ABSTRACT There are currently no disease altering drugs available for Tauopathies such as Alzheimer’s disease, which alone is predicted to affect ~88 million people worldwide by 2050. As Tau aggregation underpins its toxicity, aggregation inhibitors are likely to have disease-modifying potential. Guided by in-silico mutagenesis studies, we developed a potent retro-inverso peptide inhibitor of Tau aggregation, RI-AG03 [Ac-rrrrrrrrGpkyk(ac)iqvGr-NH 2 ], based on the 306 VQIVYK 311 hotspot. Aggregation of recombinant Tau was reduced by >90% with equimolar RI-AG03 and no fibrils were observed by EM. When added during the growth phase, RI-AG03 blocked seeded aggregation. Fluorescein-tagged RI-AG03 efficiently penetrated HEK-293 cells over 24 hours and was non-toxic at doses up to 30 μM. In transgenic Drosophila , RI-AG03 significantly improves neurodegenerative and behavioural phenotypes caused by expression of human Tau. Collectively this shows that RI-AG03 can effectively reduce Tau aggregation in vitro and block aggregation-dependent phenotypes in vivo , raising possibilities for exploring its translational potential.