Popular in body-recomp circles as a non-GLP fat-loss add-on. Users chase appetite-independent metabolic support; the science centers on NNMT inhibition and cellular metabolism, not obesity trials.
Peptides
Browse research peptides and compare vendors carrying each peptide.
Showing 89 peptides in the directory.
Peptide listings
Lab solvent used to reconstitute stubborn peptides that do not dissolve well in plain water. Shoppers buy it for mixing and pH adjustment, not for a direct body effect.
Semax-derived nootropic pursued for cleaner focus, study stamina, and smoother motivation. Public evidence is thin and mostly vendor/forum driven, so expectations should stay experimental.
Bought for aggressive fat-loss research because it targets white-fat blood supply rather than appetite. Preclinical data are notable, but user reports are sparse and safety concerns dominate discussion.
Best known as a hair-and-scalp copper peptide. Users reach for it to reduce shedding and support fuller-looking hair, while lab data mostly point to follicle signaling and dermal papilla activity.
Used like an 'exercise mimetic' for endurance, metabolic output, and cutting support. The strongest signal is AMPK activation and improved fuel use; real-world use skews performance more than aesthetics.
Taken for stubborn-fat support by people who want a non-GLP option. Human and animal work focus on lipolysis from an HGH fragment, while Reddit expectations center on slower, quieter body-comp change.
Chosen mostly for nerve pain, neuropathy, and tissue-protection research. User reports emphasize less burning, numbness, or irritation; the literature points to anti-inflammatory and nerve-repair signaling.
Usually used for skin quality, antioxidant support, and 'glow from within' routines. Evidence is broader nutrition science than peptide science, with some support for skin resilience and recovery from oxidative stress.
Most people use B-12 for energy and fatigue support, especially in shot protocols. The evidence is strongest when levels are low, but consumer intent is overwhelmingly 'more energy' and clearer daily function.
Sterile multi-dose diluent used to reconstitute peptide vials. Buyers want it because the benzyl-alcohol formula helps keep mixed solutions usable for repeated lab draws; it is a supply, not a benefit product.
The classic healing peptide for tendon, ligament, gut, and injury recovery. Reddit treats it as a 'repair' tool first, while the literature is still mostly preclinical despite strong tissue-healing buzz.
Recovery-meets-cosmetic blend people buy for tissue repair with better skin or scar quality. The commercial logic is BPC's healing reputation plus GHK-Cu's collagen and remodeling signal.
Probably the most recognizable recovery stack online. Users reach for it after strains, tendon issues, or surgery-like downtime, combining BPC's localized repair image with TB-500's broader tissue-healing reputation.
Russian lung bioregulator marketed for bronchial lining support and respiratory resilience. Public user reports are thin, so the use-case comes mainly from bioregulator literature and vendor positioning.
Taken for appetite control and satiety, often by people who want GLP-1-style weight loss with a strong 'fullness' effect. Trial data support meaningful weight loss, especially in combinations.
Niche stack aimed at losing fat without giving up recovery or lean-mass support. Real-world use is mostly merchandising logic—appetite control from cagri plus GH support from ipamorelin.
Bought as a stronger satiety-first weight-loss combo. Users expect less food noise and steadier adherence, while trials support additive body-weight reduction over semaglutide alone.
Heart-focused bioregulator sold for cardiac resilience and tissue support rather than day-to-day 'feeling' effects. Public signal is limited, so this is mostly a longevity-market peptide.
Joint-targeted bioregulator commonly placed in recovery stacks for knees, hips, and connective tissue. Vendors market it for cartilage integrity; Reddit treats it as a niche add-on for stubborn joint issues.
Used to raise GH/IGF-1 signaling for better sleep, recovery, and body composition. In user reports it sits between anti-aging and physique enhancement, with longer-acting GH support as the core draw.
One of the most common GH-support pairings for sleep, recovery, and staying lean while training. Users like it for 'deeper sleep plus better recomposition' more than for outright mass gain.
Brain bioregulator marketed for memory, clarity, and age-related cognitive support. Public demand exists, but the evidence base users cite is thin and heavily shaped by Khavinson-style vendor materials.
Known online as the 'sleep peptide.' People try it for deeper sleep, fewer night awakenings, and vivid dreams; the science is mixed and older, but the user-intent signal is clearly sleep quality.
Longevity favorite used for healthy-aging routines, sleep timing, and 'cellular reset' cycles. The science often spotlights telomerase and pineal signaling, but public use is mostly anti-aging and sleep rhythm.
Mostly chased by bodybuilders for myostatin-related muscle growth. The appeal is bigger size and faster hypertrophy, but the human evidence is limited and most enthusiasm comes from performance forums.
Senolytic-style peptide people discuss for clearing senescent cells and slowing age-related decline. It is firmly experimental, with preclinical longevity appeal far outpacing real-world human evidence.
The flagship cosmetic peptide for skin texture, collagen support, scars, and hair quality. Consumer demand is strong, and the literature points toward wound healing, remodeling, and anti-inflammatory effects.
