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The Complete Peptide Reconstitution Guide: Mixing Lyophilized Peptides Correctly

May 3, 2026 · Education

Most peptides arrive as a lyophilized powder — freeze-dried into a small puck at the bottom of the vial. Before you can inject anything, you need to mix it with a sterile solvent. This is reconstitution, and getting it right matters for both safety and dosing accuracy.

What you need

  • Bacteriostatic water — sterile water with 0.9% benzyl alcohol added as a preservative. This is the standard solvent for most peptides. Once mixed, it stays good for ~28 days at fridge temp.
  • Sterile saline (0.9% NaCl) — an isotonic alternative. Use this for peptides that sting on injection (GHK-Cu being the famous one). The matching tonicity reduces injection-site discomfort dramatically.
  • Sterile (preservative-free) water — for peptides that will be used immediately or stored frozen.
  • A 1 mL or 3 mL syringe with a 22-25 gauge needle for drawing solvent.
  • Alcohol swabs.

Standard reconstitution volumes

Most peptide vials are sold in 5 mg or 10 mg sizes. Here are the common conversions:

Vial size Bac water added Concentration Result on a U-100 insulin syringe
5 mg 1 mL 5 mg/mL 10 units = 500 mcg
5 mg 2 mL 2.5 mg/mL 10 units = 250 mcg
10 mg 2 mL 5 mg/mL 10 units = 500 mcg
10 mg 5 mL 2 mg/mL 10 units = 200 mcg

The “right” volume depends on your dose. Lower concentration = easier to draw small doses precisely.

Step-by-step technique

  1. Wipe both vial stoppers — bac water and peptide — with an alcohol swab. Let dry for 10 seconds.
  2. Draw your bac water into a syringe at the volume you calculated.
  3. Insert the needle into the peptide vial at a shallow angle so the bac water runs down the inside wall of the vial. Never squirt directly onto the lyophilized powder. The force destroys peptide bonds.
  4. Slowly press the plunger over 5-10 seconds.
  5. Swirl gently to dissolve. Do not shake. Shaking creates foam, denatures peptides, and reduces potency.
  6. Wait 30-60 seconds. If anything didn’t dissolve, swirl again. The solution should be clear.
  7. Label the vial with the date and final concentration. You’ll thank yourself in 3 weeks.

Storage after mixing

  • Refrigerate at 2-8°C (38-46°F). The door is fine; the back of the fridge can occasionally freeze.
  • Do not freeze reconstituted peptides. Ice crystals damage peptide bonds.
  • Most peptides reconstituted in bac water are stable for 28 days. BPC-157 is shorter (14 days). Tirzepatide and Retatrutide are longer (30+ days).
  • Protect from light. The original vial works fine, or use amber glass.

Common mistakes

  • Shaking the vial. Always swirl. Foam = damaged peptides.
  • Direct stream onto powder. Run the bac water down the side wall.
  • Wrong solvent. Sterile water without bacteriostatic preservative is fine for same-day use, but won’t store. Plain tap water is never acceptable.
  • Forgetting the math. Always recalculate when you change vial size or solvent volume.
  • Mixing different peptides in the same vial. Don’t. Stability and potency interactions are unpredictable.

Disclaimer: Reference information only. Compounds sold for research use. Consult a healthcare provider familiar with peptide therapy before any administration.