Small dispenser exemption

Do I Qualify as a Small Dispenser Under DSCSA?

What the 25-employee rule and November 27, 2026 deadline mean for pharmacies.

Many pharmacies are asking the same DSCSA question right now: Do we qualify as a small dispenser?

It is an important question because qualifying small dispensers have additional time, until November 27, 2026, for certain enhanced DSCSA requirements. But that extra time should not be misunderstood.

Do not misunderstand the exemption

The small dispenser exemption gives pharmacies more time. It does not make DSCSA disappear.

That is the practical point every pharmacy should understand before relying on the November 27, 2026 deadline.

“The small dispenser exemption gives pharmacies more time. It does not make DSCSA disappear.”
Jim Shaver, Managing Director of Advasur 360
What is a small dispenser?

The 25-employee rule depends on the company that owns the dispenser.

For purposes of the FDA small dispenser exemption, a pharmacy may qualify if the company that owns the dispenser had 25 or fewer full-time employees who meet specific role criteria.

Who counts?

For purposes of the FDA small dispenser exemption, a pharmacy may qualify if the company that owns the dispenser had 25 or fewer full-time employees who are either licensed pharmacists or qualified pharmacy technicians.

In plain English:

The count is focused on full-time licensed pharmacists and qualified pharmacy technicians, not simply every employee currently on payroll.

What date matters?

The important date is November 27, 2024.

That means qualification is based on the relevant full-time employee count as of that date, not simply how many people are employed today.

Practical documentation point:

Pharmacies should document how they made that determination and involve their compliance team or legal counsel if there is uncertainty.

The exemption is limited

You may have more time for certain enhanced electronic requirements.

But you still need a working DSCSA process.

The small dispenser exemption gives qualifying pharmacies more time for certain enhanced DSCSA requirements. It does not remove all DSCSA responsibilities.

Small dispensers still need to understand their suppliers, know where product tracing information is stored, access records when needed, and maintain appropriate procedures for suspect or illegitimate product concerns.

In plain English:

You may have more time for certain enhanced electronic requirements. But you still need a working DSCSA process.

The exemption gives time. The best use of that time is preparation.

What November 27, 2026 really means

The date marks the end of the small dispenser exemption period for certain enhanced DSCSA requirements.

For pharmacies, that means the time to prepare is now. The deadline may be months away, but the work is not something to save for the final weeks.

Supplier connections may require follow-up. Transaction data may be missing or delayed. Staff may need training. Workflows may need testing. Records may need to be organized.

Nov 27 2026
Before the deadline

Pharmacies should be working on the pieces that take time.

Small dispensers should use the remaining runway to stabilize operations, test workflows, organize records, and prepare for enhanced DSCSA requirements.

01

Supplier and trading partner readiness

Work on supplier setup and Authorized Trading Partner review so the pharmacy knows where product is coming from and whether supplier relationships are ready.

02

Transaction data and electronic records

Confirm transaction data receipt and retention, EPCIS and EDI 856 readiness, and the ability to connect records to supplier and shipment activity.

03

Workflows and retrieval

Build missing-data workflows, reconciliation activity, exception documentation, suspect product procedures, staff training, six-year record retention, and record retrieval.

Your preparation checklist

Turn the exemption period into a working DSCSA process.

The practical goal is to know what is in place, what still needs work, and what your pharmacy can show when someone asks.

If your pharmacy believes it qualifies as a small dispenser, now is the time to confirm your status, document your reasoning, and use the remaining time wisely.

If your pharmacy does not qualify, the need to act may be even more urgent.

Before November 27, 2026, pharmacies should be working on:

Supplier setupConfirm supplier relationships and connections.
ATP reviewReview Authorized Trading Partner status.
Transaction dataConfirm receipt and retention of transaction records.
EPCIS and EDI 856Prepare for electronic record readiness.
Missing-data workflowsDocument missing or delayed records.
ReconciliationTest comparison and review activity.
Exception documentationDocument what happened when something did not match.
Record retrievalPractice showing records when someone asks.
Why pharmacies should not wait

Waiting turns a manageable project into a deadline scramble.

Starting earlier gives the pharmacy time to find problems while there is still time to fix them.

Incomplete supplier records A pharmacy may discover too late that supplier records are incomplete.
Broken connections Supplier connections may not be working and may require follow-up.
Untrained staff Staff may be unsure what to do when something is missing or questionable.
Scattered transaction data Records may be spread across portals, emails, downloads, spreadsheets, and memory.
Untested workflows Reconciliation, exception documentation, and retrieval may need testing before they are reliable.
Last-minute pressure The final weeks are the wrong time to discover avoidable DSCSA gaps.
How Advasur 360 helps small dispensers prepare

Turn DSCSA from a confusing deadline into a practical process.

Advasur 360 was built by pharmacists, for pharmacists, and shaped by more than a decade of focused DSCSA experience.

TI

Transaction data receipt and retention

Support for receiving, retaining, and retrieving required DSCSA transaction records.

SV

Supplier and shipment visibility

A practical way to organize supplier and shipment activity before the deadline becomes urgent.

EDI

EPCIS and EDI 856 record management

Support for electronic DSCSA record management connected to supplier and shipment workflows.

RX

Reconciliation activity

Workflow support for comparing product received against shipment or transaction data.

MD

Missing-data workflows

A clearer process for identifying, following up on, and documenting missing or delayed information.

EX

Exception documentation

Tools to help show what happened when product, records, or supplier information did not match expectations.

SP

Suspect product procedures

Support for procedures that help staff identify, quarantine, investigate, document, escalate, and report when appropriate.

ST

Staff training support

Practical support so pharmacy staff know what to do and when to escalate.

6Y

Six-year record retention

Support for long-term record retention that remains organized and explainable over time.

RT

Record retrieval when someone asks

Help pharmacies produce records and explain the process without rebuilding the story manually.

360

White-glove support

Support from people who understand pharmacy operations, so your pharmacy does not have to figure this out alone.

$

Practical, affordable, turnkey

A DSCSA solution designed to help pharmacies use the remaining time wisely.

A practical next step

The question should not be: How long can we wait?

The better question is: What can we put in place now, so we are ready when someone asks?

Advasur 360 helps pharmacies answer that question with a practical, affordable, turnkey DSCSA solution.

Confirm status and prepare

Use the remaining time wisely.

  • Confirm whether your pharmacy qualifies as a small dispenser.
  • Document your reasoning and involve compliance or legal counsel if uncertain.
  • Review supplier setup, transaction data, reconciliation readiness, and staff training.
  • Practice record retrieval before someone asks.
Schedule your Advasur 360 readiness review

Get organized before November 27, 2026.

If your pharmacy is unsure whether it qualifies as a small dispenser, or if you know you qualify but still need to prepare for November 27, 2026, now is the time to get organized.

In a 30-minute Advasur 360 DSCSA Readiness Review, we can walk through your current DSCSA process and show how Advasur 360 helps with supplier setup, transaction data, reconciliation readiness, missing-data workflows, staff training, and record retrieval.

No pressure. No scare tactics. Just a practical look at where your pharmacy stands and what needs to happen next.

The small dispenser exemption gives pharmacies time. Advasur 360 helps pharmacies use that time wisely.