Counterfeit GLP-1 medications have been seized in the UK. The MHRA has confirmed seizures of falsified Mounjaro and Saxenda products, some containing incorrect or harmful substances including insulin. Buying from an unregistered provider is not just a waste of money — it carries genuine clinical risk.

The good news: checking whether a pharmacy is legitimate takes about 30 seconds. Here is exactly what to look for.

Step 1: Check the GPhC register

Every pharmacy legally operating in the UK must be registered with the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC). The register is public and searchable. Go to pharmacyregulation.org/registers/pharmacy and search by name or registration number.

Any legitimate UK online pharmacy will display its GPhC registration number prominently on its website — usually in the footer or on an 'about' or 'regulation' page. If you cannot find a GPhC number, do not proceed. All pharmacies listed on GLP1Compared.co.uk include their verified GPhC number with a direct link to the register entry.

Quick check: Every pharmacy in our comparison has a GPhC ✓ tag. Click it to see the registration number. Click "Verify ↗" to go directly to the GPhC register entry.

Step 2: Confirm a clinical consultation is required

GLP-1 medications are prescription-only. No legitimate pharmacy can supply them without a prescription issued following a genuine clinical assessment. Be cautious of any service that:

The GPhC has been clear: an online questionnaire alone is insufficient for prescribing weight loss medications safely. A qualified prescriber must review the information provided and have the ability to ask follow-up questions.

Step 3: Check the MHRA register

The MHRA maintains a register of approved online medicine sellers. Any website selling prescription medicines in the UK must be on this register. You can also use the MHRA's online check tool to verify a site.

Red flags to watch for

If you receive medication that looks different: If you receive medication that appears different from what you expected — different packaging, unusual pen design, unexpected markings — do not use it. Report it to the MHRA via their Yellow Card scheme and contact the pharmacy.

What happens if you buy from an unregistered provider

You have no consumer protection. You cannot verify the medication is genuine, stored correctly, or at the right concentration. The MHRA has confirmed seizures of counterfeit products containing insulin instead of semaglutide or tirzepatide — administering insulin without medical supervision can be life-threatening. There is also no route to clinical support if you experience side effects.