Peptides.au summarises publicly available information about how peptides are regulated, supplied and discussed in Australia. It covers the rules (TGA, ARTG, AHPRA, the Therapeutic Goods Act, the Personal Importation Scheme), the regulatory language, and the categories peptide products sit in.
The encyclopedia describes peptides that are commonly discussed in the Australian market — what each one is, how it’s regulated, and what category it belongs to. The clinic checklist is a question framework for people evaluating peptide-related services.
The information landscape around peptides in Australia is fragmented and overwhelmingly commercial. Most pages that rank for peptide questions are either selling something, marketing a clinic, or written for an overseas regulatory context. A neutral, Australian-context starting point seemed useful.
Peptides.au is built and maintained independently from Melbourne. It takes no affiliate fees, paid placements or sponsored content, and has no paid commercial relationship with peptide clinics, compounding pharmacies, or product sellers.
We are building a free, vetted directory of Australian clinics that work with peptides lawfully and transparently — so people can find legitimate, registered care instead of online sellers. Listing is free and is never paid or promoted; clinics are reviewed and verified (including AHPRA registration) before publication. A listing is information, not a medical endorsement, recommendation or referral. Our full approach is set out in our editorial standards.
Pages are reviewed and updated when public regulatory guidance changes. Page-level last-updated dates are shown on each guide.
Pages on this site are summaries of public information. For the authoritative source, refer to the TGA and your own registered Australian health practitioner before acting on anything you read here.
Corrections, questions or feedback: hello@peptides.au.
This is general education, not medical advice. Peptides.au does not sell, supply, recommend or promote any product or clinic. Always speak with a registered Australian health practitioner before making any health decision.