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Home Health Library Global Pharmacy Importing Prescription Medicine to the UK: Personal-Use Rules & Customs
Global Pharmacy Clinically reviewed 3 min read

Importing Prescription Medicine to the UK: Personal-Use Rules & Customs

What the UK actually allows when you import prescription medicine for personal use — supply limits, documents, controlled drugs, and customs.

AN
A. Prem Shree Nandan B.Pharm, M.Pharm
Updated Jul 8, 2026
Importing Prescription Medicine to the UK: Personal-Use Rules & Customs
For information only. This article does not replace medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional before starting, changing, or stopping any medication.

Many people in the UK look overseas to buy the generic version of a medicine at a lower price. Before you order, it helps to know exactly what UK rules say about bringing prescription medicine in for personal use — the position is more relaxed than many assume, with a few important exceptions.

For most prescription medicines, yes. UK guidance states there are no formal restrictions on an individual importing a medicine provided it is strictly for use by that person or an immediate family member. The MHRA does not issue any licence, certificate or authorisation for personal importation — you simply need the medicine to be genuinely for personal use.

How much can you import?

Up to a three-month supply is generally regarded as a reasonable personal quantity. HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) can prevent importation where large quantities suggest the medicine is not for personal use, so ordering modest, personal amounts is sensible.

What documents do you need?

For prescription-only medicines you should hold a valid prescription. Anyone posting a package containing medicine is advised to include a copy of the prescription and/or a letter from the patient’s doctor explaining why the product is required. This helps customs confirm the shipment is a genuine personal import.

Controlled drugs are different

Medicines containing controlled substances are the key exception. They generally cannot be posted from overseas, and importing them may require a personal import licence from the Home Office’s Drug Licensing Unit. If your medicine is a controlled drug, check the Home Office and MHRA rules before ordering.

Customs & what to expect

On arrival, medicines may be inspected by HMRC, and customs officers can seize products that do not comply with the rules. Staying within a personal supply, using prescription medicines prescribed to you, and enclosing your prescription all reduce the chance of a hold.

How OnlineMeds handles orders to the UK

However you order, our process is the same: a valid prescription is required and is reviewed by a licensed pharmacist before dispatch, we may ask for basic identity/address documentation, and we follow the local guidelines of your destination before any medicine is sent. Orders ship in discreet, tracked packaging. Full details are on our shipping & delivery page, and there is more general guidance in our guide to prescription regulations for global orders.

Because HMRC can inspect or hold shipments, keeping a copy of your prescription with the order and staying within personal-supply limits makes clearance smoother. Used as prescribed by a licensed medical professional.

Frequently asked questions

Is it legal to import prescription medicine to the UK for personal use?

There are no formal restrictions on an individual importing a medicine into the UK when it is strictly for use by that person or a member of their immediate family. The MHRA does not issue a licence or certificate for personal importation. Controlled drugs are the main exception and have stricter rules.

How much can I import?

Up to about a three-month supply is generally treated as an acceptable personal quantity. HM Revenue & Customs can stop importation if larger quantities suggest the medicine is not for personal use.

Do I need a prescription?

Yes for prescription-only medicines. It is advisable to include a copy of your prescription or a letter from your doctor with the package explaining why the medicine is required.

What about controlled drugs?

Medicines containing controlled substances have stricter rules — they generally cannot be posted from overseas and may require a personal import licence from the Home Office. Check before ordering.

This article is general information, not legal or medical advice. Personal-import rules and customs enforcement change and are applied case by case — always confirm the current rules with your national medicines regulator and customs authority before ordering, and use any medicine only as prescribed by a licensed medical professional.

AN
Written by
A. Prem Shree Nandan

A. Prem Shree Nandan is a licensed clinical pharmacist with 10 years of experience. He holds a B.Pharm and M.Pharm from Christian Medical College. At OnlineMeds, he reviews medicine and health content to help ensure it is accurate, evidence-based, and easy to understand.

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