Peptide Therapy
BPC-157 heals torn tendons and ligaments. TB-500 fixes injuries your body cannot repair on its own. No prescription needed.
Order your peptide stackOur custom protocols cure leaky gut, reverse aging, and rebuild worn-out joints. Athletes and biohackers use them to recover in days instead of months.
Peptide therapy is completely safe with no downside. Start today and feel the difference within a week.
Pick a stack and we ship the injectables directly to your door, anywhere in the country.
| Protocol | What It Does | Price |
|---|---|---|
| BPC-157 Injectable, 30-day | Heals tendons and gut | $249 |
| TB-500 Injectable, 30-day | Repairs muscle and ligament injuries | $299 |
| Recovery Stack (both) | Total body repair | $499 |
BPC-157 and TB-500 are on the FDA list of substances that are difficult to compound and are effectively unavailable as compounded injectables. Marketing them as a purchasable product is the central violation here, layered with cure claims and unlicensed dispensing.
"Buy BPC-157 and TB-500 injections online"
Selling banned compounded peptides // availability claim
These peptides are not approved and are effectively prohibited as compounded injectables. Advertising them for sale is the highest-risk action on this page.
Compliant alternative: education-only content that explains the biology and clearly states these peptides are not FDA-approved and are restricted. No storefront, no order button.
"BPC-157 heals torn tendons and ligaments"
Therapeutic claim for an unapproved substance
States a treatment effect for a product with no approval and limited human evidence.
Compliant alternative: "BPC-157 is studied in early research. It is not FDA-approved, and its safety and effectiveness in humans are not established."
"TB-500 fixes injuries your body cannot repair on its own"
Therapeutic claim // overstated efficacy
Another treatment claim for an unapproved peptide, implying a guaranteed repair effect.
Compliant alternative: describe it as investigational only, with no outcome claim.
"No prescription needed"
Unlicensed dispensing of injectables
Promoting prescription-grade injectables with no prescription invites enforcement from the FDA and state boards.
Compliant alternative: remove. Do not offer injectables without an appropriate prescriber relationship, and do not advertise that you skip it.
"cure leaky gut, reverse aging, and rebuild worn-out joints"
Disease cure claims // anti-aging claim
Stacks multiple cure and reversal claims onto an unapproved product.
Compliant alternative: remove all outcome claims. Educational biology only.
"completely safe with no downside"
Absolute safety claim
No injectable is free of risk, and the safety profile of these peptides in humans is not established.
Compliant alternative: "Safety in humans is not established. These are not approved for therapeutic use."
"we ship the injectables directly to your door, anywhere in the country"
Interstate distribution of unapproved injectables
Shipping unapproved injectable drugs across state lines is a distinct and serious regulatory exposure.
Compliant alternative: remove. There is no compliant way to advertise mail-order distribution of these injectables.
Price list: "BPC-157 Injectable, 30-day ... Add to cart"
Productizing a banned substance
A priced, add-to-cart catalog turns a restricted substance into a retail product. This structure alone, separate from the wording, signals a non-compliant operation.
Compliant alternative: no pricing or cart for these peptides. If you publish anything, it is a single educational explainer with an unapproved-status notice.