GLP-1s popping up on Amazon?

SlimSis

Active member
Has anyone else seen GLP-1 analogs and other peptides showing up on Amazon? They're priced pretty high, but I'm curious if this will become a trend. It would definitely be convenient.
 
Convenient? Maybe. Safe? Absolutely not. I wouldn't even trust buying my regular meds from Amazon, let alone research chemicals that are injectable. Way too much risk of getting a fake or contaminated product.
 
I usually get mine direct from overseas for super cheap. It's annoying when they disappear with my crypto, and returns are a pain. But at least with Amazon, you could theoretically test the product if you suspected something was off.
 
Honestly, there aren't any truly 'legit' peptide sources outside of a compounding pharmacy. The whole industry is pretty unregulated. You're basically just hoping you're getting what you paid for.
 
I've noticed some compounding pharmacies are starting to fill prescriptions for peptides, like Sermorelin, Ipamorelin, and even BPC-157. Seems like it's catching on as part of anti-aging stuff.
 
Clean-Boss said:
I've noticed some compounding pharmacies are starting to fill prescriptions for peptides, like Sermorelin, Ipamorelin, and even BPC-157. Seems like it's catching on as part of anti-aging stuff.
Which pharmacies are those? I'd be interested in looking into that.
 
I will say, the peptide scene is pretty gray. You have zero guarantee what you're injecting, unless you're getting it from a compounding pharmacy with a prescription. I'd be wary of anything too cheap. It's probably not what they say. I'd be really cautious about grabbing GLP-1s from random sites.
 
LabBetter said:
I will say, the peptide scene is pretty gray. You have zero guarantee what you're injecting, unless you're getting it from a compounding pharmacy with a prescription. I'd be wary of anything too cheap. It's probably not what they say. I'd be really cautious about grabbing GLP-1s from random sites.
That's why I was initially hopeful about Amazon, but I see the points being made. Better safe than sorry, I guess.
 
Amazon showing up for these products is new. Pricing reflects the retail markup. The foodjar storage approach is practical regardless of source.
 
the customs volume logic makes sense - higher overall shipment numbers mean higher absolute interception counts even at a constant rate. the business-as-usual characterization from people with direct visibility into the process is more useful than the community pattern of inferring change from isolated reports
 
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