The in vivo application and efficacy of many therapeutic peptides is limited due to their instability and proteolytic degradation. Novel strategies for developing therapeutic peptides with higher stability toward proteolytic degradation would be extremely valuable. Such approaches could improve systemic bioavailability and enhance therapeutic effects. The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is a hormonal system within the body essential for the regulation of blood pressure and fluid balance. The RAS is composed of two opposing classical and protective arms. The balance between these two arms is critical for the homeostasis of the body's physiological function. Activation of the RAS results in the suppression of its protective arm that has been reported in inflammatory and pathological conditions such as arthritis, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and cancer. Clinical application of the Angiotensin-(1-7) (Ang-(1-7)), a RAS critical regulatory peptide, augments the protective arm and restores balance hampered by its enzymatic and chemical instability. Several attempts to increase the half-life and efficacy of this heptapeptide using more stable analogs and different drug delivery approaches have been made. This review article provides an overview of efforts targeting the RAS protective arm. It provides a critical analysis of Ang-(1-7) or its homologs' novel drug delivery systems using different administration routes, their pharmacological characterization, and therapeutic potential in various clinical settings.Significance Statement: Ang-(1-7) is a unique peptide component of the RAS system with vast potential for clinical applications that modulate various inflammatory diseases. Novel Ang-(1-7) peptide drug delivery could compensate its lack of stability for effective clinical application.