Retatrutide headlines are loud. The vial still needs COA and HPLC.
Trial headlines create demand. They do not prove the vial in front of you is worth trusting.
Direct answer
PeptideLab lists research-grade Retatrutide with 10mg and 20mg options, current pricing from $149, batch B-RET-0301-A, 99.47% HPLC, PayPal, and Australian dispatch shown before checkout. Retatrutide is not an approved Australian medicine today.
First, separate the medicine from the vial
The public Lilly data explains why everyone is searching. It does not verify any Australian seller.
The local decision is still simple: does the product page show strength, batch, purity, PayPal, dispatch, and support before payment?
10mg vs 20mg should be obvious
COA and HPLC should be visible before checkout
The page should not pretend this is a TGA-approved medicine
What a cheap seller hides
A cheap retatrutide page can still be expensive if the seller hides the batch, only takes irreversible payment, or gives you a certificate that is not tied to the vial.
Check the boring facts first. Price only matters after the seller proves what they are selling.
Batch ID visible
HPLC tied to that batch
PayPal or another protected payment option
Straight answers
Is retatrutide approved in Australia?
No. As of 23 May 2026, there is no approved Australian retatrutide medicine.
What is the first check?
Start with strength, batch ID, HPLC purity, COA access, payment method, and dispatch origin.
What has to be visible before I pay?
Price, batch ID, COA, HPLC result, payment method, dispatch origin, and support. If those are hidden, slow down.
Is Peptide Doctor medical advice?
No. Peptide Doctor is not a clinic, pharmacy, prescriber, or treatment service. Medical questions belong with a qualified practitioner.
Why does PayPal matter?
Crypto and blind bank transfers protect the seller. PayPal gives you a dispute trail if the order or support goes wrong.
Why does the batch number matter?
A COA or HPLC number only helps if it belongs to the exact batch being sold. Generic certificates are easy to recycle.
Research peptides are not approved by the TGA for human use. Product links are for checking what is visible before payment, not medical advice.