Peptide Supplies

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About this collection

If you're running peptides, you already know the results depend on more than just the compounds themselves. Getting the injection right matters — and that starts with having the right supplies.

This collection has everything you need for subcutaneous peptide injections: the syringes, the draw needle, and the wipes. All stocked in Australia and shipped fast, so you're not waiting weeks on an overseas order when you're mid-protocol.

What You Need for Peptide Injections

Insulin Syringes — for Injecting

Most peptides are administered subcutaneously (sub-Q), and insulin syringes are the right tool for the job. The fine gauge — typically 29G to 31G — makes for a comfortable injection with minimal tissue disruption, which matters when you're dosing daily or multiple times per day.

We carry two sizes:

  • 1ml Insulin Syringes (100-pack, $34.95) — The most versatile option. Holds up to 1ml, which covers most peptide protocols even when reconstituted at lower concentrations and dosed in slightly larger volumes.
  • 0.5ml Insulin Syringes (100-pack, $34.95) — Ideal for smaller dose volumes and slightly better precision at the lower end of the scale. Popular for BPC-157 and TB-500 when drawing 0.1–0.3ml per dose.

Both come in 100-packs so you'll have a solid supply on hand and won't be scrambling to reorder mid-protocol.

Draw Syringe — for Reconstitution

Most peptides arrive as lyophilised (freeze-dried) powder and need to be reconstituted with bacteriostatic water before use. This is where the draw syringe comes in.

The Draw Syringe ($4.95) uses an 18G needle — a wider bore than your insulin syringe — so you can draw bacteriostatic water into the syringe and transfer it into your peptide vial without creating excessive pressure or damaging the rubber septum. You inject the BAC water slowly into the vial, let the peptide dissolve (don't shake it), then use your insulin syringe to draw the reconstituted dose for injection.

Using the right needle for the reconstitution step protects your vial and keeps things clean. It's a $4.95 part of the process worth doing properly.

Alcohol Wipes — for Sterile Prep

Sterile technique isn't optional. Before every injection, wipe the vial septum and your injection site with an alcohol wipe. Let it air dry for a few seconds before inserting the needle — wet alcohol can degrade the peptide on contact.

The Alcohol Wipes (200-pack, $14.95) are individually sealed, pre-saturated with 70% isopropyl alcohol, and the right size for practical use. At $14.95 for 200, there's no excuse for cutting corners on sterile prep.

Who This Is For

This collection is for people running peptide therapy in Australia — whether you're using BPC-157 for recovery and gut health, TB-500 for tissue repair and injury healing, or other peptides as part of a broader protocol. You know what you're doing; you just need a reliable Australian supplier who keeps everything in stock and ships quickly.

We're Australian-owned, hold all inventory locally, and ship with Australia Post express. Order before the cutoff and it's typically with you the next business day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which syringe size should I use for peptide injections?

Either the 0.5ml or 1ml works well. If your dose volume is 0.3ml or less, the 0.5ml gives you slightly better precision. If you're injecting larger volumes or want one syringe that works across protocols, the 1ml is the better all-rounder. When in doubt, go 1ml.

Do I need the draw syringe if I'm only injecting?

Yes — if you're reconstituting lyophilised peptides (which most peptides are), you need a draw needle for the reconstitution step. The 18G draw syringe is used to add BAC water to the vial cleanly without damaging the septum. Don't try to reconstitute using an insulin syringe needle; the fine gauge creates back-pressure and makes it difficult to work with.

How do I store supplies between uses?

Keep syringes and wipes in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight, in their original packaging until use. Each syringe is individually sealed and sterile until opened. Reconstituted peptides typically need refrigeration — check the specific guidance for your compound.

Do you sell bacteriostatic water?

Not currently — BAC water for reconstitution isn't something we stock. You'll need to source that separately from a compounding pharmacy.

Can I get free shipping?

Yes — free express shipping on orders over $149. A full peptide injection kit (syringes + draw syringe + wipes) comes to $89.85, so adding a second syringe pack or stocking up gets you over the threshold.

New to Peptide Injections?

Read Guide #6: Peptide Therapy Supplies — What You Need and How to Use Them. It covers reconstitution step-by-step, how to calculate your dose volume, sub-Q injection technique, and site rotation. Getting the fundamentals right makes a difference.

Free express shipping on orders over $149. Australian-owned and stocked locally.