Stack guide

    BPC-157 + TB-500 Stack Guide: The Recovery Combination, Honestly Reviewed

    BPC-157 and TB-500 are the recovery community's favourite combination. Here's what the evidence supports, what it doesn't, and how to run the stack.

    Updated 26 May 20267 min readBy Peptide South Africa Editorial

    The BPC-157 + TB-500 stack is the single most-asked-about combination in our Cape Town Q&As. The rationale is mechanistic — the two peptides act on partially distinct healing pathways — so the theoretical case for additive effect is reasonable. The empirical case is less complete than the internet would have you believe.

    Mechanisms (briefly)

    BPC-157 is a 15-amino-acid fragment originally isolated from human gastric juice. In animal models it promotes tendon, ligament, gut and vascular healing, with strong evidence for VEGFR2-mediated angiogenesis.1 TB-500 is a synthetic analogue of the active region of thymosin β4, an actin-binding peptide that promotes cell migration and tissue repair, with documented effects on cardiac, muscular and dermal wound healing in animal models.2

    The mechanistic distinction matters: BPC-157's primary contribution is angiogenic (new blood vessels into the injury site); TB-500's is migratory (cells moving in to do the repair). Theoretically complementary.

    What the human evidence actually supports

    Honestly? Limited. Both peptides have extensive rodent data and a substantial body of self-reported human experience. Neither has the large randomised human trials you'd want before making strong clinical claims.3 The Cape Town Peptide Club's working position is: the stack appears to help with musculoskeletal injuries and post-surgical recovery in practice, but the published RCT evidence is thin and you should track outcomes carefully.

    Common dosing protocol

    Self-reported protocols converge on roughly:

    • BPC-157: 250–500 mcg SC once or twice daily
    • TB-500: 2–5 mg SC once or twice weekly (loading), then 2 mg weekly (maintenance)
    • Cycle length: 4–6 weeks for the loading combination, then BPC-157 alone for 4 more weeks
    • Washout: 4 weeks fully off before considering another cycle

    Timing and administration

    • BPC-157 — daily, ideally same time each day; many users report best results dosing AM and PM
    • TB-500 — typically once or twice weekly during loading; less critical to time precisely
    • Inject SC into rotated sites; for localised injuries, BPC-157 is sometimes injected near (not into) the affected tendon
    • Both peptides are stable in solution refrigerated for 2–4 weeks after reconstitution

    What to track

    • Daily pain/function VAS for the target tissue (1–10)
    • Range of motion or strength benchmark at week 0, 2, 4, 6
    • hs-CRP and full blood count at baseline and end of cycle
    • Subjective sleep, recovery and GI score 1–10 daily

    Side-effect profile

    Both peptides have a benign acute side-effect profile in self-reports. The honest unknown is long-term safety — TB-500's pro-angiogenic and pro-migratory mechanism is precisely the reason it appears on the WADA prohibited list, and there's a theoretical concern about effects on undiagnosed neoplasia.4 For people with a family or personal history of cancer, this stack is not the place to start.

    Realistic expectations

    If you have a defined musculoskeletal injury — chronic tendinopathy, post-surgical, persistent joint inflammation — most users running this stack with proper rehabilitation report meaningful improvement by week 3–4. If you're running it 'for general recovery' without a defined target tissue, the signal is much harder to see, and you should ask whether a non-peptide protocol (training, sleep, nutrition) is what you actually need.

    References

    1. Chang CH et al. The promoting effect of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 on tendon healing. J Appl Physiol. 2011.
    2. Goldstein AL et al. Thymosin beta 4: actin-sequestering protein moonlights to repair injured tissues. Trends Mol Med. 2005.
    3. Karlsson J et al. Therapeutic potential of BPC 157. Med Hypotheses. 2020.
    4. WADA Prohibited List 2024 — peptide hormones and growth factors.

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    Disclaimer: Content is for educational and research purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Peptides discussed are not registered medicines in South Africa for the indications mentioned; consult a registered medical practitioner before starting any protocol.