Is Methylene Blue Legal in the UK? What Buyers Should Know
Table of Contents
Methylene blue (methylthioninium chloride) is registered as a medicine in the UK. The UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) licenses it for treating drug-induced methemoglobinemia in adults [1]. This product (ProvayBlue) is a prescription-only medicine (POM) and is supplied by hospital pharmacies. Any use outside of this medical indication is unlicensed. The UK Food Standards Agency does not allow methylene blue in food or supplements – it is not on the list of approved food additives or novel foods. In fact, UK advertising regulations treat methylene blue marketed as a “supplement” as an unlicensed medicinal product [2].
Prescription Use and MHRA Licensing
Authorised Use: In the UK, methylene blue is only authorised for one medical use: rescuing patients from methemoglobinemia [1]. All other uses (e.g., cognitive enhancement, anti-ageing, vasoplegia, etc.) are off-label and require a doctor’s judgement. No oral or over-the-counter preparation is licensed for human use.
Prescription Requirement
As a licensed drug, methylene blue is strictly prescription-only. You cannot legally buy it from a pharmacy without a prescription from a UK doctor. Any packaged product claiming to contain methylene blue for human consumption is effectively unlicensed. The MHRA warns that products labelled as supplements but making medical claims must hold an MHRA licence – which most do not [2].
Supplements and Food Regulations
Not Approved in Foods/Supplements
UK food law excludes methylene blue from all permitted ingredients in foods or food supplements. Under UK (and EU) regulations, MB is considered a novel/unapproved food additive, so it cannot legally be sold for consumption. The Advertising Standards Authority confirmed that any dietary product containing methylene blue should be treated as an unauthorised medicine when medicinal claims are made [2].
Marketing Claims
Any website or seller advertising methylene blue capsules, tablets, or powders with health or therapeutic claims is violating UK law. In a recent ASA ruling, a company marketing “methylene blue” as a supplement with claims for mood, memory or ADHD relief was found to be promoting an unlicensed medicine [2]. In short, MB cannot be legally marketed with health claims unless it is the licensed medicine.
Veterinary and Aquarium Use
Fish and Pets
Methylene blue is still legal to buy in the UK for non-human uses. Aquarium supply stores and veterinary outlets sell MB products for fish tanks and other animal applications. These are often labelled “not for human consumption” [3]. Such products are legal to sell and buy but are strictly for aquatic animal care or scientific uses, not human ingestion.
Veterinary Medicines
There are also some licensed veterinary preparations (e.g., Urogesic Blue for interstitial cystitis in humans and animals), but bulk MB for pets or labs is sold as a veterinary/chemical product. Consumers often find “liquid methylene blue 2.5%” at koi or aquarium shops. These are unregulated for human dose accuracy and may contain additives or impurities.
Consumer Advice and Legal Risks
Buying Online
If you see methylene blue marketed as a supplement or wellness products (e.g., on Amazon or overseas sites), be very cautious. Such products fall outside UK regulations. Importing MB for personal use can breach UK medicines and food laws. Customs or MHRA could confiscate unlicensed shipments.
Labelling Clues
Legally sold MB (for fish) will have warnings like “Not for human consumption” [3]. If a product is labelled only for aquariums, do not take it internally. Conversely, a genuine medical product will only be dispensed by a pharmacy on prescription.
Safety and Quality
Even if a seller claims their MB is “USP grade” or “food safe”, remember it is not approved for human use in the UK. Unregulated products may have incorrect dosing, contaminants, or misleading labels. Only use methylene blue that is prescribed and dispensed by a qualified healthcare professional.
Final Words
Methylene blue is not banned outright in the UK – it is available legally as a licensed drug for specific medical use [1]. But for any other use (health supplement or DIY nootropic), it is essentially illegal. Sellers treating it as a food supplement have no UK licence [2]. Buyers should assume that any MB for human consumption is unapproved and potentially illegal, even if available online.



