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Research Tool

The Free Peptide Calculator for Reconstitution, Dosage & Injection Volume

Instantly calculate peptide reconstitution volumes, injection doses in mcg, and insulin syringe units. Accurate results for BPC-157, TB-500, Semaglutide, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, and 50+ research peptides. No sign-up required.
  • Free & Instant
  • No Sign-Up Required
  • Research Use Only
  • 50+ Peptides Supported
  • Results in mcg · mg · IU · Units
Peptide Calculator – Reconstitution, Dosage & BAC Water Tool

How to Use the Peptide Calculator

Whether you’re reconstituting BPC-157, preparing a TB-500 injection, or calculating your Semaglutide dose, this step-by-step guide walks you through every calculation.
1
Determine Your Vial Size

Most research peptides are sold in vials of 2 mg, 5 mg, or 10 mg. Check your vial label. Common sizes include 5 mg (5,000 mcg) for BPC-157 and 10 mg (10,000 mcg) for TB-500. Enter this value in the Peptide Vial Amount field of the peptide reconstitution calculator.

2
Choose Your BAC Water Volume

Bacteriostatic water (BAC water) is the standard solvent for peptide reconstitution. The volume you choose sets your concentration. Adding 2 mL to a 5 mg vial gives 2,500 mcg/mL — a common starting point for most peptide research protocols. More water = lower concentration; less water = higher concentration per mL.

3
Calculate Your Concentration

Use the Reconstitution tab to see your concentration in both mg/mL and mcg/mL instantly. This is the foundation of every subsequent peptide dose calculation. Write it down or bookmark the page for future reference.

4
Enter Your Desired Dose

Switch to the Dosage per Injection tab and enter your target dose in mcg. A common BPC-157 research protocol uses 250–500 mcg per injection. The calculator shows the exact mL to draw and the corresponding units on a U-100 insulin syringe.

5
Draw the Correct Syringe Volume

Use a U-100 insulin syringe for precise small-volume peptide injections. The syringe has markings from 0–100 units, where 100 units = 1 mL. The syringe unit calculator converts your mL value directly to syringe markings — no mental math required.

Peptide Dosage Formulas

Reconstitution Formula

Concentration (mcg/mL) = Vial Amount (mcg) ÷ BAC Water Added (mL)

Injection Volume Formula

Injection Volume (mL) = Desired Dose (mcg) ÷ Concentration (mcg/mL)

Syringe Units Formula (U-100)

Syringe Units = Injection Volume (mL) × 100

Why Accurate Peptide Dosing Matters

Peptide research requires precise measurement. Small errors in reconstitution or dosage calculation can significantly affect experimental outcomes and data reliability.

Prevent Reconstitution Errors

Incorrect BAC water volume changes the peptide concentration, making every subsequent dose calculation inaccurate. Our peptide reconstitution calculator eliminates guesswork with instant, verified results.

Precise Injection Volumes

Drawing 0.05 mL (5 units) vs 0.15 mL (15 units) from an insulin syringe can mean a 3× dose difference. The insulin syringe unit calculator maps volumes to syringe markings exactly.

Consistent Research Protocols

Calculate vial duration and daily volumes to maintain consistent protocols across weeks without running out of compound unexpectedly.

Multiple Unit Conversions

Switch seamlessly between mcg, mg, g, and ng — useful when comparing published research papers that use different unit conventions for the same peptide.

Popular Peptides — Reconstitution & Dosage Reference

Common research peptides, standard vial sizes, and typical reconstitution configurations used in published studies. Use these as starting points with the peptide calculator above.
Peptide Vial BAC Water Concentration Dose Range Category
BPC-157 5 mg 2 mL 2,500 mcg/mL 250–500 mcg/dose Tissue Repair
TB-500 (Thymosin β4) 10 mg 2 mL 5,000 mcg/mL 2,000–2,500 mcg/dose Tissue Repair
CJC-1295 (no DAC) 2 mg 1 mL 2,000 mcg/mL 100–300 mcg/dose GH Releasing
Ipamorelin 2 mg 2 mL 1,000 mcg/mL 200–300 mcg/dose GH Releasing
Semaglutide 5 mg 2 mL 2,500 mcg/mL 250–2,400 mcg/week GLP-1 / Metabolic
Tirzepatide 5 mg 2 mL 2,500 mcg/mL 2,500–15,000 mcg/week GIP/GLP-1 / Metabolic
Sermorelin 3 mg 1 mL 3,000 mcg/mL 200–500 mcg/dose GH Releasing
PT-141 (Bremelanotide) 10 mg 2 mL 5,000 mcg/mL 1,000–2,000 mcg/dose Melanocortin
Selank 5 mg 5 mL 1,000 mcg/mL 250–500 mcg/dose Nootropic
Semax 30 mg 30 mL 1,000 mcg/mL 300–600 mcg/dose Nootropic
GHK-Cu (Copper Peptide) 50 mg 50 mL 1,000 mcg/mL 200–400 mcg/dose Cosmetic / Repair
DSIP 2 mg 2 mL 1,000 mcg/mL 100–300 mcg/dose Sleep / Recovery

All values are for research reference only. Concentrations depend on actual BAC water volume used. Always verify using the reconstitution calculator above.

