Along with Argentina, Ukraine, Bolivia, Andorra and Israel, it has been deemed "non-compliant" by Wada.
Brazil, Belgium, France, Greece, Mexico and Spain have been placed on a 'watch list' and must meet strict conditions by March 2016 or face similar action.
Meanwhile, Kenya has been ordered to explain its doping controls or join those countries under scrutiny.
Wada said that if Kenya's answers are "unsatisfactory", it could also face sanctions. There are 15 Kenyans currently banned for doping by athletics' governing body the IAAF.
The "non-compliant" countries have failed to responded fully to Wada's request for information and Argentina, Bolivia and Ukraine have been found to be using non-accredited laboratories, which is a breach of the code. Andorra and Israel did not have correct rules in place.
Drug testing will continue, but it will be carried out independently and the country in question will foot the bill. This will continue until the country reinstalls quality anti-doping programmes.
Russia's athletics federation is already provisionally banned from international competition for its alleged involvement in widespread doping.
The IAAF imposed the sanction after a Wada independent commission report accused the country of "state-sponsored doping".
The head of the Russian doping laboratory accused by the Wada report of destroying more than 1,400 blood and urine samples, has left his position, and the laboratory has had its accreditation suspended.
However, the report's co-author Dick Pound said it would be "child's play" for Russian athletics and Rusada - the country's anti-doping organisation - to meet the conditions in time to compete in Rio.
"I don't think you'll get the culture fixed in nine months but you can do actions that will come to the same result," Pound said.
"In a sense, I don't care whether you're there with clean athletes if the only reason is fear of getting caught, as opposed to thinking that's the right thing to do. Listen, Russia built Sochi in seven years. This is child's play."
The country's sports minister Vitaly Mutko said Russian athletics will co-operate "in any way" to prove it is clean.
Pound's report stated that Russia was not the only country with anti-doping issues, and that athletics was not the only sport with those problems.
Pound also alleged that Kenya has a "real problem with doping".
However, during a two-day meeting in Colorado Springs in the United States, Wada said it was "encouraged" by reports the Kenyan government is committing funding to its national anti-doping programme.
Last week, the country approved the immediate establishment of an anti-doping agency. The government said the new agency will carry out testing and ensure compliance with doping rules.
The head of Kenya's Olympic committee, Kipchoge Keino, has accused his government of complacency.
-BBC