CalcMyPeptide
Pillar Guide • 12 min read

The Complete Guide to Peptide Reconstitution & Dosing

Everything you need to know about mixing lyophilized peptides, calculating concentrations, choosing the right syringe, and measuring accurate doses — from first principles to advanced multi-peptide stacks.

1. What Is Peptide Reconstitution?

Reconstitution is the process of dissolving a lyophilized (freeze-dried) peptide powder into a liquid solvent — typically bacteriostatic water (BAC water) — to create an injectable solution. Peptides are shipped as a dry powder because the lyophilized form is far more stable at room temperature during transit. Once reconstituted, the peptide becomes a clear liquid solution ready for subcutaneous injection.

The reconstitution process determines three critical values that govern every subsequent dose calculation:

  • 1. Concentration (mg/mL) — how much peptide is dissolved per milliliter of solution
  • 2. Micrograms per unit (mcg/unit) — how much peptide each tick mark on your syringe represents
  • 3. Units to draw — the exact number of syringe units needed for your desired dose

Getting these calculations right is essential. Too much water dilutes the solution, potentially making accurate measurement difficult with larger syringe sizes. Too little water creates a highly concentrated solution where a single tick mark represents a large dose, increasing the risk of measurement error.

2. Bacteriostatic Water: What It Is and Why It Matters

Bacteriostatic water (BAC water) is sterile water containing 0.9% benzyl alcohol as a preservative. The benzyl alcohol inhibits bacterial growth, which is why BAC water is the preferred solvent for peptides that will be stored and used over multiple days.

BAC Water vs. Sterile Water

✓ Bacteriostatic Water

Contains 0.9% benzyl alcohol. Allows multi-use for up to 28 days. Standard choice for peptide reconstitution.

⚠ Sterile Water

No preservative. Single-use only — must be discarded after one withdrawal. Only for peptides incompatible with benzyl alcohol.

Storage: Unopened BAC water should be stored at room temperature (15-30°C). After opening, store at 2-8°C (refrigerator) and use within 28 days. Always use a fresh alcohol wipe on the rubber stopper before each use to maintain sterility.

3. The Concentration Formula

The reconstitution formula is straightforward — concentration is simply the peptide mass divided by the water volume:

Concentration (mg/mL) = Vial Size (mg) ÷ Water Volume (mL)

For example, a 5 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water yields a concentration of 2.5 mg/mL, which equals 2,500 mcg/mL.

The more water you add, the more dilute the solution becomes — and the more syringe units you'll need to draw for a given dose. The less water you add, the more concentrated the solution — and fewer units needed per dose, but with less room for measurement precision.

Vial (mg)Water (mL)Concentrationmcg/unit
5 mg1 mL5 mg/mL50 mcg
5 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL25 mcg
5 mg2.5 mL2 mg/mL20 mcg
10 mg2 mL5 mg/mL50 mcg
10 mg3 mL3.33 mg/mL33.3 mcg
10 mg5 mL2 mg/mL20 mcg

4. Micrograms per Syringe Unit

On a standard U-100 insulin syringe (the most commonly used for peptides), 100 units = 1 mL. Therefore each "unit" equals 0.01 mL. Once you know the concentration, calculating micrograms per unit is simple:

mcg/unit = (Concentration mg/mL × 1,000) ÷ 100

For a 2.5 mg/mL solution: (2.5 × 1000) ÷ 100 = 25 mcg per unit. This means each tick mark on a U-100 syringe delivers 25 mcg of peptide. For a dose of 250 mcg, you would draw 10 units (250 ÷ 25 = 10 units).

5. Choosing the Right Syringe Size

Insulin syringes come in three standard sizes. The right choice depends on your dose volume:

0.3 mL (30 units)

Best for: Doses under 30 units

Needle: 31G × 5/16"

Finest graduation — best precision for peptides

0.5 mL (50 units)

Best for: Doses 30-50 units

Needle: 30G × 5/16"

Good balance of capacity and readability

1.0 mL (100 units)

Best for: Doses over 50 units

Needle: 29G × 1/2"

Largest capacity but wider graduation marks

Pro tip: For most peptide doses (100-500 mcg), the 0.3 mL (30-unit) syringe offers the finest graduation marks and best accuracy. Use our Reverse Calculator to find the optimal water volume that brings your dose into the 5-20 unit range on a 30-unit syringe.

6. Step-by-Step Reconstitution Process

  1. 1

    Prepare your workspace

    Clean surface, alcohol wipes, peptide vial, BAC water vial, syringe, and sharps container.

  2. 2

    Calculate your water volume

    Use the concentration formula or our calculator to determine how much BAC water to add. More water = easier to measure small doses.

  3. 3

    Wipe the vial stoppers

    Use an alcohol wipe on both the peptide vial and BAC water vial rubber stoppers. Let dry for 10 seconds.

  4. 4

    Draw BAC water

    Using a fresh syringe, draw the calculated amount of BAC water. For 2 mL, use a standard 3 mL syringe (not an insulin syringe).

