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.
Cosmetic Peptides
Browse cosmetic research peptides and compare vendors carrying each peptide.
Showing 9 peptides in Cosmetic.
Peptide listings
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.