You don't need to be a chemist to buy a good peptide serum. You need a short checklist and a bit of resistance to marketing. Here's how we'd go about it.

What you're trying to fix

Get clear on your goal first, because it points you to different ingredients: the look of fine lines and firmness (signal peptides, GHK-Cu), the look of expression lines (Argireline-type peptides), or just a gentle step that keeps skin looking hydrated. One serum can't do everything at once.

The label checklist

  1. Named peptides. Look for the actual ingredient names — Palmitoyl Tripeptide-1, Copper Tripeptide-1, Acetyl Hexapeptide-8 — not just a vague "peptide complex."
  2. Where they sit in the list. Ingredients are listed from most to least (down to about 1%). Peptides stuck right at the end are probably there in tiny amounts.
  3. Good ingredients around them. Things that hydrate (glycerin, hyaluronic acid), plus niacinamide and ceramides, are good company for peptides.
  4. Packaging that protects. Non-see-through packaging that keeps air out (pumps, tubes) protects peptides better than a wide-open jar.
  5. Honest wording. Talk about how skin *looks* ("look of firmness") is a good sign. Medical promises ("rebuilds collagen," "erases wrinkles") are a bad one.

What it can claim

  • A serum can say it supports the look of firmness, fine lines, and hydration
  • A serum can name and highlight specific, well-studied peptides
  • A serum can be sold as a gentle, everyday supportive step

What it can’t claim

  • A serum cannot honestly claim to work like an injection
  • A serum cannot promise to cure, erase, or medically treat anything
  • A raw 'research use only' powder cannot be sold to you as skincare

Feel, packaging, and price

  • Feel is down to you: light serums layer well under moisturiser; richer ones suit drier skin.
  • Packaging really does matter for keeping peptides working — go for non-see-through designs that keep air out.
  • Price doesn't tell you much about how well it works. Good peptide serums come cheap and expensive. A high price isn't proof it's better, and a low price isn't proof it's worse.

A realistic thing to expect

A good peptide serum is a gentle, long-game step for the *look* of your skin — used regularly, alongside moisturiser and daily sunscreen. If a product promises more than that, the promise is the problem, not your skin.

What this does not mean

  • This does not mean a longer ingredient list or a higher price means a better product.
  • This does not mean a serum on its own will make a dramatic change — sunscreen and sticking with it do a lot of the work.
  • This is general guidance, not a recommendation of any one product.