Section 04
Safety & Regulation
How to tell safe skincare peptides from the risky injectable kind, and how to read a label without getting fooled.
Peptide Safety: Why Purity, Sterility, and COAs Matter More Than Marketing
Peptide safety depends on identity, purity, sterility, impurities, manufacturing controls, storage, route of use, and evidence — not just the peptide name on the vial. A certificate of analysis (COA) can help, but it is not a complete safety guarantee.
Research Peptides: The 'Not for Human Use' Label Everyone Misunderstands
Research peptides are compounds marketed for laboratory or scientific research rather than for human use. The phrase "research use only" does not mean a product is safe, approved, sterile, legal for personal use, or appropriate for injection.
How to Spot Fake Peptides: The Red Flags
Real talk: with grey-market research peptides, you basically can't verify what's in the vial — and that's the whole problem. Red flags include no real Certificate of Analysis (COA), anonymous or sketchy sellers, suspiciously low prices, the 'research use only' wink, and no independent third-party testing.
Are Peptides Legal? A Plain-English Guide
It depends on the peptide. Peptides in skincare are legal cosmetics.
"Peptide Cycles" and "Stacks": What These Words Mean
A "cycle" means using a peptide for a set stretch of time, then stopping. A "stack" means using more than one peptide at once.
"Research Use Only" Peptides Explained
"Research use only" peptides are chemicals sold for use in a lab, not for putting on or in your body. The label is not a rule you're meant to get around.
Are Peptides Safe in Skincare?
For most people, peptides in skincare are gentle. They don't usually sting, burn, or cause a reaction.
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