNo — not individually reviewed2
Who makes itThe approved manufacturerA licensed compounding pharmacy
OversightFDA-regulated product + providerState/FDA-licensed pharmacy + provider
ConsistencyStandardized, batch-controlledVaries by pharmacy; ask about testing
Typical examplesWegovy, Zepbound, EgriftaCompounded semaglutide; many peptides where permitted
Requires a providerYesYes

Gray-market “research only” vials are a separate, unregulated category and are not represented here as a legitimate option.

Why these get confused

The confusion peaks around the FDA’s Category 2 list (“do not compound”). In 2023 the FDA moved roughly 19 peptides to Category 2; in April 2026 it removed 12 of them. Marketing quickly translated “off Category 2” into “now legal and safe” — which isn’t what it means.3

Off Category 2
no longer “do not compound”
503A-compoundable
awaits formal guidance
FDA-approved
full review, defined uses

Three gates, not one. A peptide can clear the first and still be nowhere near the third.

Safety & quality — the honest version

Compounded does not automatically mean unsafe. Legitimate 503A and 503B pharmacies are licensed, inspected, and — the good ones — third-party test for potency, sterility, and endotoxins. Compounding exists for real clinical reasons.2

But because compounded products aren’t individually FDA-reviewed, quality varies, and the FDA has specifically warned about unapproved GLP-1 products. The gray market — “research only” vials — is a different animal entirely: no clinical oversight, unverified contents, and real safety risk. The safeguard is the same throughout: a licensed provider and an accredited pharmacy.

This is education, not legal or medical advice. Regulation moves fast and varies by product and state. A licensed provider and pharmacy determine what’s appropriate and lawful for you. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.

What to actually ask

  • Is this an FDA-approved product, or compounded? If compounded, by what kind of pharmacy?
  • Is the pharmacy licensed and accredited, and does it third-party test for potency and sterility?
  • Is a licensed provider prescribing and monitoring — or is this a “research only” vendor to walk away from?

Research & references

  1. 1FDA — drug approval vs pharmacy compounding overview. Link to be finalized.
  2. 2FDA — 503A/503B compounding framework & GLP-1 compounding warnings. Link to be finalized.
  3. 3FDA 503A bulk-substances Category 2 list; April 2026 removals; PCAC July 2026 & Feb 2027 dockets (FDA-2025-N-6895). Confirm at publish.

Citations are flagged for the site-wide citation pass — this is a YMYL/legal page, so accuracy of dates and framework language matters most. Don’t invent specifics.

Talk to a licensed provider

Whether any option is appropriate or legitimate for you is a question for a licensed provider.

Find a provider →

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between an FDA-approved drug and a compounded one?+

An FDA-approved drug has passed the FDA’s review of safety, efficacy, and manufacturing. A compounded product is made by a pharmacy for a specific need and is not FDA-approved or individually reviewed for safety and efficacy — a different regulatory category.

Is compounded semaglutide the same as Wegovy?+

No. Wegovy is the FDA-approved branded product; compounded semaglutide is not FDA-approved and is regulated differently. The FDA has warned about unapproved GLP-1 drugs.

Does off Category 2 mean a peptide is legal to compound?+

Not necessarily. Off Category 2, 503A-compoundable, and FDA-approved are three separate things. Coming off the do-not-compound list is a status change, not automatic clearance to compound or a drug approval.

Is compounded automatically unsafe?+

Not automatically — legitimate 503A/503B pharmacies are licensed and inspected. But compounded products aren’t individually FDA-reviewed, and quality varies, which is why a licensed provider and accredited pharmacy matter.