Peptide Dosage Calculator

Enter your vial size, how much BAC water you added, and your desired dose—this calculator gives you the exact syringe units to draw, plus a visual diagram showing the fill line on your syringe.

Peptide Dosage Calculator

Calculate reconstitution concentration, injection volume, and syringe units

Quick Presets
mg
mL

Your Results

Concentration
Volume Per Dose
Syringe Units
Doses Per Vial
Syringe Fill Level

For research and educational purposes only. This calculator is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any peptide.


How to Use This Calculator

Step 1: Select a Preset or Enter Custom Values

Click BPC-157, TB-500, or Tirzepatide to auto-fill common vial sizes and starting doses. Or enter your own values manually—the calculator works with any peptide.

Step 2: Enter Your Vial Information

  • Peptide in Vial — The total amount of peptide in your vial, in milligrams (mg). This is printed on the vial label.
  • Bacteriostatic Water — How much BAC water you added (or plan to add) during reconstitution, in milliliters (mL).

Step 3: Enter Your Desired Dose

  • Desired Dose — The amount you want per injection.
  • Dose Unit — Select micrograms (mcg) or milligrams (mg). BPC-157 is typically dosed in mcg. TB-500 and tirzepatide are dosed in mg.

Step 4: Select Your Syringe

  • 100-unit (1 mL) — Most common. Tick marks every 2 units.
  • 50-unit (0.5 mL) — Better precision for small doses. Tick marks every 1 unit.
  • 30-unit (0.3 mL) — Best precision. Tick marks every 0.5 units.

Step 5: Read Your Results

  • Concentration — How much peptide per mL of solution after reconstitution.
  • Volume Per Dose — The exact mL to draw per injection.
  • Syringe Units — The number to draw to on your insulin syringe. This is the number you actually use.
  • Doses Per Vial — How many total injections you’ll get from one vial.

The syringe diagram below the results shows exactly where to fill to on your syringe.


Understanding the Math

You don’t need this section to use the calculator, but understanding the math helps you double-check your work.

Concentration

Concentration = Peptide Amount (mg) ÷ Water Added (mL)

Example: 5 mg peptide + 2 mL BAC water = 2.5 mg/mL (or 2,500 mcg/mL)

Volume Per Dose

Volume = Desired Dose ÷ Concentration

Example: 250 mcg dose ÷ 2,500 mcg/mL = 0.1 mL

Syringe Units

On a standard 100-unit (1 mL) insulin syringe, 1 mL = 100 units. So:

Units = Volume (mL) × 100

Example: 0.1 mL × 100 = 10 units. Draw to the 10 unit mark on your syringe.


Quick Reference: Common Peptide Dosing

PeptideVial SizeBAC WaterDoseSyringe Units
BPC-1575 mg2 mL250 mcg10 units
BPC-1575 mg2 mL500 mcg20 units
TB-5005 mg2 mL2.5 mg100 units
TB-5005 mg2 mL750 mcg30 units
Tirzepatide10 mg2 mL2.5 mg50 units
Tirzepatide30 mg3 mL5 mg50 units

Tips for Accurate Dosing

  • Read at eye level. Hold the syringe horizontally at eye level to read the meniscus (the bottom curve of the liquid line). Reading from above or below gives inaccurate measurements.
  • Use the right syringe. For doses under 20 units, a 50-unit or 30-unit syringe gives better precision than a 100-unit syringe.
  • Be consistent with BAC water. Always add the same amount of BAC water each time you reconstitute the same peptide. This keeps your concentration—and your dose math—consistent.
  • Account for dead space. Insulin syringes have minimal dead space, but low dead volume (LDV) needles waste even less. For expensive peptides, this matters.
  • Store reconstituted vials properly. Refrigerate at 2–8°C. Use within 4–6 weeks. Never freeze a reconstituted vial.

This calculator is for research and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any peptide.