Can You Buy Medicine Without a Prescription in Mexico?
The reputation that “you can buy anything over the counter in Mexico” is outdated. Here is the real picture of what you can and cannot buy without a prescription as a tourist, and how to get what you need safely.
What you can buy over the counter
Plenty: pain and fever relievers (paracetamol, ibuprofen), antihistamines, anti-diarrheals, antacids, oral rehydration salts, cold remedies, basic creams and many everyday medicines are freely available. For these, a Mexican pharmacy — or our delivery service — works just like at home, sometimes with even easier access than the US or Canada.
What now requires a prescription
The big change: antibiotics have required a prescription since 2010, and controlled substances (strong painkillers, certain anxiety, sleep and ADHD medications) are tightly restricted. Pharmacies enforce these rules. So no, you cannot reliably buy antibiotics or controlled drugs over the counter anymore, and you should not try to source them informally.
How to get prescription medicine
It is easy and quick: a bilingual doctor assesses you (in person or by video), prescribes if appropriate, and we deliver the medication to your hotel. The whole thing can happen the same day, often within a couple of hours.
A word of caution
Be wary of anyone offering to sell prescription drugs with no doctor involved, and of online sites shipping medication internationally — these are frequently illegal and sometimes counterfeit. The legitimate route — real doctor, real pharmacy — is safer and barely slower.
This article is general information for travelers, not medical advice. For prescriptions or if symptoms are serious, consult a doctor — ours are bilingual and available 24/7.
The grey areas worth understanding
Beyond the clear cases — common remedies over the counter, antibiotics and controlled drugs by prescription — there are some grey areas travelers ask about. Certain medications that require a prescription in the US or Canada are available more freely in Mexico, which is true, but “available” does not mean “advisable to self-prescribe.” Buying a blood-pressure, asthma or other ongoing medication without a doctor’s involvement risks the wrong drug, dose or interaction, even if the pharmacy will sell it. The smarter move for anything beyond a simple OTC remedy is a quick doctor check — inexpensive, fast, and it ensures the medication actually suits you. The other grey area is quantity and intent: pharmacies and customs look askance at large quantities or anything that looks like stocking up to take home. Buy for your genuine personal trip needs. And steer well clear of the real no-go zone — informal sellers and websites offering prescription drugs with no doctor, which is both unsafe and illegal. Used sensibly, the system is straightforward: easy access to everyday remedies, a doctor in the loop for anything more, and proper channels throughout.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you buy medicine without a prescription in Mexico?
Many everyday medicines (pain relief, antihistamines, anti-diarrheals, antacids, rehydration salts, cold remedies) are available over the counter. But antibiotics (since 2010) and controlled substances now require a prescription.
How do I get prescription medicine in Cabo?
A bilingual doctor assesses you in person or by video, prescribes if appropriate, and we deliver to your hotel — often the same day.
Is it safe to buy prescription drugs informally?
No. Avoid sellers offering prescription drugs with no doctor and online sites shipping internationally — these are often illegal and sometimes counterfeit. Use the legitimate doctor-plus-pharmacy route.
Need prescription medicine in Cabo?
A doctor prescribes, we deliver — often same day.