Research peptide guide
How to evaluate research peptides without crossing into clinical-use claims
A practical, conservative guide for qualified laboratories reviewing RUO peptide catalog listings, lot documentation, and availability signals.
The short answer
What are research peptides?
Research peptides are amino-acid chains supplied for laboratory and preclinical research contexts. They may be used by qualified researchers to study binding behavior, stability, assay response, biomarker changes, or other non-clinical endpoints.
Peptific lists compounds as research-use-only materials. They are not marketed as drugs, supplements, cosmetics, foods, or products intended for human or veterinary consumption.
What a responsible catalog page should disclose
A useful catalog page should make the compound identity clear, state the listed fill amount, show truthful availability, avoid medical promises, and provide a clear research-use-only posture.
For purchasable listings, researchers should be able to request a Certificate of Analysis tied to a lot and should see consistent SKU, price, and product state across the page, feed, and checkout.
COAs, lot IDs, and analytical testing
A Certificate of Analysis is only useful when it is tied to a specific lot. Researchers should evaluate whether the lot ID on the vial, packing records, and COA correspond to the same batch.
Common analytical references include HPLC for purity and identity confirmation. A COA is not a clinical safety document and should not be interpreted as approval for human use.
Storage and handling context
Lyophilized research compounds are generally handled under laboratory protocols that account for temperature, light exposure, contamination control, and documentation. Follow the product documentation and your lab's safety requirements.
Peptific does not provide reconstitution, administration, dosing, or self-use instructions. Those topics are outside the scope of a research-use-only catalog.
How Peptific keeps the catalog conservative
Peptific separates catalog information from clinical guidance. Product pages may describe compound identity and research context, but they do not provide treatment recommendations, dosage protocols, or human-use positioning.
When a listing is not ready for active commerce, the site should preserve truthful availability instead of implying inventory that does not exist.
Need a lot-specific COA before ordering?
Send the compound name to the team and request the latest available Certificate of Analysis for review before purchase.
Request A COA