Free — No Signup — All 5 Modes Unlocked

The peptide calculator I wish existed.

I built this for myself first — then opened it up because peptide research deserves better tools. Free. All five modes work. Every step of the math shown so you actually understand the answer instead of just trusting it.

These are common research configurations — not personal recommendations.

Concentration
Mcg per unit
Draw to
— units
050100

How we got there:

Enter your numbers — the math updates live.

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This calculator is provided strictly for educational and research purposes only. Nothing here is medical advice. Reference ranges reflect amounts published in research literature, not personal recommendations. Always work with a qualified healthcare provider before making health decisions.

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What's BAC water?

Bacteriostatic water is sterile water with 0.9% benzyl alcohol. The preservative prevents bacterial growth, so it's the standard diluent for multi-draw research vials.

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Why "units" on a syringe?

An insulin syringe is marked in units. U-100 means 100 units per 1 mL — so 25 units = 0.25 mL. That's why we convert your dose into units to draw.

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Quality reminder

Reconstitute slowly down the side of the vial, swirl — don't shake — and refrigerate at 2–8°C. Most peptides are ~28 days stable once mixed; always verify per compound.

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What is a peptide reconstitution calculator?

Research peptides ship as a lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder. Before they can be studied in liquid form they must be reconstituted — dissolved in bacteriostatic (BAC) water. A reconstitution calculator does the conversion for you: it takes the amount of peptide in the vial and the volume of BAC water you add, works out the concentration, and tells you exactly how many units to draw on an insulin syringe for your target dose.

The math itself is simple but easy to get wrong under pressure. The universal formula is: concentration = vial (mg) ÷ BAC water (mL); mcg per unit = (concentration × 1000) ÷ syringe units per mL; units to draw = desired dose (mcg) ÷ mcg per unit. This tool shows every one of those steps so you learn the logic, not just the answer.

BAC water is sterile water containing 0.9% benzyl alcohol, a mild preservative that keeps a multi-draw vial from growing bacteria. It's the standard diluent for research peptides that will be accessed more than once.

Who is this tool for?

Anyone doing peptide research who wants to get the concentration and draw volume right the first time — from complete beginners reconstituting their first vial to experienced researchers running blends and split-dose schedules. All five modes are free, with no signup.

How to use this calculator (4 steps)

1) Pick a preset or choose a mode. 2) Enter the vial amount and the BAC water you're adding. 3) Enter your target dose and pick your syringe type. 4) Read the big "draw to" number and check the visual syringe — the math box shows exactly how it was calculated.

Common reconstitution scenarios

CompoundVialBAC waterConcentration
BPC-1575 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL
TB-5005 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL
Semaglutide2 mg2 mL1 mg/mL
Tirzepatide5 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL
Retatrutide10 mg2 mL5 mg/mL
CJC-1295 (no DAC)5 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL
Ipamorelin5 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL
MOTS-c10 mg2 mL5 mg/mL
GHK-Cu50 mg5 mL10 mg/mL

Why I built this

Because the free calculators out there are either broken, locked behind a signup, or hide the math. I wanted a tool that's genuinely free, runs all five modes, and shows every step so you actually understand what you're doing. No shortcuts, no gimmicks — just a better tool for the space. — Coach Cam