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How to spot counterfeit AndroGel — for Spain

Counterfeit medication is a real and serious problem in unregulated supply chains. AndroGel (Testosterone), particularly when bought online from unverified sources, is among the most counterfeited prescription drugs in some markets. Knowing what genuine AndroGel looks like and where the red flags lie is part of self-protection at 1%, 1.62%.

Spain context

Counterfeit prescription medication is a real concern in unregulated channels in Spain, particularly for high-demand brands. Genuine AndroGel dispensed through licensed Spanish pharmacies under AEMPS (Agencia Española de Medicamentos y Productos Sanitarios) oversight carries vanishingly small counterfeit risk; suspect packaging, missing leaflets or implausibly low EUR pricing online are warning signs to verify before taking.

Regulator
AEMPS (Agencia Española de Medicamentos y Productos Sanitarios)
Currency
EUR

Visual and packaging checks

Genuine AndroGel arrives in original sealed packaging from AbbVie, with intact tamper-evident features, an in-box patient leaflet matching the local language, and tablets or capsules with consistent shape, colour and markings as described in the prescribing information. Inconsistent typography, missing or low-quality printing, broken seals or absent leaflet are all warning signs.

Supply chain red flags

The biggest single predictor of counterfeit risk is the supplier. Licensed local pharmacies and well-known regulated online channels carry vanishingly small counterfeit risk. Unverified online sellers, parallel-import websites with no contactable pharmacist, "no prescription needed" offers at suspicious prices, and shipping from countries unrelated to the buyer's jurisdiction are major red flags. According to the prescribing information, only legitimate channels guarantee that Testosterone matches the labelled dose at 1%, 1.62%.

Frequently asked questions

How can I tell if my AndroGel is real?

Compare packaging, tablet appearance, leaflet language and the supplier against expected references. Genuine AndroGel from a licensed pharmacy at 1%, 1.62% should match the prescribing-information description exactly. Discrepancies are the warning to stop and verify with the pharmacist before taking.

What do I do if I think my AndroGel is fake?

Stop taking the suspect product. Photograph the packaging and tablets. Contact the pharmacy where you obtained AndroGel; if the source was online and unverified, consider reporting to the local medicines regulator. Do not throw the suspect product away until verification is complete, as it may be needed as evidence.

How to spot counterfeit AndroGel in other countries

The information on this website is provided for reference and educational purposes only. It does not replace consultation with a qualified healthcare professional.