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How to Start Using Peptides Safely: A Complete Beginner’s Guide to Sourcing, Dosing, Administration, and Protocol Design

Category: Getting Started · Published April 24, 2026

If you have read through the rest of this series and you are ready to actually start, this is the guide for you. Starting peptides well is not complicated, but there are several places people go wrong: sketchy sources, bad reconstitution math, aggressive first-cycle dosing, no monitoring, and no clear goal. This guide walks you through starting peptides the right way, step by step.

This is educational content, not medical advice.

Step 1: Define Your Goal Before You Pick a Peptide

The single most common beginner mistake is picking a peptide first, then retroactively justifying why it fits. Do the reverse.

Step 2: Get Baseline Bloodwork Before You Start

Minimum panel: CMP, CBC, lipid panel (including ApoB and Lp(a)), HbA1c and fasting insulin, hsCRP, IGF-1, complete thyroid, sex hormones, vitamin D, B12, ferritin. Rerun the relevant panel at 8–12 weeks into your first cycle.

Step 3: Work With a Qualified Clinician

Who to look for: functional or integrative medicine physicians with peptide experience; anti-aging/longevity clinicians; hormone optimization clinics; sports medicine physicians; established peptide-specialist telehealth clinics.

A good clinician reviews goals, orders labs, prescribes through a licensed compounding pharmacy, sets a clear protocol, monitors at intervals, and adjusts based on response.

Step 4: Understand Your Sourcing Options

Option A: Compounding pharmacy via clinician (recommended)

Pharmaceutical compounding standards (503A or 503B), clinician-pharmacy accountability. Higher cost but highest quality and legal clarity.

Option B: Research chemical suppliers

Labeled “for research use only.” A good supplier provides a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis (COA) from an independent third-party lab (identity via mass spec, purity via HPLC, endotoxin testing). Red flags: no COA, suspiciously cheap, no accountability, pre-reconstituted product sold ready to inject.

Option C: Overseas / non-vetted sources

Avoid. Risk-to-savings ratio is terrible.

Step 5: Understand Peptide Reconstitution

Most injectable peptides ship as lyophilized powder. Reconstitute with bacteriostatic water (sterile water with 0.9% benzyl alcohol).

  1. Wipe both vials with alcohol swab.
  2. Draw desired volume of BAC water (1–3 mL).
  3. Inject BAC water slowly down the side of the peptide vial — don’t blast it.
  4. Swirl gently. Do not shake — many peptides are shear-sensitive.
  5. Let sit if needed. You should have a completely clear solution.
  6. Store refrigerated. Most reconstituted peptides are stable for 2–4 weeks refrigerated.

Dose math: if you have 5 mg in a vial and add 2 mL of BAC water, concentration is 2,500 mcg/mL. On an insulin syringe, 1 mL = 100 units, so each unit = 25 mcg. A 250 mcg dose = 10 units.

Simple reconstitution reference

VialBAC waterConcentration100 mcg250 mcg500 mcg
5 mg2 mL2,500 mcg/mL4 units10 units20 units
5 mg2.5 mL2,000 mcg/mL5 units12.5 units25 units
10 mg2 mL5,000 mcg/mL2 units5 units10 units
10 mg5 mL2,000 mcg/mL5 units12.5 units25 units

Write concentration and units-per-dose on a label taped to the vial.

Step 6: Learn Injection Technique

Most peptides are subcutaneous (SubQ) injections — into the fat layer just under the skin. Use 1 mL insulin syringes with an integrated 29–31 gauge × 5/16” or 1/2” needle.

Sites: abdomen (at least 2” from navel), outer thigh, love-handle area. Rotate sites.

Steps:

  1. Wash hands.
  2. Wipe vial top with alcohol, let dry.
  3. Draw air equal to dose; inject into vial to prevent vacuum.
  4. Invert vial, draw dose to correct unit mark.
  5. Flick out large air bubbles.
  6. Wipe injection site with alcohol swab.
  7. Pinch a roll of fat (about an inch).
  8. Insert needle at 45–90°, quickly and smoothly.
  9. Inject slowly (3–5 seconds).
  10. Withdraw at same angle.
  11. Press gently with swab.
  12. Dispose in sharps container. Never reuse.