Stronger GH secretagogue used for muscle gain, recovery, and sometimes appetite support. Compared with ipamorelin it is viewed as more aggressive and less selective, which is why some lifters seek it out.
Popular with bulking users because it can drive GH release and hunger at the same time. In practice it is less about elegance and more about eating more, recovering harder, and adding size.
Cosmetic-recovery blend built around GHK-Cu, BPC-157, and TB-500. People buy it for skin quality, collagen support, and general healing without managing three separate vials.
Usually purchased for brighter-looking skin, antioxidant support, and general 'glow' protocols. The evidence is broader than direct peptide literature, but consumer use clearly leans cosmetic and recovery-minded.
Most often used in hormone-optimization circles to stimulate LH/FSH signaling while preserving testicular function. In real-world shopping it reads as TRT support, libido support, and fertility-adjacent maintenance.
Widely used alongside TRT for testicular function, libido, and maintaining fertility potential. Consumers typically buy it to 'keep everything working' rather than as a standalone performance enhancer.
Potent GH secretagogue favored by users who want stronger GH pulses than milder options. It is usually discussed for muscle gain, recovery, and sleep, with desensitization concerns showing up often.
Used specifically for fat-loss support, especially around stubborn areas, without the broader GH image. The science and the forums both frame it as a lipolysis-focused fragment instead of a mass-building peptide.
In practice HMG is bought to support fertility, testicular output, and hormonal recovery, especially when hCG alone is not enough. Consumer intent is reproductive hormone support more than pure libido.
Mitochondrial longevity peptide people chase for cellular resilience, neuroprotection, and healthier aging. The mechanistic science is intriguing, but public use is still early and mostly biohacker-driven.
Physique peptide prized for fullness, pumps, nutrient partitioning, and fast muscle gain. The bodybuilding appeal is strong, while the evidence base is more mechanistic than clinically established for this use.
A gentler GH secretagogue used for better sleep, recovery, and lean body composition. Users often prefer it when they want GH support without the heavier hunger or side-effect profile of older GHRPs.
Discussed as a brain-first libido and reproductive-hormone peptide. Users often want stronger desire or better HPG-axis signaling, while clinical work shows real effects on sexual brain processing.
Four-part healing blend—BPC-157, TB-500, GHK-Cu, and KPV—used for 'everything recovery.' Shoppers choose it when they want inflammation control, tissue repair, and skin support in one simplified stack.
Most people seek KPV for gut inflammation, skin irritation, and general calming of inflammatory flare-ups. The strongest signal is anti-inflammatory rather than anabolic or cosmetic.
Used for workout energy, fatty-acid transport, and cutting support. Users often describe better training drive and a leaner feel, while the research points to modest weight and performance benefits.
A lipotropic injection people use as a dieting sidekick for fat-loss support and energy. Consumer intent is closer to 'metabolic shot' than peptide therapy, and expectations are usually modest.
Bought for a combined 'fat-burning plus energy' shot. Most customers expect metabolic support with a noticeable B-12 lift rather than dramatic stand-alone weight loss.
Best known for antimicrobial, immune, and wound-healing interest. Users often mention infections, skin recovery, or biofilm talk; the science supports broad immune activity but remains far from routine consumer use.
A next-wave dual agonist used for appetite suppression and large-scale fat loss. Real-world interest comes from people looking beyond semaglutide or tirzepatide, with early trials showing strong obesity signals.
Sought mainly for tanning with less UV exposure time. Unlike PT-141, the primary consumer appeal is cosmetic pigmentation rather than libido.
Bought first for faster tanning and deeper pigmentation, with libido effects often treated as a bonus. Forum chatter consistently puts tanning at the center and arousal effects right behind it.
A mitochondrial peptide people take for cleaner energy, better endurance, and metabolic flexibility. The science supports exercise-like metabolic signaling, which matches the way biohackers actually talk about it.
Used for cellular energy, less fatigue, mental clarity, and rebound after stress or travel. The biology is foundational, and real-world users usually frame it as 'energy and recovery' more than abstract longevity.
A buffered NAD+ format marketed for the same energy-and-recovery goals with gentler delivery or handling. Consumer intent mirrors standard NAD+: less fatigue, better clarity, and smoother function.
Usually pursued for intimacy, emotional warmth, social ease, and sometimes libido support. Users do not treat it like a pure sex peptide so much as a bonding and connection enhancer.
Niche nootropic peptide used for memory, learning, and neuroplasticity-focused stacks. Interest is strongest in advanced nootropics circles, with limited public human data behind the hype.
Pancreas bioregulator marketed for glucose handling and endocrine-pancreatic support. Public user reports are thin, so most of its identity comes from metabolic vendor positioning.
Marketed as a regenerative peptide for tissue healing, inflammation control, and recovery. Public evidence is thin and vendor-driven, so it remains an experimental product more than an established category leader.
Also called spadin, this experimental neuropeptide is discussed for fast antidepressant and anti-anhedonia effects. The science is centered on TREK-1 blockade, but real-world use remains niche.
