The Peptide Research Library
Clear, honestly framed guides to the research peptides we supply, what each one is investigated for in the literature, and how our third-party-tested kits and Certificates of Analysis work. Written for researchers, not patients.
What these guides cover
Every guide in this library is a single, focused reference for one research peptide. We explain what the compound is, the broad areas it has been studied or investigated for, how it is typically handled and reconstituted in a laboratory context, and where the open questions still sit. The aim is to give you an accurate, jargon-light starting point so you can read the primary literature with more context, not to make claims on its behalf.
A research peptide is a short chain of amino acids supplied for laboratory and educational use. The peptides documented here are investigational and supplied for research and educational use only. They are not for human consumption, they are not a treatment for any condition, and nothing in this library should be read as medical, dosing, or safety advice. Where you see a compound described, the framing is always what it has been studied for or investigated for in published research, never what it does for a person.
Inside each guide you will find
- A plain-English explanation of the peptide and its place in the research literature
- The general areas it has been investigated for, framed strictly as research, not outcomes
- Handling, storage, and reconstitution notes for a laboratory setting (general, not advice)
- How it is supplied as a complete, ready-to-assemble kit
- The verifiable Janoshik Certificate of Analysis for the batch
- Honest notes on what is still uncertain or untested
We never promise an outcome and we never describe a peptide as treating, curing, healing, or preventing anything. Any dose target or research design is a qualified researcher's call. Our guides only supply context and arithmetic, such as the reconstitution and pen-click maths, so your own work starts from accurate numbers.
How to navigate and compare the guides
The grid below lists every guide in the library. Each card opens a full reference for that single compound. There is no right place to start, but most researchers find it easiest to open the guide for the peptide already on their reading list, then use the related links inside it to branch out to anything mentioned alongside it.
A practical way to read across guides
- Start with the compound you are actually researching, then read its 'investigated for' section first to ground everything else
- Compare handling and reconstitution notes across guides, since storage and stability differ meaningfully between peptides
- Check the Certificate of Analysis on each guide so you are comparing verified batches, not marketing copy
- Use the interactive pen and dosing guide when you need to turn a vial and a diluent volume into a concentration and a per-click figure
- Note where each guide flags open questions, as the gaps are often as useful as the findings
Reconstitution is just division: concentration equals milligrams of powder divided by millilitres of diluent. On a U-100 insulin pen, one click is 0.01 mL. The pen and dosing guide does this calculation for you so a vial size and diluent volume turn into an accurate per-click figure. The target itself is always a qualified researcher's decision.
Quality and third-party testing
Trust on this site comes from transparency and lab proof, not from named personalities. The guides are maintained by the NovaPeptides Research Team and lean on real, verifiable documentation rather than testimonials. The single most important document for any batch is its Certificate of Analysis, and we make every one available to read before you enquire.
Every batch is independently tested by Janoshik, one of the most respected analytical labs in the peptide space, and the resulting Certificate of Analysis is verifiable rather than a screenshot we ask you to take on faith. Reported purity figures sit at the high end of what third-party testing returns, with SS-31 (elamipretide) verified at 99.7% and our GHK-Cu blends tested and documented batch by batch. The numbers we publish are the numbers Janoshik returned, and you can request and read the report for yourself.
What our quality approach looks like in practice
- A verifiable Janoshik Certificate of Analysis on every batch, not a stock image
- Peptides supplied as complete, ready-to-assemble research kits rather than loose vials
- Honest handling and storage guidance written for a laboratory context
- References framed generally as research and education references, with no fabricated citations or statistics
- Enquiries handled directly over WhatsApp, with the COA available on request
All products documented in this library are investigational and supplied for research and educational use only. They are not for human consumption and are not approved for human use. Nothing here is medical advice. Confirm the regulatory position that applies to your work before ordering or handling any compound.
How the kits and COAs work
We supply each peptide as a complete, ready-to-assemble research kit rather than a single vial in isolation. The idea is that you receive everything needed to set up cleanly in a laboratory context, alongside the documentation that tells you exactly what is in the vial. Because this is an education and catalogue site, there is no cart and no checkout. When you are ready, you enquire directly and we handle it from there.
From guide to enquiry, step by step
- Read the guide for the peptide you are researching and review its 'investigated for' section
- Open and read the Janoshik Certificate of Analysis for the batch
- Use the pen and dosing guide if you need concentration or per-click maths for your own research design
- Send your enquiry over WhatsApp, where we answer questions and confirm the current COA
- Receive the kit with its documentation, ready to assemble in your research setting
Every batch is third-party tested with a verifiable Certificate of Analysis from Janoshik. You can request and read it before you ever enquire.
Every peptide, explained
The GLP-1, GIP and glucagon triple agonist, studied in trials for weight and metabolic outcomes.
Read the guide →The copper peptide behind GLOW, studied for skin, collagen, hair and tissue repair.
Read the guide →The body protection compound, studied for tendon, gut and tissue repair.
Read the guide →A Thymosin Beta-4 fragment, studied for cell migration, recovery and flexibility.
Read the guide →An alpha-MSH tripeptide, studied for calming inflammatory pathways in gut and skin research.
Read the guide →The mitochondrial peptide elamipretide, studied for cellular energy and oxidative stress.
Read the guide →Guides, comparisons & resources
Frequently asked questions
What is a research peptide?+
A research peptide is a short chain of amino acids supplied for laboratory and educational use. The compounds documented in this library are investigational and supplied for research and educational use only. They are not for human consumption, are not approved for human use, and are not a treatment for any condition.
Are these guides medical advice?+
No. Every guide is research-framed reference material maintained by the NovaPeptides Research Team. We describe what a peptide has been studied or investigated for in the literature, never what it does for a person, and we never promise an outcome. Nothing here is medical, dosing, or safety advice.
How do I know the peptides are tested?+
Every batch is independently tested by Janoshik, one of the most trusted labs in the peptide space, and the resulting Certificate of Analysis is verifiable. You can request and read the COA for any batch before you enquire. Published figures include SS-31 (elamipretide) at 99.7% purity and GHK-Cu blends documented batch by batch.
What is a Certificate of Analysis (COA)?+
A Certificate of Analysis is the lab document that reports what is actually in a given batch, including its purity, as returned by an independent testing lab. Ours come from Janoshik and are verifiable rather than a screenshot, so you are reading the lab's own result, not our marketing copy.
Where should I start in the library?+
Open the guide for the peptide you are already researching, read its 'investigated for' section first to ground everything else, then use the related links inside it to branch out. Compare the handling notes and the Certificate of Analysis across guides so you are comparing verified batches.
How do I order, and are there prices?+
This is an education and catalogue site, so there is no cart, no checkout, and no prices listed. When you are ready, you enquire directly over WhatsApp. We answer questions, confirm the current Certificate of Analysis, and arrange the kit from there.
Questions? Talk to us.
Message us on WhatsApp and we will walk you through the kits, the COAs, reconstitution and the dose tool.
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