Buying prescription medicine online in the EU is safe when using services that are registered with national authorities, display the EU Common Logo, require a valid prescription from an EU-registered doctor, and source medicines from licensed EU manufacturers — but the same internet that offers convenience also hosts thousands of illegal sites selling falsified, substandard, or unregulated products.
What does EU law say about buying medicine online?
EU Directive 2011/62/EU — the Falsified Medicines Directive — created a harmonised legal framework specifically to address the risks of online medicine sales. It established:
- Mandatory registration: All pharmacies selling medicines online within the EU must register with their national competent authority (the medicines regulator in their country)
- The EU Common Logo: A mandatory visual identifier that consumers can verify against a national registry
- Serialisation and traceability: Each pack of prescription medicine must carry a unique identifier and anti-tamper device, verifiable against the European Medicines Verification System (EMVS)
- Supply chain controls: Licensed manufacturers, wholesale distributors, and pharmacies must form a verified chain from production to patient
The European Medicines Agency (EMA) coordinates regulatory activities across member states, while national authorities — including BfArM (Germany), ANSM (France), AIFA (Italy), AEMPS (Spain), and equivalents in all EU member states — enforce compliance at the national level.
What is the EU Common Logo?
The EU Common Logo is one of the most important consumer protection tools in European online pharmacy regulation. It is:
- A white cross on a green background, overlaid with the national flag of the country where the pharmacy is registered
- Clickable — tapping or clicking the logo must redirect you to the official national registry entry for that pharmacy, confirming its registration status
- Mandatory for any pharmacy legally selling medicines online within the EU
If a site does not display the EU Common Logo, or if clicking the logo does not redirect to a verified national registry, do not purchase from that site. This is a fundamental compliance requirement, not a recommendation.
You can also independently verify online pharmacies using the official EU registry at the European Commission’s website, which aggregates national pharmacy registers.
How serious is the threat from illegitimate online pharmacies?
The scale of the problem is substantial. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that more than 50% of medicines sold by websites that conceal their physical address are falsified or substandard. Europol and national law enforcement agencies regularly conduct operations — such as Operation Pangea — that result in the seizure of millions of counterfeit medicine doses annually.
The European Commission’s own analysis found that 62% of medicines purchased from illegal online sources are either counterfeit or substandard. Common problems include:
- Wrong active ingredient — the medicine contains a completely different substance
- Incorrect dosage — the active ingredient is present but at the wrong concentration
- Contamination — manufacturing without quality controls introduces harmful impurities
- No active ingredient — the product is entirely inert
- Expired medicine — relabelled with false expiry dates
Crucially, counterfeit medicines can look identical to genuine products. Sophisticated criminal operations invest in packaging that replicates branded products precisely. Visible inspection alone cannot identify a falsified medicine.
What do red flags for illegitimate sites look like?
Learning to identify illegitimate online pharmacies is a critical safety skill. The following characteristics strongly indicate an unregulated or illegal operation:
Red flags — leave the site immediately if you see these:
- No EU Common Logo, or a Common Logo that does not link to a verifiable national registry
- Prescription medicines available without requiring a medical assessment or existing prescription
- Prices dramatically below standard EU pharmacy prices (genuine medicines have regulated pricing)
- No physical address, or a physical address that cannot be verified
- Unsolicited emails advertising medicines or “special offers” on prescription products
- Payment requested by bank transfer, cryptocurrency, or wire transfer
- No clear returns or complaints policy
- Contact only via anonymous email addresses — no phone number, no live support
- Claims of “miracle” results or guaranteed outcomes for medical conditions
- No information about where medicines are manufactured or sourced
Signs of legitimacy — look for these:
- Verified EU Common Logo linking to national registry
- Requires a valid prescription or offers a consultation with a named, registered EU doctor
- Transparent pricing: consultation fee, medicine cost, and delivery listed separately
- GDPR-compliant privacy policy
- Registered business address verifiable via company registry
- Secure payment processing (HTTPS throughout, established payment providers)
- Named doctors with verifiable registration numbers
- Clear information about the pharmacy partner and its registration
What does a legitimate online prescription service look like?
Legitimate services operating in the EU typically follow one of two models:
Model 1: Licensed online pharmacy accepting existing prescriptions. These are registered EU pharmacies with an online ordering system. Patients upload or transfer an existing prescription issued by their own GP, and the pharmacy dispenses and delivers the medicine.
Model 2: Intermediary platforms connecting patients with doctors and pharmacies. These services — such as platforms like Prescrivia — do not themselves sell medicine or employ doctors. Instead, they connect patients with independent EU-registered doctors for a medical assessment, and if the doctor determines treatment is clinically appropriate, a prescription is issued. The prescription is then sent to a licensed pharmacy partner for dispensing and delivery.
Both models are legitimate when operated within the regulatory framework. The key distinction is that no legitimate service guarantees a prescription before a clinical assessment has been completed.
