Metabolic peptides

Extensively Studied

Metabolic

Longevity

ss3

Metabolic

SS-31

Well Studied

LongevityMetabolic

Weight

orf

Metabolic

Orforglipron

Extensively Studied

WeightMetabolic

Longevity

nad

Metabolic

NAD+

Extensively Studied

LongevityMetabolic

Growth

tes

Metabolic

Tesamorelin/Ipamorelin

Limited Research

GrowthMetabolicHealing

Weight

sur

Metabolic

Survodutide

Extensively Studied

WeightMetabolic

Weight

ret

Metabolic

Retatrutide

Extensively Studied

WeightMetabolic

Weight

sem

Metabolic

Semaglutide

Fda Approved

WeightMetabolic

Weight

aod

Metabolic

AOD-9604

Well Studied

WeightMetabolic

Longevity

mot

Metabolic

MOTS-c

Well Studied

LongevityMetabolic

Metabolic

lca

Performance

L-Carnitine

Longevity

pan

Metabolic

Pancragen

Moderate Research

LongevityMetabolic

Metabolic

aic

Performance

AICAR

Longevity

slu

Metabolic

SLU-PP-332

Weight

maz

Metabolic

Mazdutide

Extensively Studied

WeightMetabolic

Weight

bam

Metabolic

BAM-15

Moderate Research

WeightMetabolic

Weight

5am

Longevity

5-Amino-1MQ

Weight

cag

Metabolic

Cagrilintide

Extensively Studied

WeightMetabolic

Frequently asked questions

What is a peptide dosage calculator?

A peptide dosage calculator is a free tool that converts your vial size, bacteriostatic water volume, and target dose into an exact syringe draw volume. Instead of doing the reconstitution math by hand, you enter three inputs and instantly get the concentration of your solution and how many milliliters or syringeunits to draw. This calculator works for single peptide compounds and multi-peptide blends.

How do I calculate peptide dosage from a vial?

To calculate your peptide dose, divide the total peptide content of your vial in micrograms by the volume of bacteriostatic water you added in milliliters. This gives you your solution concentration in mcg/mL. Then divide your target dose by that concentration to get your draw volume. For example, a 5mg (5,000 mcg) vial reconstituted with 2mL of BAC water gives a concentration of 2,500 mcg/mL. A 250 mcg dose would require drawing 0.1mL. This calculator automates all of those steps instantly.

How much Bacteriostatic water should I add to a peptide vial?

Most people add 2mL to 3mL of bacteriostatic water per vial, but the right amount depends on the dose you want to draw and the syringe size you are using. Adding 1mL to a 5mg vial gives you a concentration of 5,000 mcg/mL, making each dose very small in volume. Adding 2mL gives you 2,500 mcg/mL, which is easier to measure on a standard insulin syringe. A general guideline is to choose a volume that puts your typical dose somewhere between 10 and 30 units on a U-100 syringe. Use the calculator above to test different water volumes and find what works for your dose.

How are peptides different from proteins?

Both are made of amino acids, but peptides are much smaller than proteins. Because of their tiny size, peptides can act like tiny messengers in the body, sending specific signals to your cells to tell them exactly what to do.​