
If you've been following the peptide space, you already know the last few years have been frustrating.
In 2023, the FDA moved 19 widely used peptides to its Category 2 restricted list. That decision effectively prevented licensed compounding pharmacies from preparing them — even for patients who had been stable on therapy for years.
The result was predictable. Patients didn't stop wanting these therapies. They just had fewer safe ways to access them.
That's starting to change.
On February 27, 2026, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that approximately 14 of those 19 restricted peptides are expected to move back to Category 1 status. Category 1 is the designation that allows licensed compounding pharmacies to legally prepare a compound when prescribed by a physician.
The announcement was direct: the original Category 2 classifications lacked the required safety signal to justify restricting most of the affected peptides. Kennedy also acknowledged that the 2023 restrictions had an unintended consequence — they pushed patients toward gray-market and unregulated sources, which carry far greater actual risk than licensed pharmacy access.
As of this writing, the FDA has not yet published its formal updated list. The regulatory change is expected within weeks.
This is worth slowing down on — because there's been some confusion in the coverage.
Moving from Category 2 to Category 1 does not mean these peptides are FDA-approved drugs. FDA approval is a separate, lengthy process involving large-scale clinical trials. That process hasn't happened for most of these compounds, and reclassification doesn't change that.
What reclassification does mean is that licensed compounding pharmacies will once again be able to legally prepare these peptides — with a physician's prescription. That's a meaningful distinction from the gray market, where products have no quality control, no pharmaceutical oversight, and no guarantee of what's actually in the vial.
Provider-guided access through a licensed pharmacy is a fundamentally different experience than ordering from an unregulated online source. That gap matters for your safety.
While the official list is pending, regulatory experts and industry analysts have identified the compounds most likely to return to Category 1 based on the strength of existing safety data. They include:
We're covering each of these in depth across this blog series. But the short version: these are compounds that practitioners have used for years, with reasonably strong preclinical data and growing clinical interest.
To be direct: none of these peptides are currently legally available through licensed compounding pharmacies in the United States. The Category 2 restrictions remain in effect until the FDA formally publishes its updated list. The announcement signals the direction clearly, but that regulatory step hasn't happened yet.
Any provider or website offering these compounds today is operating outside current legal compounding guidelines. Any product sold as "research use only" online carries no pharmaceutical oversight and significant quality risk. The legal pathway doesn't exist yet — but it's expected to, and likely soon.
The right move now is to connect with a licensed provider who understands this space and will be positioned to guide you when options expand.
Belle currently offers provider-guided programs for weight management, metabolic health, and longevity that are available today. As the regulatory landscape evolves, we'll be expanding our offerings.
Explore Belle's currently available programs.
Belle offers provider-guided compounded medication programs. Peptide compounds are not FDA-approved drugs. Access requires a licensed provider's prescription. Always work with a qualified medical professional before beginning any new therapy.