Peptide Reconstitution Guide — Step by Step

Reconstitution is the process of dissolving a lyophilized (freeze-dried) peptide powder in bacteriostatic water to create an injectable solution.

What is Bacteriostatic Water (BAC Water)?

Bacteriostatic water is sterile water containing 0.9% benzyl alcohol as a preservative. The benzyl alcohol prevents bacterial growth, allowing reconstituted peptide solutions to remain stable for 4–6 weeks when refrigerated at 2–8°C. It is the preferred solvent for peptide reconstitution because it significantly extends the usability window compared to plain sterile water

How Much BAC Water Should I Add to a Peptide Vial?

There is no single correct amount — the ideal BAC water volume depends on your target dose and how precisely you need to measure it. Here are common configurations for a 5 mg peptide vial:

Add 1 mL BAC water → 5,000 mcg/mL (50 mcg per unit on U-100 syringe)

Add 2 mL BAC water → 2,500 mcg/mL (25 mcg per unit on U-100 syringe)

Add 5 mL BAC water → 1,000 mcg/mL (10 mcg per unit on U-100 syringe)

A good rule of thumb: choose the BAC water volume that makes your injection volume easy to measure. If your dose is 250 mcg and you use 2 mL BAC water in a 5 mg vial, you’ll draw exactly 10 units on a U-100 syringe — clean and precise. For a full guide on BAC water for peptides and storage, visit our reconstitution guide.

Reconstitution Step-by-Step

1
Prepare a Clean Environment

Wipe the rubber stopper of your peptide vial and BAC water vial with a 70% isopropyl alcohol swab. Allow to air-dry for 30 seconds before puncturing.

2
Draw and Inject BAC Water Slowly

Draw your desired BAC water volume into a syringe. Inject slowly along the side wall of the vial — never directly onto the peptide powder, as forceful contact can denature fragile peptide bonds.

3
Swirl Gently — Never Shake

Gently swirl the vial in a circular motion until the powder is completely dissolved. Never shake a peptide vial. Mechanical agitation creates air bubbles and degrades peptide structure.

4
Refrigerate Immediately After Reconstitution

Store reconstituted vials at 2–8°C (standard refrigerator temperature). Keep away from direct light. A reconstituted peptide solution in bacteriostatic water remains stable for 4–6 weeks when stored correctly.

Peptide Storage Before Reconstitution

Lyophilized peptide powder is far more stable than reconstituted solution. Sealed vials under nitrogen or argon can be stored at -20°C (freezer) for 12–24 months. At room temperature, peptide powder is generally stable for 3–6 months if protected from heat and light. Once reconstituted, refrigerate immediately and use within 4–6 weeks.

Understanding Peptide Units — mcg, mg, IU & Syringe Units

Peptide dosages are expressed in several different units. Understanding the relationships between mcg, mg, IU, and how many units on an insulin syringe to draw is essential for accurate peptide dose calculation. Need help with mcg to mg conversion for peptides? See the chart below.

mcg vs mg — What's the Difference?

Both are units of mass, but at very different scales.

  • 1 g = 1,000 mg
  • 1 mg = 1,000 mcg
  • 1 mcg = 1,000 ng
  • 5 mg vial = 5,000 mcg
  • 10 mg vial = 10,000 mcg

How to Read an Insulin Syringe

U-100 insulin syringes hold 1 mL max and are marked 0–100 units. Each unit = 0.01 mL.

10 units = 0.10 mL
20 units = 0.20 mL
50 units = 0.50 mL
100 units = 1.00 mL

International Units (IU)

Some compounds — notably HGH and certain gonadotropins — are measured in International Units (IU) rather than mcg/mg. IU is a biological activity unit, not a mass unit, so conversion depends on the specific compound. For HGH, the general approximation is 1 mg ≈ 3 IU, though this varies by manufacturer.

Insulin Syringe Quick Reference — Units to mcg Chart

Based on 5 mg vial + 1 mL BAC water = 5,000 mcg/mL concentration
Dose (mcg)Units Drawn (U-100)Volume (mL)
50 mcg1 unit0.01 mL
100 mcg2 units0.02 mL
150 mcg3 units0.03 mL
200 mcg4 units0.04 mL
250 mcg5 units0.05 mL
300 mcg6 units0.06 mL
500 mcg10 units0.10 mL
1,000 mcg20 units0.20 mL
Concentrations change based on your BAC water volume. Use the peptide calculator above for your exact configuration.

How Reconstitution Works

A step-by-step visual guide to safely reconstituting your peptides.
1
Draw Bacteriostatic Water

Using a sterile syringe, draw your desired amount of bacteriostatic water (BAC water). Typical volumes range from 1mL to 3mL depending on concentration needs.

2
Inject Into the Vial

Slowly inject the BAC water into the peptide vial along the glass wall. Never spray directly onto the powder — let it trickle down gently.