A shorter spadin analogue sought for mood lift, motivation, and brain-fog relief. Interest is very niche but consistent in nootropics communities; the evidence is promising yet still preclinical-heavy.
Bodybuilding peptide used for muscle repair, local growth signaling, and post-workout recovery. The appeal is satellite-cell activation and anabolic support, but high-quality human evidence is limited.
Brain-focused bioregulator marketed for memory, neuroprotection, and healthy cognitive aging. Public use is real but small, and much of the narrative comes from Russian longevity literature.
An experimental anti-cancer peptide studied for selectively lysing tumor cells. This is not a mainstream wellness compound; discussion is sparse and mostly tied to oncology research interest.
Another p53-derived oncology peptide investigated for cancer-cell killing. It sits squarely in the research-only lane, with far more preclinical intrigue than consumer wellness use.
The clearest libido peptide in the market. Users want stronger desire, easier arousal, and better erection quality because it works through the brain's arousal pathways rather than simple blood flow.
The heavyweight of experimental weight-loss peptides. People chase it for powerful appetite suppression and dramatic body-fat reduction, and trial data support unusually large losses for an obesity drug.
Ultra-aggressive fat-loss stack aimed at maximum appetite control and faster scale changes. This is largely a community-built combo rather than a formally studied product pairing.
Speculative stack for people chasing extreme multi-pathway weight loss. Real-world interest exists, but evidence for using both together is thin and largely forum- or vendor-led.
Calming nootropic users try for lower anxiety, smoother focus, and easier social interaction. The literature supports anxiolytic plus nootropic effects, which matches how nootropics communities describe it.
Bought overwhelmingly for appetite suppression, weight loss, and better food control. Its clinical evidence base is strong, and user reports focus on reduced cravings and steady body-weight reduction.
Productivity peptide used for focus, mental clarity, memory, and reduced brain fog. Both the literature and user communities place it firmly in the nootropic lane rather than mood or physique use.
Classic nootropic stack pairing sharper focus from Semax with calmer mental tone from Selank. Users like it when they want productivity without stimulants' rough edges.
Used for GH support, better sleep, recovery, and mild body recomposition. It is often seen as a more conservative, clinic-style peptide compared with harder-edged bodybuilding stacks.
An experimental exercise-mimetic compound used for endurance, fat oxidation, and cleaner energy. Online users report better work capacity more than appetite suppression; the strongest evidence is still preclinical.
Cosmetic wrinkle peptide sold for softening expression lines and giving a smoother, less creased look. It is closer to a topical anti-wrinkle active than a classic systemic peptide.
Mitochondria-targeted peptide used for energy, endurance, and recovery resilience. Users often describe better workout capacity or less fatigue, which lines up with elamipretide's mitochondrial literature.
Dual GLP-1/glucagon agonist gaining attention for substantial weight loss and metabolic improvement. It is mainly pursued by users looking for next-generation obesity tools beyond standard GLP-1s.
Recovery staple used for soft-tissue healing, mobility, and bounced-back training. Its reputation is systemic repair rather than localized muscle gain, and that is exactly how most users buy it.
Experimental TB-500 fragment sold for healing and tissue-repair research with a more targeted angle. Public user data are much thinner than for standard TB-500.
Mostly pursued for visceral-fat and belly-fat reduction, especially in body-recomp protocols. Even though it works through the GH axis, consumer intent is usually 'leaner waist' rather than bigger muscle.
Recomp-oriented GH stack used for trimming abdominal fat while preserving recovery and lean tissue. Buyers usually want body-composition change rather than either pure mass gain or pure appetite control.
Marketed as an endocrine bioregulator for testosterone, gonadal support, and broader HPG-axis health. Public signal is moderate but still relies heavily on vendor framing.
Thymus peptide used for immune support and healthier immune signaling, especially in bioregulator circles. Public user reports are limited, but the positioning is consistently immune-focused.
Thymic peptide complex used for immune resilience, recovery, and healthy aging. Compared with Thymosin Alpha-1, it feels more like a classic Eastern European bioregulator than a mainstream peptide.
The strongest immune peptide in this list from a conventional-evidence standpoint. It is used for immune modulation and resilience rather than physique or aesthetics, with real clinical literature behind it.
Thymic immunopeptide discussed for immune balance, inflammation control, and sometimes neuroimmune aging support. Public use exists, but broad consumer familiarity is still low.
Used for major fat loss, appetite control, and better glycemic/metabolic outcomes. User reports emphasize less food noise and strong waist reduction, which tracks closely with the clinical evidence.
Vascular bioregulator marketed for circulation, endothelial support, and vascular aging. It is mostly a longevity-shop product, with thin mainstream user-report volume.
Tiny bioregulator peptide associated with immune aging and gene-expression support. Public demand is niche and the evidence base is mostly older bioregulator literature.
Multi-system peptide people seek for gut inflammation, barrier support, vasodilation, and sometimes respiratory comfort. The science is strongest around anti-inflammatory and immune signaling.