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There are categories of medication we structurally refuse to handle — no matter what personal-import frameworks technically allow in your country. This page lists what we won't ship and why, so you don't waste time asking and so you know this is a deliberate choice.
We do not route, sell, or facilitate any of the following — even within a 3-month personal-use window in countries where private import is otherwise tolerated:
Several countries have personal-importation carve-outs that would permit a 30 or 90-day supply of some of the above categories with the right paperwork — a Yakkan Shoumei in Japan, a medical practitioner's import approval in Australia, a notarized prescription in parts of the EU. We still will not do it.
Three reasons:
For full clarity on what fits inside our model:
If the molecule you need is not in our catalog and falls into one of the categories on the hard-no list above, we are not the right service. We would rather lose the order than route into a category we do not belong in.
We know this list reads as conservative. Some of these molecules are legitimately useful, prescribed in your home country, and you have been on them for years. We are not making a moral claim about the drugs themselves — we are making a structural choice about what our particular supply chain and our particular jurisdictional exposure can responsibly handle.
If the medicine you need is on the refused list, please consult a licensed pharmacy in your own country, ideally one that operates under direct supervision from your treating clinician. That is the right path. We cannot do it better than they can, and honestly we should not try.
Questions about this policy? Reach us through the inquiry form.
LiberaCure Editorial Team· Last updated April 23, 2026
Medical disclaimer: LiberaCure is a routing front-end for licensed Indian generic pharmacies. We are not pharmacists, doctors, or licensed dispensers. Information on this page is educational only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, changing, or stopping any medication.