Is Enclomiphene Legal in Canada? | Elite Bio Supply

Quick answer: Yes. Enclomiphene is not a controlled substance in Canada. It is not scheduled under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) and is available as a research compound from domestic suppliers including Elite Bio Supply.

Is Enclomiphene Legal in Canada?

Enclomiphene is legal to purchase and possess in Canada as a research compound. It is not listed under Schedule I through VIII of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, which governs substances with high abuse potential or recognized medical risk in the Canadian context. This means there is no federal prohibition on acquiring enclomiphene for personal research purposes.

Unlike opioids, benzodiazepines, and anabolic steroids, enclomiphene does not appear on any Canadian controlled substance schedule. It occupies a regulatory grey area similar to other research-grade selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs): not approved as a pharmaceutical drug in Canada, but not prohibited either. This status makes it accessible from research compound suppliers operating within Canada, without requiring a prescription or attracting customs scrutiny for domestic purchases.

It is important to understand what “legal” means in this context. It means you will not face criminal or civil penalty for purchasing, possessing, or importing enclomiphene for personal research use. It does not mean enclomiphene is approved as a therapeutic drug by Health Canada. Those are two separate questions, and the answer to each is different.

Why Enclomiphene Was Not FDA Approved: What It Means for Canadian Buyers

Enclomiphene was developed under the brand name Androxal by Repros Therapeutics. It completed Phase III clinical trials, and those trials produced strong efficacy data. Wiehle and colleagues (2014) reported that 77 percent of men with secondary hypogonadism achieved testosterone normalization on 25 mg per day, a result comparable to topical testosterone replacement therapy. Despite this, enclomiphene never received FDA approval.

The FDA’s decision not to approve Androxal was not based on safety concerns or evidence of harm. The agency required additional cardiovascular outcomes data, a standard it applies to any drug intended for chronic use in hormone management. Repros Therapeutics did not conduct those additional studies, partly due to the financial cost and partly because the company ultimately changed strategic direction. The drug was not pulled from trials due to adverse events. It was simply never submitted with the full data package the FDA required for chronic male hormone indications.

This distinction matters for Canadian buyers. “Not FDA approved” means the full regulatory submission was not completed in the United States. It does not mean the compound is dangerous, unproven, or illegal. In Canada, FDA decisions have no direct legal standing. Health Canada makes its own determinations, and enclomiphene has not been classified as a restricted or prohibited substance by Health Canada.

For comparison, many compounds used in Canadian research contexts are not FDA approved and are not Health Canada approved drugs either. The absence of drug approval status does not create a legal barrier to purchase or possession as a research compound.

How Enclomiphene Compares to Clomid in Canadian Law

Clomiphene citrate (Clomid) and enclomiphene share the same legal standing in Canada. Neither is a controlled substance. Both are prescription medications when dispensed through a pharmacy as an approved drug product, but neither is scheduled under the CDSA. The key distinction is that Clomid (racemic clomiphene) is approved by Health Canada for specific indications, primarily ovulation induction in women, while enclomiphene has no approved indication in Canada.

For research purposes, this difference is largely irrelevant. Both compounds can be obtained from research suppliers without a prescription, and neither is subject to import restrictions based on controlled substance scheduling. If you are purchasing for personal research rather than as a pharmaceutical product for clinical use, the two compounds are equivalent from a legal standpoint.

This contrasts with the EU regulatory environment, where clomiphene is a prescription-only medicine in most member states and enclomiphene, lacking any approval, would typically require a special import authorization. Canada’s more permissive research compound environment makes both accessible without that complexity.

Dosage Note

Elite Bio Supply’s enclomiphene is supplied as 50 mg tablets in 5-count packs. Research protocols typically use 12.5 to 25 mg per day, meaning tablets are commonly halved. A 5-tablet pack provides 10 to 20 days of supply at standard research doses. This should be factored into quantity decisions when ordering for extended research protocols.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I be stopped at customs if I order enclomiphene from overseas?

When purchasing domestically from a Canadian supplier, customs is not a factor. Domestic Canada Post shipments stay within Canadian borders and are not subject to customs review. For international purchases, the risk depends on the origin country and Canadian border services priorities. Enclomiphene is not on any CBSA watch list for controlled substances, but all import purchases carry some customs uncertainty. Purchasing from a Canadian domestic supplier eliminates this variable entirely.

Does Health Canada treat enclomiphene differently than other research SERMs?

Health Canada has not issued any specific guidance or classification order targeting enclomiphene. It is treated similarly to other research-grade SERMs that lack Canadian drug identification numbers (DINs). This means it is not an approved drug product but is also not a prohibited substance. The regulatory category it occupies is essentially “unapproved research compound,” which is the same category as many other novel research molecules used by Canadian researchers.

Is enclomiphene the same as clomid legally?

From a controlled substance perspective, yes. Neither enclomiphene nor racemic clomiphene (Clomid) appears on any Canadian controlled substance schedule. Both are research compounds in Canada’s current regulatory framework. The practical difference is that Clomid is also available as an approved pharmaceutical through prescription channels for certain indications, while enclomiphene is available only through research compound suppliers.

Sourcing Enclomiphene in Canada

Elite Bio Supply ships enclomiphene domestically across Canada via Canada Post. Our enclomiphene citrate is pharmaceutical grade, third-party tested for purity and identity, and accurately labeled. Each 50 mg tablet is verified against a certificate of analysis (COA). We accept cryptocurrency payment and ship discreetly. Domestic shipping means no customs exposure and typically 3 to 7 business day delivery anywhere in Canada.

Related Guides

Ready to order enclomiphene for your research? View our enclomiphene listing for current pricing, COA documentation, and shipping details.

Elite Bio Supply sells research compounds for research purposes only. This content does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified physician before use.

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