  5. 5

    Inject water slowly

    Insert the needle into the peptide vial at a slight angle, aiming the water stream down the inside wall of the vial — NOT directly onto the peptide cake. Release the water slowly.

  6. 6

    Swirl gently to dissolve

    Do NOT shake the vial. Gently roll or swirl until the powder is fully dissolved. The solution should be clear. If cloudy, continue gentle swirling.

  7. 7

    Label and refrigerate

    Label the vial with: peptide name, concentration, reconstitution date, and discard date (28 days). Store at 2-8°C.

7. How to Calculate Your Dose in Units

Once you know the mcg per unit from your reconstitution, calculating your dose is division:

Units to draw = Desired dose (mcg) ÷ mcg per unit

Example: You want a 250 mcg dose of BPC-157. Your 5 mg vial was reconstituted with 2 mL of BAC water, giving 25 mcg/unit. → 250 ÷ 25 = 10 units on a U-100 syringe. Use our Reconstitution Calculator to do this instantly.

8. Worked Examples for Popular Peptides

BPC-157

Vial: 5 mg
Water: 2 mL
Conc: 2.5 mg/mL
mcg/unit: 25 mcg/unit
Dose: 250 mcg
Draw: 10 units

TB-500

Vial: 5 mg
Water: 2 mL
Conc: 2.5 mg/mL
mcg/unit: 25 mcg/unit
Dose: 2,500 mcg (2.5 mg)
Draw: 100 units (full syringe)

Semaglutide

Vial: 5 mg
Water: 2 mL
Conc: 2.5 mg/mL
mcg/unit: 25 mcg/unit
Dose: 250 mcg (0.25 mg)
Draw: 10 units

Ipamorelin

Vial: 5 mg
Water: 2.5 mL
Conc: 2 mg/mL
mcg/unit: 20 mcg/unit
Dose: 200 mcg
Draw: 10 units

CJC-1295 (no DAC)

Vial: 2 mg
Water: 2 mL
Conc: 1 mg/mL
mcg/unit: 10 mcg/unit
Dose: 100 mcg
Draw: 10 units

9. Storage & Shelf Life Guidelines

Unreconstituted (Lyophilized)

  • • Room temp: 30-60 days (most peptides)
  • • Refrigerator (2-8°C): 6-12 months
  • • Freezer (-20°C): 2+ years
  • • Keep away from light and moisture

Reconstituted (In Solution)

  • Always refrigerate at 2-8°C
  • • Use within 21-28 days
  • • Do not freeze reconstituted peptides
  • • Discard if cloudy or discolored

⚠️ Important: If your calculated vial duration exceeds 28 days, consider adding more water (to increase dose volume) or using smaller vials. Use our Vial Duration Calculator to check.

10. Multi-Peptide Stacks & Blends

Many users combine two or more peptides in a stack for synergistic effects. Each peptide is reconstituted and drawn separately, then injected at the same site (or different sites depending on preference).

BPC-157 + TB-500

The most popular healing stack. BPC-157 promotes angiogenesis and upregulates growth factors; TB-500 promotes cell migration and reduces inflammation. Together they provide complementary tissue repair mechanisms.

CJC-1295 (no DAC) + Ipamorelin

The gold standard GH secretagogue stack. CJC-1295 extends the GH pulse duration while ipamorelin provides selective GH release without raising cortisol or prolactin.

Use our Blend / Stack Calculator to plan multi-peptide reconstitution and track individual doses across your stack.

11. Frequently Asked Questions

Can I mix multiple peptides in the same vial?
Generally not recommended unless they are known compatible blends. Different peptides may interact, degrade, or have incompatible pH requirements. Reconstitute and store each peptide separately.
What if there is still powder stuck to the vial after adding water?
Gently swirl or roll the vial. Do not shake — vigorous agitation can denature the peptide. If powder remains after 5 minutes of gentle swirling, add a small amount of additional BAC water.
Can I use regular sterile water instead of BAC water?
Sterile water can be used but must be discarded after a single withdrawal because it has no preservative. Bacteriostatic water is preferred for multi-use over 28 days.
How do I know if my reconstituted peptide has gone bad?
Signs include cloudiness, particles, unusual color, or a sulfur-like smell. If any of these are present, discard the vial. Clear solutions with no odor are normal.
Why do some peptides come in different vial sizes?
Manufacturers offer common sizes like 2 mg, 5 mg, and 10 mg to accommodate different dose requirements and durations. Higher-dose protocols benefit from larger vials to reduce cost per dose.
Is it safe to inject the benzyl alcohol in BAC water?
Yes — the 0.9% benzyl alcohol concentration in bacteriostatic water is well below any toxic level for subcutaneous injection. It is widely used in FDA-approved injectable medications.

Ready to Calculate?

Use our free calculators — no account needed, no data collected.

Questions or data corrections? Contact us at contact@calcmypeptide.com