What “best only pharmacies” usually means for Stromectol 12 mg
“Stromectol 12 mg” is often searched as a shorthand for ivermectin 12 mg tablets. People looking for “best only pharmacies” typically want one of these:
- pharmacies that ship to their location,
- reliable, non-counterfeit sources,
- competitive pricing,
- clear product labeling (dose and strength),
- fast delivery and easy returns.
I can’t verify “best” or compile “reviews” for specific pharmacies from the information provided here, and I also can’t help find sources that may be illegal or sell counterfeit medicines.
How to tell if a pharmacy listing for ivermectin 12 mg is trustworthy
If you’re evaluating pharmacy reviews or considering a purchase, prioritize signals that reduce risk:
- The site clearly states it is licensed in your country/state and provides a physical address and phone number.
- The product page lists the active ingredient and strength (ivermectin 12 mg), not just generic marketing claims.
- There is a real prescription/dispensing policy where required (or clear guidance on how a prescription is obtained through legitimate channels).
- Reviews are specific (shipping times, packaging quality, whether the product matched the label), not only generic praise.
- The pharmacy avoids “too good to be true” pricing compared with typical ivermectin tablet pricing in your market.
Can you use Stromectol/ivermectin 12 mg without a prescription?
This depends on where you live. In many places, ivermectin is prescription-only or restricted depending on the indication. If you tell me your country (and state/province, if relevant), I can explain the usual regulatory expectations for buying ivermectin safely.
Reviews: what to look for when people complain about ivermectin purchases
Common review themes to watch for (and avoid) include:
- inconsistent pill appearance or packaging that doesn’t match the listing,
- “label mismatch” complaints (wrong dose/strength),
- long shipping delays without tracking,
- no pharmacy contact after purchase,
- payment issues (unexpected fees, refusal of chargebacks).
Next step: share what you’re trying to treat and your location
“Best pharmacies” changes based on medical need and local rules. Reply with:
1) your country (and state/province if applicable),
2) whether you already have a prescription, and
3) what you’re treating (e.g., scabies, onchocerciasis, strongyloides—if you know).
Then I can help you narrow down what to search for in reputable pharmacy reviews and how to assess them safely.