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The research peptide guide.

Everything you need to understand research peptides, use this site effectively, and make informed sourcing decisions. No prior knowledge required.

For laboratory and research use only — not for human or animal consumption.

The basics

What are research peptides?

Peptides are short chains of amino acids — the same building blocks that make up proteins, just far smaller. Your body produces thousands of them naturally to carry signals between cells. In a research setting, peptides are studied for their roles in processes such as tissue repair, metabolism, cellular signalling, and inflammation.

The compounds listed on Peptide Supermarket are synthetic research peptides: manufactured, freeze-dried into a powder, sealed in a vial, and sold for in-vitro laboratory study only. They are not medicines, supplements, or consumer products, and nothing on this site should be read as guidance to use them on a person or animal.

Why "research use only" matters: these compounds have not been approved as medicines. Their purity, effects, and safety in living subjects are exactly what researchers set out to study — which is why everything here is framed around laboratory work, not personal use.

The landscape

The research peptide market

The research peptide market is loosely regulated, and quality varies enormously between suppliers. Two vials with the same label can differ in actual purity, accuracy of the stated amount, and consistency from batch to batch. That makes how you choose a supplier at least as important as which compound you're sourcing.

The signals that separate a credible supplier from a risky one tend to be:

Third-party testing

Independent lab results (a COA) for the actual batch you can buy.

Transparency

Clear info on sourcing, storage, shipping and returns.

Track record

A consistent history rather than a brand-new, anonymous shopfront.

Fair, stable pricing

Prices that make sense per milligram, not just per vial.

This is exactly what we built the site to help with. We track pricing directly from suppliers and maintain detailed supplier profiles so you can weigh these signals side by side.

Verification

Reading a Certificate of Analysis (COA)

A Certificate of Analysis is a lab report describing what a particular batch actually contains. A credible supplier will provide a recent, third-party COA for the product on sale. Here's how to read one with a critical eye.

Good signs

  • Named, independent testing lab
  • HPLC and/or mass spectrometry methods
  • Stated purity (commonly ≥98%)
  • A recent test date and batch number
  • A document you can independently verify

Red flags

  • No COA available at all
  • Purity below 95%, or none stated
  • No batch number or test date
  • A report that can't be traced to a real lab
  • The same generic COA reused for everything

Treat a COA as a starting point, not a guarantee — documents can be old or mismatched to the batch you receive. Where a supplier lets you verify a report directly with the testing lab, that's a strong positive signal.

Lab handling

Reconstitution & lab handling

Most research peptides arrive lyophilised (freeze-dried) as a small amount of powder. To work with a sample in the lab, it's dissolved in a sterile liquid — usually bacteriostatic water. This is standard laboratory preparation, and the concentration maths below is simply dilution arithmetic.

Important: the following is general information about preparing and measuring research samples in a laboratory. It is not dosing guidance, and these compounds are not for human or animal use. See our research-use note below.

Typical supplies

Sealed vial of peptide Bacteriostatic water Sterile syringes Alcohol swabs Storage at the right temperature

Worked example: concentration

If you dissolve a 10 mg vial in 2 ml of bacteriostatic water:

10 mg ÷ 2 ml = 5 mg/ml = 5,000 mcg/ml

On a U-100 insulin syringe, each 1 unit (0.01 ml) of that solution therefore contains 50 mcg. Changing the volume of water changes the concentration — the maths is the same either way. This is purely for accurately measuring research aliquots.

Need to run the numbers for a different vial size? Use our free reconstitution calculator.

Our specialty

Understanding peptide pricing

This is where most people overpay. A vial's sticker price tells you almost nothing on its own, because vials come in different strengths. The only honest way to compare is price per milligram.

A quick example

• Supplier A: £40 for a 5 mg vial → £8.00/mg

• Supplier B: £60 for a 10 mg vial → £6.00/mg

Supplier B looks more expensive at a glance, but is actually 25% cheaper per milligram. We do this calculation for every listing automatically.

A few other things worth factoring in when comparing:

Shipping & minimums

A low price can be undone by postage or a high minimum order.

Coupon codes

Discounts can flip which supplier is genuinely cheapest.

Stock & lead time

The best price is no use if the item is out of stock.

Quality, not just cost

Weigh price against testing and track record together.

Browse current supplier promo codes to see live discounts factored in.

In practice

Using Peptide Supermarket

Here's how to get the most out of the site in four steps:

  1. 1

    Search for a compound

    Find any peptide and instantly see every UK supplier we track, ranked by price per mg.

    Compare peptide prices
  2. 2

    Open the supplier profiles

    Check who you're buying from — sourcing, testing approach, shipping and track record.

    Browse suppliers
  3. 3

    Use the free tools

    Run reconstitution and cycle calculations, or let Quick Solve point you to the best option.

    Open the calculators
  4. 4

    Read the research

    Go deeper on individual compounds with our research guides and articles.

    Read research guides
Reference

Glossary of terms

The vocabulary you'll come across, in plain English.

Peptide
A short chain of amino acids; the building blocks of proteins.
Lyophilised
Freeze-dried into a stable powder for shipping and storage.
Reconstitution
Dissolving the dried powder in a sterile liquid for lab use.
Bacteriostatic water
Sterile water with a preservative, used to reconstitute samples.
COA
Certificate of Analysis — a lab report on a specific batch.
HPLC
High-Performance Liquid Chromatography; measures purity.
Mass spectrometry
Confirms a compound's identity by its molecular weight.
Purity %
The proportion of the sample that is the intended compound.
Batch / Lot
A specific production run a COA should correspond to.
mg / mcg
Milligram and microgram; 1 mg = 1,000 mcg.
Price per mg
Cost divided by strength — the fair way to compare value.
Research use only
Sold strictly for laboratory study, not for consumption.
Research Use Only

A note before you go: research use only

Everything in this guide is provided for educational purposes to help you understand and compare research peptides. All compounds listed on Peptide Supermarket are intended exclusively for in-vitro laboratory research and scientific study. They are not intended for human or animal consumption, therapeutic use, or self-administration. We do not sell, supply, or ship any products, and nothing here is medical advice. For the full picture, see our FAQ and terms of service.

Put it into practice

Ready to compare prices the smart way?

Now you know what to look for. Compare every UK supplier we track, ranked by price per milligram.

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