Terms of Use
Research and education. Not medical advice.
The peptides discussed here are not FDA-approved for most of the uses described. Reading the research deeply is a starting point for a conversation with a licensed clinician, not a substitute for one. These terms describe the rules around that posture, plainly.
Last updated: May 20, 2026
What this site is
WhatPeptidesDo is a research and education resource. It collects, summarizes, and contextualizes publicly available information about peptide compounds — mechanism of action, dosing protocols used in the published research, evidence levels, legal status by jurisdiction, vendor pricing, and synergies between compounds. The intended audience is adults conducting independent investigation of the literature for themselves.
WhatPeptidesDo is not a clinic, a pharmacy, a compounding pharmacy, a telehealth provider, a research institution, or a regulated dispenser of any kind. It does not prescribe, dispense, manufacture, formulate, or ship peptides. It does not establish a patient relationship with you, and reading anything on this site does not create one.
Not medical advice
Nothing on WhatPeptidesDo is medical advice. The site does not diagnose, treat, cure, prevent, or mitigate any disease or condition. Dosing protocols described on peptide profile pages are drawn from the published literature — clinical trials, animal studies, and reported research protocols — and are presented for educational context, not as a treatment plan for your specific physiology, medical history, current medications, or risk profile.
If you are considering using a peptide for any purpose, the responsible move is to talk to a licensed clinician who can review your bloodwork, your medications, your underlying conditions, and the actual evidence base for the indication you have in mind. We mean this literally: the entire ethical premise of publishing the research at this depth is that readers go talk to a clinician, not that they self-prescribe from a website. If the content on this site nudges you in the direction of a serious conversation with a physician, the site has done its job.
FDA status of the compounds discussed
Most peptides profiled on this site are not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the uses discussed in the literature. Some are approved for narrower indications than the ones the research covers; some appear on the FDA's 503A or 503B bulks lists; some are subjects of compounding restrictions or import alerts; some are research chemicals with no human use indication at all. Where a compound's status under FDA, DEA, or analogous regimes in other jurisdictions is relevant, the peptide profile pages describe the status as we understand it, with a note when the picture is contested.
Regulatory status changes. The descriptions on the site are accurate to the date of last update on each page; they are not a substitute for current verification through the FDA's own resources or counsel familiar with regulated-drug law in your jurisdiction.
Legal compliance is your responsibility
Possession, importation, and use of the compounds discussed on this site are governed by laws that vary by country, state, and in some cases by purpose (personal use, research use, veterinary use, prescription compounding). The /vendors and peptide profile pages on this site describe vendor offerings; the existence of a vendor offering does not constitute a representation that ordering from that vendor is legal in your jurisdiction or for your purpose.
You are responsible for understanding and complying with the laws that apply to you. If you are unsure, talk to a lawyer admitted in your jurisdiction. The site does not provide legal advice and is not a substitute for one.
Vendor information and affiliate disclosure
Vendor cards, pricing tables, and outbound links to vendor sites are informational. They describe what vendors offer at the prices the vendors publish at the time the data was last pulled. We do not warrant the accuracy of vendor pricing in real time, the quality of any vendor's product, the purity claimed on any vendor's certificate of analysis, or the reliability of any vendor's fulfillment.
Some outbound vendor links carry a referral parameter that identifies the click as coming from WhatPeptidesDo. When you subsequently transact on the vendor's site, the vendor may pay us a referral commission. This is disclosed in the footer of every page on the site and in /privacy section 04. The commission relationship does not influence which peptides get profiled, how dosing protocols are written, which evidence level a compound receives, or which vendor sits at the top of a price-comparison table. Vendors with active FDA warning letters or reported federal raids remain listed with the warning displayed, in the rank position the underlying data places them.
Content licensing
The content on WhatPeptidesDo — including peptide profiles, dosing protocols as written, evidence summaries, comparison pages, learn-section articles, blog posts, the synergy graph, and the recommendation engine outputs — is available for your personal, non-commercial reference. You may save it for your own use and share specific pages with a clinician, a friend, or a research collaborator.
You may not republish substantial portions of the site as a competing peptide-information library, white-label the content as your own product or newsletter, scrape the site to assemble a derivative dataset for sale, or use the content to train a commercial AI system without our permission. The underlying scientific literature cited throughout the site is, of course, governed by its own publisher and author rights — we do not grant you any rights to the underlying papers that exceed what the publishers grant.
Disclaimers and limitation of liability
The site, the data, the protocols, the tools, the recommendation engine, and any other content reachable from whatpeptidesdo.com are provided on an as-is and as-available basis, without warranties of any kind, express or implied, including warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, accuracy, and non-infringement. We do not warrant that the information is current to the second, complete for every relevant edge case, or applicable to your specific physiology, medication regimen, or jurisdiction.
To the maximum extent permitted by law, WhatPeptidesDo, its operator, and its contributors are not liable for indirect, incidental, consequential, special, exemplary, or punitive damages of any kind arising out of your use of the site or your reliance on anything you read here, including damages arising out of any decision to use or not use any peptide, vendor, or protocol described on the site. Where liability cannot be fully disclaimed, our total aggregate liability to any one user for any cause is capped at one hundred United States dollars.
Eligibility
WhatPeptidesDo is intended for adults aged 18 and older. By using the site you represent that you are at least 18 and are reviewing the material on your own behalf or on behalf of an adult who has asked you to. The site is not intended for and is not directed at minors.
Governing law
These terms are governed by the laws of the State of New York, without regard to its conflict-of-laws rules. Any dispute arising out of these terms or your use of the site will be brought in the state or federal courts located in New York County, New York, and you consent to that forum.
If any provision of these terms is found unenforceable, the remainder remains in effect. A failure to enforce any provision on one occasion does not waive the right to enforce it later.
Changes
We update these terms when the site changes — when a new tool is added, when the data practices in /privacy change, or when the regulatory landscape around peptides shifts in a way that changes what we need to disclose. Material changes are noted by bumping the date at the top of this page. Continued use of the site after a change constitutes acceptance of the updated terms.
Contact
Questions about these terms, the data, an error on a peptide profile, or anything else go to info@whatpeptidesdo.com. A real person reads the inbox.