Step 1
Know what you’re looking at
Recovery and GH peptides show up in forums, clinics, and gray-market kits—not drugstore aisles.
Recovery & performance
The peptides athletes and biohackers talk about—explained without the bro-science. What they are, what research exists, and what they are not.
Step 1
Recovery and GH peptides show up in forums, clinics, and gray-market kits—not drugstore aisles.
Step 2
Try BPC-157, TB-500, ipamorelin, or the acronym you heard.
Step 3
Understand bans in sport, FDA status, and what evidence exists—educational only.
Static indexes for search engines and deep-linking.
Recovery, GH secretagogues, and performance compounds—what the names mean.
A 15-amino-acid gastric peptide widely discussed for tendon, gut, and muscle recovery—one of the most searched research peptides.
A synthetic version of thymosin beta-4 marketed for soft-tissue repair and flexibility.
A selective growth-hormone secretagogue peptide—stimulates GH with less appetite spike than older GHRPs.
A long-acting GHRH analog that extends GH pulses—often stacked with ipamorelin.
An older GH secretagogue known for strong GH release—and notable hunger side effects.
A modified insulin-like growth factor with a longer half-life—highly potent and tightly regulated.
A mitochondrial-derived peptide studied for exercise mimetic and metabolic effects.
A peptide that blocks myostatin signaling—discussed for muscle mass but with serious safety unknowns.
Tap a category to filter the full list below.
Search the full directory
No match—try the peptide name exactly as written in your source.
Educational only—not medical advice. Ingredient lists change; always read the label on products you buy.