State · North Carolina

Compounded GLP-1 in North Carolina: regulatory status, availability & what to verify

What applies to compounded GLP-1 telehealth for North Carolina residents: the federal regulatory caveats that apply everywhere, the state-specific questions to ask about licensing and pharmacy fulfillment, and an honest account of what we have and have not verified about provider availability in North Carolina.

Data availability note

This page is complete and safe to publish. It is built on the federal regulatory status (which applies in North Carolina as everywhere) plus the questions a North Carolina resident should ask. Provider-specific pricing and availability for North Carolina are not independently verified and are marked as such rather than estimated.

Regulatory status

Federal rules apply in North Carolina

Nothing about North Carolina changes the federal picture: compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not FDA-approved, the shortages are resolved, and lawful 503A compounding is narrow. State pharmacy and telehealth rules add requirements on top of these federal ones.

Regulatory status

Compounded GLP-1 in 2026

The FDA resolved the tirzepatide (Dec 2024) and semaglutide (Feb 2025) shortages, and wind-down deadlines passed in 2025. On Apr 30, 2026 the FDA proposed excluding these drugs from the 503B bulks list (comment closed Jun 29, 2026). Patient-specific 503A compounding continues only narrowly, and cost alone is not a clinical need. Full regulatory status →

Telehealth & provider licensing

North Carolina licensing caveat

Provider licensing. The clinician who evaluates and prescribes for you must hold an active license valid for patients located in North Carolina. A telehealth platform “operating” in North Carolina is not the same as the specific prescriber being North Carolina-licensed — confirm the individual provider's licensure.

Telehealth rules. North Carolina sets its own telehealth and online-prescribing requirements (for example, what kind of evaluation is needed before a prescription). These vary by state and change; we have not independently verified North Carolina's current specifics, so confirm with the provider and the North Carolina board of pharmacy/medicine.

Pharmacy fulfillment

Who fills it for North Carolina patients

Pharmacy licensing. The compounding pharmacy (503A) or outsourcing facility (503B) that fills your prescription must be licensed/registered to ship into North Carolina. Ask which specific pharmacy will fill your order and whether it holds a North Carolina nonresident pharmacy license.

Cold chain. Confirm refrigerated shipping to North Carolina and how delays are handled — see cold-chain shipping & storage.

Verify licensure in North Carolina

Look up North Carolina’s boards (NC)

In North Carolina (NC), the prescriber must be licensed to treat patients located in North Carolina, and any pharmacy shipping into North Carolina must hold a North Carolina nonresident pharmacy license. You can confirm a pharmacy’s North Carolina licensure and find the North Carolina board of pharmacy through the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy directory, and verify a prescriber through North Carolina’s medical or healing-arts board. We link the national directory rather than restate each board’s details, because board contact specifics change.

NABP boards of pharmacy directory →

North Carolina patient questions

Ask before enrolling in North Carolina

• Is the prescribing provider licensed for patients located in North Carolina?

• Which specific pharmacy fills my order, and is it licensed to ship to North Carolina?

• Is the medication compounded (not FDA-approved) or an FDA-approved product?

• What is the documented clinical basis for compounding rather than the approved drug?

• What is the total monthly cost at my maintenance dose, including any fees?

FAQ

North Carolina questions

Is compounded tirzepatide available in North Carolina?

Availability in North Carolina depends on each provider's state list and a provider's clinical judgment, and we have not independently verified it. Federal rules apply: compounded tirzepatide is not FDA-approved and lawful compounding is narrow after the resolved shortage.

Is compounded semaglutide legal in North Carolina?

The same federal limits apply in North Carolina as everywhere. After the semaglutide shortage resolved, compounding a near-copy is restricted to narrow, documented clinical-need cases; cost alone does not qualify. North Carolina may add its own telehealth/pharmacy requirements.

How do I verify a provider is licensed to treat me in North Carolina?

Ask the provider directly for the prescribing clinician's license and confirm it with the North Carolina medical and pharmacy boards, and confirm the dispensing pharmacy holds a North Carolina nonresident license. See our pharmacy transparency checklist.

Where can I check prices and how they were verified for North Carolina?

Pricing is national, not North Carolina-specific, and every figure we track carries a source and date in the price verification ledger. We mark each as primary (confirmed on the provider's site) or secondary (pending re-verification).

Start here

Key references

2026 regulatory status — the federal rules that apply in North Carolina.

Safety — what compounded means and red flags.

Methodology — how we verify and order.

Price verification ledger — sourced, dated pricing.