NIMOH PHARMACY AND COMPOUNDING LLC
Florida-licensed Pharmacy practicing at 12878 US HIGHWAY 301, Dade City, FL 33525. License verified through the Florida Department of Health Division of Medical Quality Assurance.
License Details
FL DOH · MQA| Full name | NIMOH PHARMACY AND COMPOUNDING LLC |
| Profession | Pharmacy (profession code 2205, rank PH) |
| License number | 28347 |
| License status | Clear |
| Status effective since | January 13, 2015 |
| License originally issued | July 24, 2014 (12 years ago) |
| License expires | February 28, 2027 |
| Practice address | 12878 US HIGHWAY 301 Dade City, FL 33525 |
| County | Pasco County, FL |
| Prescribing authority | No (not authorized to prescribe) |
| Dispensing authority | No |
About the Pharmacy Profession in Florida
EDITORIALWhat they do
A Pharmacy permit in Florida authorizes a physical or virtual location to dispense, compound, or distribute prescription medications. The Florida Board of Pharmacy issues different classes of permit depending on the operating model — community (retail), institutional class I and II (such as hospital pharmacies), special pharmacy, nuclear pharmacy, special parenteral/enteral, internet pharmacy, and others. Each permit class defines what kinds of medications may be stored, how compounding may be performed, and what record-keeping and security requirements apply.
In Florida, every pharmacy must operate under the supervision of a designated prescription department manager who is a Florida-licensed pharmacist responsible for ensuring statutory compliance. Pharmacies are inspected by the Florida Department of Health and must follow strict rules on controlled substances, drug recalls, sterile compounding standards (USP 797/800 where applicable), patient counseling, and pseudoephedrine sales. Many pharmacies in Florida also provide point-of-care testing, immunizations, and medication therapy management under their pharmacist staff's licensure.
Licensing in Florida
A pharmacy permit application requires identification of the prescription department manager, facility floor plans, security details, ownership disclosure, and inspection by the Department of Health. Different permit categories have specific physical and operational requirements (for example, institutional class II permits cover hospitals with on-site compounding). Permits are renewed every two years, and pharmacies must update the Board on changes in ownership, location, or pharmacy manager. The Florida Board of Pharmacy regulates all permit holders and conducts routine and complaint-based inspections.
How to verify or report
Look up a Florida pharmacy permit, license status, and disciplinary history through the Florida MQA license search. To report problems with a pharmacy — diversion, errors, sanitary concerns — file through the Florida Department of Health complaint form or call 850-488-0796.