3
Gently Swirl to Dissolve

Roll or gently swirl the vial between your fingers until the peptide is fully dissolved. Never shake vigorously as this damages the peptide structure.

4
Draw Your Dose

Using the calculator above, determine how many units to draw for your desired dose. Pull back the syringe slowly for precision.

Understanding Concentration

10mg peptide + 1 mL water

10,000

mcg/mL

High concentration
10mg peptide + 2 mL water

5,000

mcg/mL
Standard
10mg peptide + 3 mL water

3,333

mcg/mL

Diluted

Key insight: More water = lower concentration = larger injection volume per dose. Less water = higher concentration = smaller, more precise doses.

Reading Your Syringe

1mL (100 unit)

Each tick = 0.01 mL. Most common for peptide research.
100 marks
Standard dosing

0.5mL (50 unit)

Each tick = 0.01 mL. Better visibility for low-volume doses.
50 marks
Smaller doses

0.3mL (30 unit)

Each tick = 0.01 mL. Ideal for very small, precise amounts.
30 marks
Micro-dosing

Frequently Asked Questions About the Peptide Calculator

Get answers to the most common questions about peptide reconstitution, dosing, and calculations. Also check our in-depth guide on how to reconstitute BPC-157 and other research peptides.

How do I calculate peptide dosage in mcg?
Peptides are short chains of amino acids that act as tiny instructions for cells. In research, peptides are used to probe pathways, mimic protein regions, or serve as building blocks for assays and method development.
How much BAC water do I add to a peptide vial?
Most researchers add 1–2 mL of bacteriostatic water to a standard 5 mg peptide vial. Adding 2 mL creates a 2,500 mcg/mL concentration, making a 250 mcg dose equal to exactly 10 units on a U-100 syringe. There is no universally correct amount — choose the volume that produces easy-to-measure injection volumes for your specific dose.
Can I use sterile water instead of BAC water for peptides?
Yes, but sterile water without a preservative should be used within 24 hours of reconstitution. BAC water contains 0.9% benzyl alcohol which inhibits bacterial growth, extending the stable use window to 4–6 weeks when refrigerated. For any multi-dose research vial, BAC water is strongly preferred.
How many units on an insulin syringe is 100 mcg?
It depends on your reconstitution concentration. If you added 1 mL to a 5 mg vial (5,000 mcg/mL), 100 mcg = 2 units. If you added 2 mL to a 5 mg vial (2,500 mcg/mL), 100 mcg = 4 units. Use the peptide dosage calculator above with your specific values for an exact answer.
What is the difference between BPC-157 and TB-500?
To reconstitute BPC-157: (1) Clean the vial rubber stopper with an alcohol swab. (2) Draw 1–2 mL of BAC water into a syringe. (3) Slowly inject the BAC water along the side wall of the vial. (4) Gently swirl — never shake. (5) Refrigerate at 2–8°C immediately. Use the reconstitution calculator above to determine the exact concentration based on your BAC water volume.
How long does a reconstituted peptide vial last?
BPC-157 is a 15 amino acid peptide derived from a stomach protein, studied for tissue healing, gut health, and joint repair — typically dosed at 250–500 mcg per injection. TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a 43 amino acid protein studied for cell migration and wound healing — typically dosed at 2,000–2,500 mcg per injection. Both are common in research protocols, often used together.
How do I calculate Semaglutide dosage?
BPC-157 is a 15 amino acid peptide derived from a stomach protein, studied for tissue healing, gut health, and joint repair — typically dosed at 250–500 mcg per injection. TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a 43 amino acid protein studied for cell migration and wound healing — typically dosed at 2,000–2,500 mcg per injection. Both are common in research protocols, often used together.
Is this peptide calculator free to use?
BPC-157 is a 15 amino acid peptide derived from a stomach protein, studied for tissue healing, gut health, and joint repair — typically dosed at 250–500 mcg per injection. TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a 43 amino acid protein studied for cell migration and wound healing — typically dosed at 2,000–2,500 mcg per injection. Both are common in research protocols, often used together.
What is the difference between mcg and mg in peptides?
BPC-157 is a 15 amino acid peptide derived from a stomach protein, studied for tissue healing, gut health, and joint repair — typically dosed at 250–500 mcg per injection. TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a 43 amino acid protein studied for cell migration and wound healing — typically dosed at 2,000–2,500 mcg per injection. Both are common in research protocols, often used together.
How do I reconstitute BPC-157?
BPC-157 is a 15 amino acid peptide derived from a stomach protein, studied for tissue healing, gut health, and joint repair — typically dosed at 250–500 mcg per injection. TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a 43 amino acid protein studied for cell migration and wound healing — typically dosed at 2,000–2,500 mcg per injection. Both are common in research protocols, often used together.

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This peptide calculator is intended strictly for research and educational purposes. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Peptides referenced on this page are for laboratory research only and are not approved for human use by the FDA. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional before handling or administering any peptide compound. Results provided by this tool are for informational purposes only and should be verified independently.
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