How to Store and Reconstitute Peptides Correctly (2026 Guide)
⚡ Quick Answer
Lyophilized (dry powder) peptides: Store at 2–8°C (refrigerator) away from light. Can be kept at room temperature for short shipping periods (up to 2–3 weeks) without significant degradation. Long-term storage: freeze at -20°C.
Reconstituted peptide solution: Refrigerate at 2–8°C immediately. Use within 28–30 days. Never freeze reconstituted solution. Keep away from light. Never shake.
Storing Dry Peptide Powder (Before Reconstitution)
Lyophilized peptide powder is highly stable in dry form — far more forgiving than reconstituted solution. The enemies of dry peptide stability are heat, moisture, and light.
| Storage Condition | Temperature | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator (ideal daily storage) | 2–8°C | 6–12 months | Best for regular use; minimal degradation |
| Freezer (long-term storage) | -20°C | 2+ years | Best for unused stock; allow to reach room temp before reconstituting |
| Room temperature (shipping/travel) | 15–25°C | 2–4 weeks max | Acceptable during transit; refrigerate on arrival |
| Avoid: Heat, sunlight, humidity | >30°C | Degrades rapidly | Never store in car, near window, or in bathroom |
Multiple Vials Strategy
If you purchased multiple vials, keep only your current-use vial in the fridge. Store remaining vials in the freezer at -20°C. This maximizes potency retention for stock you won’t use for months. Allow frozen vials to come fully to room temperature (15–20 min) before reconstituting — never reconstitute from frozen.
Reconstitution: The Right Way
| Step | Action | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Use bacteriostatic water (BAC water) only | Preserves solution 28–30 days; prevents bacterial growth |
| 2 | Allow peptide vial to reach room temperature first | Prevents cold-shock denaturation when liquid contacts powder |
| 3 | Swab both vial tops with 70% isopropyl alcohol; let dry | Sterility; prevents contamination |
| 4 | Aim BAC water stream at vial wall — not onto powder | Direct high-velocity contact can denature peptide bonds |
| 5 | Use 1–2ml BAC water per standard 5mg vial | 1ml = 5,000mcg/ml; 2ml = 2,500mcg/ml (easier for small doses) |
| 6 | Gently swirl or roll to mix — never shake | Shaking creates bubbles and mechanical force that breaks peptide chains |
| 7 | Solution should be clear and colorless | Cloudiness, particles, or color change = contamination or degradation |
Storing Reconstituted Peptide Solution
| Rule | Detail |
|---|---|
| Refrigerate immediately | Store at 2–8°C as soon as reconstituted. Never leave at room temperature for extended periods. |
| Use within 28–30 days | BAC water preserves for ~4 weeks. After this, bacterial growth risk increases and peptide potency declines. |
| Never freeze reconstituted solution | Ice crystal formation physically damages peptide chains and irreversibly reduces potency. |
| Store upright, away from light | Light (especially UV) degrades peptide bonds. Keep in a dark spot in the refrigerator door or in original cardboard packaging. |
| Minimize air exposure | Each needle insertion introduces a tiny amount of air. Use insulin syringes (fine gauge) to minimize this; avoid repeatedly opening vials unnecessarily. |
| Label with date and concentration | You will forget. Label everything: peptide name, concentration (mcg/ml), date reconstituted, expiry date (reconstitution date + 30 days). |
Shelf Life Reference by Peptide Type
| Peptide Category | Examples | Dry Powder Shelf Life | Reconstituted Shelf Life |
|---|---|---|---|
| GLP-1 / Weight Loss | Semaglutide, Tirzepatide | 12–24 months (frozen) | 28–30 days (refrigerated) |
| GHRPs | Ipamorelin, Hexarelin, GHRP-6 | 12–18 months (frozen) | 28–30 days |
| GHRH Analogues | CJC-1295, Sermorelin, Tesamorelin | 12–18 months (frozen) | 28–30 days |
| GH Fragments | AOD-9604 | 18–24 months (frozen) | 28–30 days |
| Healing / Recovery | BPC-157, TB-500 | 12–18 months (frozen) | 28–30 days |
| Anti-Aging | Epithalon, GHK-CU | 12–18 months (frozen) | 28–30 days |
Mistakes That Destroy Peptide Potency
| Mistake | Effect on Peptide | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Shaking vial vigorously | Mechanical disruption of peptide bonds; irreversible denaturation | Gently swirl or roll only |
| Using hot water for reconstitution | Heat denatures protein structure | Use room temperature BAC water only |
| Leaving reconstituted peptide at room temp | Bacterial growth; accelerated degradation | Refrigerate within 30 minutes of reconstitution |
| Freezing reconstituted solution | Ice crystal formation ruptures peptide chains | Never freeze; dry powder only for freezing |
| Exposing to UV/sunlight | Photodegradation of peptide bonds | Store in dark; keep in cardboard or covered |
| Using sterile water instead of BAC water | Bacterial contamination within hours; rapid degradation | Always use BAC water |
| Using peptide past 30 days reconstituted | Degraded potency; contamination risk | Label with expiry; discard after 30 days |
Frequently Asked Questions
My peptide solution looks slightly yellow — is it still good?
Slight yellow tint in some peptides (particularly BPC-157) is normal and not a sign of degradation. However, significant color change, cloudiness, visible particles, or unusual smell are signs of contamination or degradation — discard the vial. When in doubt, err on the side of caution and reconstitute a fresh vial.
Can I travel with reconstituted peptides?
Yes — most peptide users travel with reconstituted vials in a small cooler or insulated bag with an ice pack. Reconstituted peptides remain stable for several hours at room temperature (within reason). For flights, pack in carry-on in original vials with a note from your physician. TSA liquid rules apply (under 3.4oz/100ml for carry-on). Keep cold during travel as much as possible.
How do I know if my peptide has gone bad?
Signs of degraded or contaminated peptide: cloudy or discolored solution (beyond normal slight tint), visible floating particles, unusual smell, or solution that was left unrefrigerated for extended periods. If any of these are present, discard the vial. Using degraded peptide won’t necessarily cause harm, but it won’t work effectively.
How much BAC water should I use for reconstitution?
It depends on your dose size. The goal is to make dose calculations easy. Standard approach: add 1ml BAC water to a 5mg vial = 5,000mcg/ml (each 0.1ml = 500mcg). Or add 2ml = 2,500mcg/ml (each 0.1ml = 250mcg). Choose the concentration that makes your specific dose land on a clean syringe marking. See our injection guide for full dose calculation examples.
📚 References
- WHO. “Guidelines on the stability of pharmaceutical products.” World Health Organization, 2019.
- USP. “Pharmaceutical Compounding — Sterile Preparations.” United States Pharmacopeia, 2020.
- Bhatt D. et al. “Stability of lyophilized peptide formulations.” Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 2015.
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