Reconstitution math

    Peptide Dosage Calculator: The Reconstitution Math, Explained Once and For All

    Most peptide dosing errors are math errors. Here's the simple framework — with worked examples — that eliminates them.

    Updated 26 May 20267 min readBy Peptide South Africa Editorial

    The single most common mistake in self-administered peptide protocols is dosing math. Vials are labelled in mg. Protocols are quoted in mcg. Syringes are marked in units. Reconstitution volumes vary. It's a recipe for 10× errors — and 10× errors with bioactive peptides are how protocols go badly wrong. Here's a clean peptide dosage calculator walk-through.

    The three numbers you need

    1. Vial size — how much peptide is in the vial (e.g. 5 mg)
    2. Reconstitution volume — how much bacteriostatic water you add (e.g. 2 mL)
    3. Target dose — what you want to inject (e.g. 250 mcg)

    Step 1 — convert vial to mcg

    Most vials are labelled in milligrams. Most protocols use micrograms. 1 mg = 1,000 mcg.

    A 5 mg vial = 5,000 mcg of peptide.

    Step 2 — calculate concentration

    Concentration is just amount divided by volume:

    5,000 mcg ÷ 2 mL = 2,500 mcg per mL.

    Step 3 — calculate dose volume

    Dose volume = target dose divided by concentration:

    250 mcg ÷ 2,500 mcg/mL = 0.1 mL.

    Step 4 — convert to insulin syringe units

    Standard insulin syringes (used for SC peptide injections) are marked in 'units'. A standard U-100 insulin syringe has 100 units per 1 mL.

    0.1 mL = 10 units on a U-100 insulin syringe.

    Worked examples

    BPC-157, 5 mg vial, reconstituted with 2 mL, 250 mcg dose

    • Vial: 5,000 mcg
    • Concentration: 5,000 ÷ 2 = 2,500 mcg/mL
    • Dose volume: 250 ÷ 2,500 = 0.1 mL
    • Syringe: 10 units

    Ipamorelin, 5 mg vial, reconstituted with 2.5 mL, 300 mcg dose

    • Vial: 5,000 mcg
    • Concentration: 5,000 ÷ 2.5 = 2,000 mcg/mL
    • Dose volume: 300 ÷ 2,000 = 0.15 mL
    • Syringe: 15 units

    TB-500, 5 mg vial, reconstituted with 5 mL, 2 mg dose

    • Vial: 5,000 mcg = 5 mg
    • Concentration: 5,000 ÷ 5 = 1,000 mcg/mL = 1 mg/mL
    • Dose volume: 2,000 ÷ 1,000 = 2 mL
    • Syringe: 200 units (or 2 mL on a larger syringe)

    Reconstitution volume — practical guidance

    Volume is your lever. Smaller reconstitution volume means more concentrated solution and smaller injection volume — but less precision on small doses. Larger volume means easier precise dosing but more liquid per injection. Sensible defaults:

    • BPC-157 5mg: reconstitute with 2 mL → 2,500 mcg/mL
    • Ipamorelin 5mg: 2.5 mL → 2,000 mcg/mL
    • CJC-1295 no DAC 5mg: 2 mL → 2,500 mcg/mL
    • TB-500 5mg: 5 mL → 1,000 mcg/mL (allows precise 2mg dosing)
    • GHK-Cu 50mg: 5 mL → 10 mg/mL

    Syringe selection

    • SC injection: U-100 insulin syringe, 28–31 gauge, 0.5 mL barrel for most doses
    • Larger SC doses (>50 units): 1 mL barrel insulin syringe
    • IM injection: 25–27 gauge, 1 inch needle, 1 mL barrel — rarely needed for most peptide protocols

    Sanity-check rules

    1. Whenever your math says 'inject more than 50 units', re-check the concentration
    2. Whenever your math says 'inject less than 2 units', re-check — you may need to reconstitute with more water for precision
    3. Always check mg vs mcg twice. Twice.
    4. Match the calculated dose against a published reference range. If you're 10× off, you've made a math error.

    References

    1. Raun K et al. Ipamorelin, the first selective growth hormone secretagogue. Eur J Endocrinol. 1998.
    2. Sigalos JT, Pastuszak AW. Safety and efficacy of growth hormone secretagogues. Sex Med Rev. 2018.
    3. USP <797> Pharmaceutical compounding sterile preparations. United States Pharmacopeia.

    Frequently asked questions

    Free tool

    Track your peptide protocol

    Log doses, cycles, bloodwork and side effects in one place. Built for South African researchers.

    Open the tracker

    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.