Why we don't give doses
Why we don't provide dosing
Every peptide site seems to have a dosing chart. We don't. Not because we're squeamish — because a number on a page you've never met is the single most dangerous thing we could hand you.
A dose isn't a fact — it's a medical decision
The 'right' amount of anything depends on you: your body, your health history, what else you're taking, the actual purity of what's in the vial, and a hundred things a website can't see. A generic number strips all of that away and pretends it's simple. It isn't.
For most of the compounds people search for, there also isn't an evidence-based human dose to give. The numbers circulating online come from forums, sellers, and anecdote — not from trials. Publishing them as if they were settled would be faking a certainty that doesn't exist. That's exactly what we're against.
What we give you instead
- An honest evidence grade on every compound, so you know how much is actually known.
- The typical ranges people report — clearly labelled as reporting, cited to their source, never as our recommendation.
- A reconstitution calculator that does the mixing math on numbers you enter — arithmetic, not advice.
- A ready-made list of questions to ask a qualified professional who can actually see you.
Your body, your choice — but don't confuse vibes with evidence. The most useful thing we can do isn't hand you a number. It's make sure you ask better questions before you decide anything.
Last reviewed: 2026-07-07