Step 7: Start With One Peptide, Not a Stack

Start with one peptide for at least 2–4 weeks. Establish a baseline, note how you respond, then add the second peptide if the protocol calls for it. Exception: CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin are almost always started together because they work synergistically.

Step 8: Start With Conservative Doses

PeptideStarting doseFrequencyRoute
BPC-157250 mcg1–2× dailySubQ
TB-5002–2.5 mg2× weeklySubQ/IM
CJC-1295 (no DAC)100 mcg1–3× dailySubQ
Ipamorelin100 mcg1–3× dailySubQ
Sermorelin100–300 mcgNightlySubQ
Tesamorelin1 mgDailySubQ
Semax100–300 mcgDailyIntranasal
Selank100–300 mcgDailyIntranasal
GHK-Cu (SubQ)1–2 mgDailySubQ
Epitalon5–10 mg total/courseShort course 1–2×/yrSubQ
PT-1411 mgOn demandSubQ
MOTS-c5–10 mg2–3× weeklySubQ
Thymosin alpha-11.6 mg2× weeklySubQ

Step 9: Cycle Properly

Step 10: Monitor, Adjust, and Be Patient

Track objective labs at 8–12 weeks; body composition every 8–12 weeks; subjective metrics weekly (1–10 ratings for sleep, energy, recovery, mood, etc.); any new symptoms early.

Peptides take 2–6 weeks to produce noticeable effects and 8–12 weeks to fully express. Don’t judge on week 1.

Safety: Contraindications

Consult a physician carefully before starting if: active cancer, recent cancer history, pregnancy or breastfeeding, uncontrolled diabetes, severe kidney/liver disease, severe hypertension or cardiovascular disease, autoimmune conditions, or other medications (especially blood thinners, immunosuppressants, insulin, hormone therapy).

Red Flags in the Peptide Space

Common Mistakes Beginners Make

  1. Starting with a stack of 3+ peptides at once.
  2. Going too high, too fast.
  3. Poor sourcing.
  4. Reconstitution math errors.
  5. No baseline labs.
  6. Skipping cycles.
  7. Not updating the clinician when side effects appear.
  8. Quitting at week 2 because “nothing happened.”
  9. Ignoring the fundamentals (sleep, training, nutrition).
  10. Running peptides indefinitely “just in case.”

A Sensible First Protocol Template

Weeks 1–8: CJC-1295 (no DAC) 100 mcg + Ipamorelin 100 mcg, nightly SubQ. Optional BPC-157 250 mcg if there’s an injury or gut issue. Optional GHK-Cu topical for skin.

Monitoring: baseline labs before starting; weekly subjective tracking; labs at week 8.

Weeks 9–12: off all peptides. Track how baseline holds.

At week 12: decide to continue, maintain with fundamentals, or revise based on results.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I really need a doctor to start peptides?

Strongly recommended. Monitoring, quality sourcing, and protocol design are worth the cost for most people.

Can I start without bloodwork?

You can. You shouldn’t. You’ll have no way to know whether it helped or hurt you.

What’s the first peptide I should try?

Either BPC-157 (if you have a specific injury or gut issue) or a CJC+Ipamorelin GH stack (for general optimization).

How much do peptides cost per month?

$150–300 per peptide for research-use-only sourcing; $300–600 for clinician-prescribed compounded. More complex stacks run higher.

Do peptide injections hurt?

Almost not at all with a 29–31 gauge insulin needle and good technique.

How do I know a peptide is working?

Objective labs, body composition, sleep and recovery metrics, and consistent subjective changes over weeks — not one good night or one good workout.

What if I have a reaction?

Stop, document, contact your clinician. Minor injection-site irritation is usually not a reaction; systemic symptoms (rash, breathing difficulty, severe headache, cardiovascular symptoms) warrant immediate medical attention.

Final Thoughts

Starting peptides well is a discipline, not a purchase. Define the goal. Get the labs. Pick the right source. Get the dose right. Start slow. Track rigorously. Cycle intentionally. Adjust based on data. Work with a clinician. Respect the compounds. Don’t chase hype.

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Peptide use carries legal, regulatory, and health considerations that vary by jurisdiction. Always consult a qualified physician before beginning any peptide protocol.