Safety checklist: 10 steps before you buy
Before purchasing prescription medicine from any online service, complete this checklist:
- Verify the EU Common Logo — click it and confirm the national registry entry
- Confirm the pharmacy’s physical address — verify it against official company registries
- Check that a prescription is required — for all prescription-only medicines
- Identify the reviewing doctor — name and registration number should be disclosed
- Confirm GDPR compliance — a privacy policy explaining data handling must be present
- Review itemised pricing — consultation, medicine, and delivery should be listed separately
- Check secure payment — HTTPS throughout the site; established payment processors only
- Look for a customer support channel — not just an email address with no response commitment
- Research the service — look for registered business information and patient reviews on independent platforms
- Confirm medicine packaging standards — genuine EU medicines arrive in original sealed packaging with labelling in the language of the destination country
Prescription medicines vs. over-the-counter medicines online
The safety considerations differ between prescription-only medicines (POMs) and over-the-counter (OTC) medicines sold online:
| Factor | Prescription-only medicines (POMs) | Over-the-counter medicines (OTC) |
|---|---|---|
| Prescription required | Yes — legally mandatory | No |
| Doctor assessment needed | Yes — before dispensing | No |
| EU Common Logo | Required from any dispensing pharmacy | Required from any dispensing pharmacy |
| Regulatory oversight | High — national medicines authority + EMA | Medium — national authority |
| Risk if falsified | High — dosing errors can be severe | Moderate — some products carry risk |
| Price regulation | Tightly regulated in many EU countries | Variable |
| Available without assessment online | No — if offered, it is illegal | Yes — from registered sources |
Even for OTC medicines, the EU Common Logo requirement applies. Unregistered sites selling OTC products still carry contamination and falsification risks.
What happens if you receive a falsified medicine?
If you have purchased medicine from an unverified source and suspect it may be falsified or substandard:
- Stop taking it immediately
- Preserve the packaging — do not discard the box, leaflet, or any remaining product
- Seek medical advice — contact your GP or, if you feel unwell, emergency services
- Report it to your national medicines authority — in Germany: BfArM; in France: ANSM; in Italy: AIFA; in Spain: AEMPS; in the Netherlands: MEB/CBG
- Report to national law enforcement — Europol’s Operation Pangea partners include national police forces
- Report to the European Commission if cross-border fraud is suspected
You can also report suspected illegal online pharmacies via the EU’s Fake Medicines website, which aggregates national reporting systems.
Why EU-registered intermediary services offer stronger protections
When using intermediary platforms that connect patients with independent EU-registered doctors:
- The doctor is bound by the professional standards of their national medical council
- Clinical decisions cannot be overridden by the platform
- The pharmacy partner is a separately registered, licensed EU pharmacy
- The platform itself must comply with GDPR and national e-commerce regulations
- The prescription chain is documented and auditable
This structure means that multiple regulated parties are involved in every transaction — providing layers of protection that a direct purchase from an unverified website cannot offer.
Sources and further reading
- World Health Organization — Substandard and falsified medical products
- European Commission — EU Common Logo for online pharmacies
- EU Directive 2011/62/EU — Falsified Medicines Directive
- European Medicines Agency — Buying medicines online: risks and how to protect yourself
- Europol — Operation Pangea — targeting online pharmaceutical crime
- European Medicines Verification Organisation — EMVS medicines verification
How can we help you?
- Is it safe to buy prescription medicine online in the EU?
- Yes — provided you use a service that is registered with national authorities, displays the EU Common Logo, requires a valid prescription, and is compliant with EU pharmaceutical regulations. Unverified or unregistered services carry significant safety risks.
- What is the EU Common Logo and how do I check it?
- The EU Common Logo is a mandatory symbol — a white cross on a green background with the EU flag — that all legally operating online pharmacies in the EU must display. Clicking the logo should redirect you to the national registry of your country, confirming the pharmacy is registered. Never buy from a site that does not display a verifiable Common Logo.
- What are the biggest risks of buying medicine from unregulated sites?
- The WHO estimates that over 50% of medicines sold by websites concealing their physical address are falsified or substandard. Risks include receiving counterfeit medicines with incorrect active ingredients, contaminated products, underdosed or overdosed formulations, and medicines with no expiry date labelling.
- Do I need a prescription to buy medicine online in the EU?
- Yes. For any prescription-only medicine (POM), a valid prescription from a registered EU doctor is legally required. Sites offering prescription medicines without a consultation or prescription are operating illegally and should be avoided.
- How do I know if an online doctor service is legitimate?
- A legitimate service will disclose the doctors' names and registration numbers, never guarantee a prescription before assessment, charge separately for consultation and medicine, and be registered with a national authority. The reviewing doctor should be a licensed EU-registered professional.
- Can counterfeit medicines look identical to genuine ones?
- Yes. Sophisticated counterfeiting operations produce packaging that is virtually indistinguishable from genuine products. The only reliable protection is purchasing through verified, registered channels that source directly from licensed EU manufacturers and wholesalers.
- What should I do if I receive medicine I suspect is counterfeit?
- Stop taking it immediately. Contact the service you used, report the concern to your national medicines authority (e.g., BfArM in Germany, ANSM in France, MHRA in the UK), and seek medical advice if you have taken any of the medicine.
- Are EU regulations the same as UK regulations post-Brexit?
- No. Since Brexit, the UK has its own regulatory framework under the MHRA rather than the EU's EMA. The EU Common Logo does not apply to UK pharmacies, which have their own registration system. If ordering from the UK to an EU country or vice versa, additional customs and regulatory considerations apply.