Ghoul
Well-known Member
No one can answer this accurately because the question is ludicrously broad.
Every destination has its own laws regarding steroids. In some countries they're unregulated. In others, they're completely illegal and your prescription is meaningless.
So just google it.
But as others have said, in real life unless you're traveling to some totalitarian regime the risk from carrying a single vial of test is near zero.
You can tell who hasn't travelled internationally very much, because having been pulled aside for close inspection outside of and coming back to the US with a bag full of meds, including ampules of test at least two dozen times over decades, I've never once been asked to produce a prescription for anything. Anyone who suggests you're going to be thrown in prison for carrying a personal amount of medication as if you were found carrying a baggie of cocaine is being ridiculous.
At worst it'll be confiscated.
Airports are full of first time travelers who don't know what they're doing, have their Valium and pain pills in pill organizers and little bags, insulin syringes and loose vials and they're not getting locked up or detained until they can produce a prescription.
Every destination has its own laws regarding steroids. In some countries they're unregulated. In others, they're completely illegal and your prescription is meaningless.
So just google it.
But as others have said, in real life unless you're traveling to some totalitarian regime the risk from carrying a single vial of test is near zero.
You can tell who hasn't travelled internationally very much, because having been pulled aside for close inspection outside of and coming back to the US with a bag full of meds, including ampules of test at least two dozen times over decades, I've never once been asked to produce a prescription for anything. Anyone who suggests you're going to be thrown in prison for carrying a personal amount of medication as if you were found carrying a baggie of cocaine is being ridiculous.
At worst it'll be confiscated.
Airports are full of first time travelers who don't know what they're doing, have their Valium and pain pills in pill organizers and little bags, insulin syringes and loose vials and they're not getting locked up or detained until they can produce a prescription.