Skip to main content

HomeLegalBPC-157 in Texas

Educational — Not Legal AdviceUpdated

BPC-157 in Texas: Legal Status & Provider Guide (2026)

Quick Answer

BPC-157 is a prescription substance in the United States. BPC-157 has no FDA-approved drug application. It is classified as a research peptide and cannot be compounded by 503A/503B pharmacies under current federal guidance. Clinical use in the U.S. occurs in a legal gray area — consult a healthcare attorney and licensed prescriber for current federal standing. In Texas, compounding is governed by the Texas State Board of Pharmacy (TSBP). In Texas, physician assistants and nurse practitioners with prescriptive authority can prescribe compounded medications including peptides. Prescribers must hold an active Texas license. Telemedicine prescribing of controlled substances and certain compounded medications is permitted under Texas Medical Board rules with specific conditions.

Federal Legal Status

FDA Approval Status

Not FDA-approved as a drug. Not on any FDA bulk substances list for compounding.

Compounding Pharmacy Rules (Federal)

BPC-157 is not on the FDA 503A or 503B bulk substances lists, meaning licensed compounding pharmacies cannot legally compound it for individual patients under federal law. Its status as a bulk substance for compounding has been contested and remains legally uncertain. Some providers offer it under state-level regulatory frameworks, but federal compliance risk is elevated.

Also Known As

Body Protection Compound 157 · PL 14736

Primary Research Areas

  • Tissue repair
  • Gut health
  • Tendon and ligament healing
  • Angiogenesis

Texas Pharmacy Board & Compounding Rules

Compounding Overview

Texas is home to one of the largest compounding pharmacy industries in the country, with detailed rules set by the Texas State Board of Pharmacy (TSBP). Texas 503A pharmacies may compound non-FDA-approved peptides under certain conditions, though federal FDA guidance takes precedence for pharmacies participating in the national regulatory framework. Texas-specific rules address sterile compounding standards, USP 797 compliance, and registration requirements for non-resident pharmacies shipping into the state.

Notable Rules

  • Texas TSBP requires sterile compounding facilities to comply with USP 797 standards.
  • Non-resident (out-of-state) pharmacies shipping compounded products into Texas must be registered with the TSBP.
  • Texas prohibits the sale of prescription-only compounded products without a valid prescription.
  • The Texas Medical Board regulates prescribing standards for telemedicine encounters including peptide programs.

Prescribing Requirements in Texas

In Texas, physician assistants and nurse practitioners with prescriptive authority can prescribe compounded medications including peptides. Prescribers must hold an active Texas license. Telemedicine prescribing of controlled substances and certain compounded medications is permitted under Texas Medical Board rules with specific conditions.

About BPC-157

BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound 157) is a synthetic pentadecapeptide derived from a protein found in gastric juice. It has been studied in animal models for tissue repair, gut protection, and angiogenesis. No completed Phase III human trials exist as of 2026.

For more research information, mechanism of action, and provider availability, see the BPC-157 research profile on PeptideBase.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is BPC-157 legal in the United States?
BPC-157 exists in a legal gray area. It is not FDA-approved and is not on the 503A/503B bulk compounding lists. Research-use possession is generally not a federal crime, but commercial sale and compounding for human use carry significant legal risk.
Can a doctor prescribe BPC-157?
A licensed prescriber may write an order for BPC-157, but compounding pharmacies subject to FDA oversight cannot legally compound it. Some providers operate under state regulations or as research programs. Patients should consult both a physician and legal counsel.

BPC-157 Providers in Texas

No providers currently listed in Texas for BPC-157. Browse the full directory to find providers offering BPC-157.

Browse all BPC-157 providers →

BPC-157 Legal Status in Other States

Pharmacy board rules and compounding regulations vary by state. Compare BPC-157 legal status across other major markets:

PeptideBase provides educational research tools and provider discovery. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, prescribing guidance, or dosing instructions. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before making health decisions.

Content review: This educational overview is prepared by the PeptideBase editorial team and reviewed for factual accuracy. Reviewer byline coming soon (gated on 4.4). Last updated: .

Free newsletter

The Peptide Research Digest

Weekly analysis on providers, sourcing and compounds — from the team behind PeptideBase.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy policy.

Free Guide

The Peptide Research Digest

Get our free provider vetting guide — plus weekly research briefings on peptide sourcing, COA verification, and clinical developments.

No spam.