Peptide News Digest

#Peptide-Compliance

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Australia's TGA Designates Unapproved Peptides a Formal Compliance Priority — Targets BPC-157, GHK-Cu, TB-500, Retatrutide, CJC-1295 With Infringement Notices, Import Seizures, and Civil/Criminal Penalties

Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) escalated its peptide-products oversight to a formal compliance priority in a June 2026 media release, citing rising importation, expanding online advertising and supply, and hospitalisation data identifying serious adverse effects associated with unapproved peptides. Targeted products include BPC-157, GHK-Cu, TB-500, retatrutide, and CJC-1295. The TGA emphasized that unapproved peptide products are not in the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods and have not been evaluated for safety, quality, or efficacy. An eight-month operation involving TGA, the Australian Border Force, and Victoria Police seized about $2M worth of peptides, performance-enhancing drugs, and illicit steroids. Future compliance responses may include infringement notices, product seizures, import interventions, and civil or criminal penalties; advertising or promoting unapproved peptides through social media or influencer channels is likely to breach Australian therapeutic goods advertising laws. The escalation parallels the FDA's PCAC reclassification track and tightens the global regulatory squeeze on the gray-market peptide channel.