Online Pharmacies May Be Allowing Minors to Get Transgender Hormones "With Alarming Ease"
How is this even possible?

This article originally appeared on the Daily Caller News Foundation and was republished with permission.
Guest post by Ireland Owens
Some online pharmacies seemingly do not require prescriptions or information about patient age for individuals seeking transgender hormones, according to a Do No Harm (DNH) report released Tuesday.
The new report, first obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation, also highlights a spate of resources DNH found which promote online pharmacies and other distribution networks for âhomebrewedâ transgender hormones, as well as guides on how to self-administer such hormones. Kurt Miceli, chief medical officer at DNH, told the DCNF in a statement that the report âreveals how online pharmacies may enable minors to obtain cross-sex hormones with alarming ease.â
âFrom websites listing online vendors across the globe to marketplaces for âhomebrewedâ hormones, we found a multitude of troubling pathways that appear to bypass basic safeguards and regulatory oversight,â Miceli said. âGender-confused kids should not be able to purchase potent, experimental medications with just a few simple clicks. These hormones carry significant risks, including effects that can be irreversible.â
âWe urge the [U.S. Food and Drug Administration] and other federal agencies to investigate any potential unlawful sellers and, where appropriate, for states to do the same when their laws are being violated,â Miceli continued. âProtecting minors from unsafe and unregulated access to powerful cross-sex hormones must remain a priority.â
Transgender Map, a website which aims to teach people âhow to make a gender transition,â lists several online pharmacies based in multiple continents from which minors can procure cross-sex hormones, adding that âgetting hormones without a prescription is against the law,â according to DNHâs report. Transgender Map also notes that online pharmacies âmay move or go out of business without warningâ and that âthings can change quickly,â per DNH.
Transgender Map claims on a guide titled âhow to get hormones as a transgender minorâ that âfor young people who are sure they want to make a gender change, getting on hormone blockers and maybe hormones can help a lot, adding âyou need to be sure, though.â The website also claims that âyou need to know the other risks and side effects that can happen before starting.â
âIf you wish to take that risk, go here,â Transgender Map tells users, before linking to a guide about how to order hormones online. Transgender Map was created by Andrea James, a transgender filmmaker and consumer activist who launched the website during their own gender transition.
James did not respond to the DCNFâs request for comment.
Moreover, another website, called DIYHRT.market, lists several pharmacies and so-called âhomebrewersâ where one may be able to bypass any age restrictions or prescription requirement in order to acquire transgender hormones like estradiol, a female sex hormone which can be used in male-to-female transitions, according to the report. The website also claims that âhormone replacement therapy (HRT)â for transgender people is âunquestionably beneficialâ and that âthere is clear statistical evidence that there are overwhelmingly positive outcomes on mental health and an overall improvement in quality of life.â
DIYHRT.market states it is âimportant to understand the risksâ of using âhomebrewâ transgender drugs, because âthere is a non-zero possibility of contamination or problems with the manufacturing process because these folks simply do not have the same resources that a multi-million dollar pharmaceutical company has.â
DIYHRT.market could not be reached for comment.
Some other websites, including HRT.Coffee and HRT Cafe, provides various information on pharmacies and other hormone vendors and also highlight a list of âunregulatedâ online pharmacies from which users can purchase hormones online, with language stating that these pharmacies do not require prescriptions, according to DNHâs report.
HRT.Coffee notes on its website that such suppliers âhave been tested and verified by multiple people, but some suppliers are more reliable than others so consult with your communities if you are unsure who to pick or want to [minimize] risk.â
HRT.Coffee could not be reached for comment.
âI have no comment on your questions at this time however I want to clarify hrtcafe has never sold, nor taken money for hrt, nor shipped hrt to anyone, nor provided medical treatment in any way,â HRT Cafe told the DCNF in an emailed statement. âIt is just a list of places already viewable on google. The sites we link to are entirely separate entities that we benifit from in no way. The site is not monetized nor takes donation.â
Meanwhile, MedsMex, an online pharmacy based in Mexico which ships to the U.S., includes in its FAQ page the following language: âNo prescription to purchase any medicines in our pharmacy. By ordering from Medsmex you are agreeing that you are only purchasing medicine for your own personal use,â according to DNHâs research. The report also found that Inhouse Pharmacy, an online pharmacy based in the South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, says that it is âpermittedâ to process orders without prescriptions.
MedsMex and Inhouse Pharmacy each did not respond to the DCNFâs request for comment.
However, DNH notes in its report that while âmany of these pharmacies do not appear to require a prescription or verification of a customerâs age at any point before prompting the customer to submit payment information,â the organization was unable to âconfirm that all of the listed pharmacies lack prescription or age verification requirements.â
âIt may be possible that at some point following the entry of payment information, age and prescription information is required,â according to DNHâs report. âIndeed, several pharmacies included on the lists found on these transgender resource sites state that customers should mail or fax over their prescriptions after purchasing the drugs.â
President Donald Trump issued an executive order in January 2025 which aims to protect children from âchemical and surgical mutilation. From 2019 and 2023, 13,994 minors underwent sex change treatments in the U.S., per the Stop The Harm Database.
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