Important Safety Notice

This guide provides educational safety information only. It does NOT recommend or endorse any specific peptide sources, sellers, or vendors. Our goal is to teach you how to evaluate quality and identify red flags, not where to buy. Purchasing unregulated peptides carries significant health and legal risks. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider. PeptideScholar does not facilitate, profit from, or endorse the sale of unapproved peptides.

How to Evaluate Peptide Sources Safely

This is not a source list. This is a guide to developing the skills to verify quality, identify scams, and understand the legal landscape — so you can protect yourself.

The Legal Landscape: Know What You're Dealing With

There are fundamentally two legal categories for obtaining peptides in the United States. Understanding this distinction is essential for your safety.

✓ Legitimate Pathway

  • • Licensed healthcare provider evaluation
  • • Valid prescription issued
  • • Dispensed by licensed pharmacy (retail or compounding)
  • • FDA-regulated supply chain
  • • USP compounding standards (503A/503B)
  • • State board of pharmacy oversight
  • • Batch-specific quality testing
  • • Sterility and purity verified

✗ Risk Pathway

  • • No prescription or medical evaluation
  • • 'Research chemical' or 'not for human use' labeling
  • • Unlicensed seller — no pharmacy license
  • • No FDA oversight or inspection
  • • No sterility standards enforced
  • • Unverifiable or fake COAs
  • • Unknown purity, contaminants, or identity
  • • Potential legal liability for buyer

FDA Category 2: In 2024, the FDA placed several popular peptides on the Category 2 list of bulk drug substances that cannot be used in compounding. This includes BPC-157 and certain growth hormone releasing peptides (GHRPs). These peptides cannot be legally compounded by any US pharmacy — 503A or 503B. Any seller offering compounded BPC-157 or Category 2 peptides is operating outside FDA regulations. FDA Compounding Resources →

How to Read a Certificate of Analysis (COA)

A COA is the primary quality document for peptides. Here's what a legitimate one contains — and how to spot a fake.

What a legitimate COA must include:

!Testing laboratory name + accreditation
!Unique report number + date of testing
!Batch/lot number — must match product
!Quantitative purity result (e.g., 99.2% by HPLC)
Identity confirmation (mass spectrometry)
Heavy metals testing (lead, mercury, arsenic)
Endotoxin testing (EU/mg)
Sterility testing (USP <71>)
Residual solvents testing
Analyst signature and review date

How to verify a COA is real: Do not trust a PDF alone. Contact the testing laboratory directly using their publicly listed contact information (not contact info provided by the seller). Provide the report number and batch number and ask them to confirm the results. Reputable third-party testing laboratories will verify their reports.

Red flags on COAs: Missing batch/lot number, no quantitative purity data (just 'pass/fail'), the testing lab doesn't exist or has no web presence, the COA is from a lab that doesn't actually test peptides, or the seller refuses to provide batch-specific COAs and only shows a 'representative' one.

Tools: Use our COA Verifier Tool to walk through a systematic verification checklist.

Red Flags: How to Spot a Problematic Seller

These patterns should make you stop and reconsider. They are not exhaustive — use your judgment.

Critical

No prescription required

Any seller offering prescription peptides (semaglutide, tirzepatide, etc.) without requiring a prescription is operating illegally. FDA-approved peptides require a prescription by law. This is the single most important red flag.

Critical

Vague about sourcing or testing

Legitimate pharmacies and manufacturers are transparent about their quality control. If a seller cannot provide batch-specific COAs from accredited third-party labs, or is evasive about their supply chain, do not trust their products.

High

Prices far below market

FDA-approved GLP-1 agonists have known price ranges (Wegovy ~$1,300/month cash price, compounded versions $200-500/month). Significantly lower prices suggest counterfeit, diluted, or mislabeled products. If it seems too good to be true, it is.

High

Marketing 'research chemicals' for human use

Products labeled 'for research purposes only' or 'not for human consumption' that are clearly marketed for human use are operating in a legal gray area at best, illegally at worst. These products have no quality control, no sterility testing, and no regulatory oversight.

High

No physical address or verifiable license

Legitimate pharmacies have a physical address and verifiable state license. Be wary of sellers with only a PO box, no address at all, or a license number that cannot be verified through the state board of pharmacy website.

Medium

Aggressive marketing or urgency tactics

Limited-time offers, countdown timers, 'while supplies last,' and high-pressure sales tactics are inconsistent with legitimate healthcare. Licensed pharmacies do not market this way. These tactics are common among scam sellers.

Critical

Fake or recycled COAs

Some sellers provide fraudulent COAs — either completely fabricated, recycled from old batches, or from unaccredited labs. Always verify a COA by contacting the testing laboratory directly using the lab's publicly listed contact information (not contact info provided by the seller). A COA from 'Janoshik' or 'MZ Biolabs' should be verifiable through those labs' websites.

The Legitimate Pathway: Telehealth Prescribing

If you're interested in FDA-approved peptide therapies (GLP-1 agonists like semaglutide and tirzepatide), the legitimate pathway is through a licensed healthcare provider. Here's how to verify a provider is legitimate:

1

Verify the provider's medical license through your state medical board website. Every state has an online license lookup.

Search '[state name] medical board license lookup' — it takes 30 seconds.

2

Confirm the provider conducts a real medical evaluation — not just a 2-minute questionnaire.

A legitimate telehealth visit includes medical history review, current medications, allergies, and appropriate lab work or prior records.

3

Verify the pharmacy filling your prescription is licensed by your state board of pharmacy.

Search '[state name] board of pharmacy license lookup' and confirm the pharmacy's license is active and in good standing.

4

Be extremely cautious of any provider that prescribes without an evaluation, or any pharmacy that ships without a prescription.

This is illegal under federal and state law.

Peptide Sourcing Safety: FAQ