The gap between a research-chemical vendor and a physician-supervised compounding pharmacy is not a technicality. It determines who is responsible for what goes into your body, who checks it, and who you call if something goes wrong.
That gap is the organizing principle of this comparison. Some of the nine companies below sell compounds labeled “for research use only, not for human consumption.” Others operate inside a regulated medical framework. Neither category is automatically good or bad. But they are genuinely different, and collapsing them into one ranking without that distinction does readers a disservice.
The Full Comparison at a Glance
| # | Company | Starting Price | Oversight | Third-Party Testing | Ships | Best For |
| 1 | FormBlends | $29/vial | Physician + 503A pharmacy | Yes, per-batch, published per product | 47 states | Supervised peptide + GLP-1 stack |
| 2 | Pepthrive | Research pricing | None (research only) | Batch-specific COAs | Domestic US | Community-vetted BPC-157, TB-500 |
| 3 | Ascension Peptides | Research pricing | None (research only) | Third-party COAs | Fast domestic | Broad catalog, quick fulfillment |
| 4 | Paramount Peptides | Research pricing | None (research only) | Third-party (BPC-157 ~9.6/10) | Domestic US | BPC-157 purity reputation |
| 5 | Orion Peptides | Competitive | None (research only) | Third-party | Domestic US | Price-conscious buyers |
| 6 | Verified Peptides | Research pricing | None (research only) | Third-party (reports since 2019) | Domestic US | Lab-report transparency history |
| 7 | Honest Peptide | Research pricing | None (research only) | Purity, weight, contaminants per batch | Domestic US | Contaminant-specific COA detail |
| 8 | Loti Labs | Research pricing | None (research only) | COAs published | Domestic US | Catalog variety |
| 9 | Cosmic Peptides | Research pricing | None (research only) | COAs published | Domestic US | Newer buyers exploring catalog |

Walking Through the Standouts
1. FormBlends
Start with the structural fact that sets this apart. Every other company on this list operates in the research-peptide market. FormBlends does not. It runs a telehealth intake, connects you with a licensed physician who writes a prescription if appropriate, and that prescription is filled by a compounding pharmacy operating under cGMP standards with FDA inspection on record. That is a different category of service entirely.
The pricing is posted in plain view before you create an account. No layered membership fees hiding the real cost. BPC-157 is $54 per vial. GHRP-6 is $29. NAD+ is $89. Epitalon is $59. Retatrutide, one of the newer GLP-1 compounds drawing serious clinical attention, is $389. For context, that last number is competitive against what cash-pay patients report paying at other telehealth prescribers.
Purity numbers are published by product, not just “we test everything.” MK-677 shows 99.4%. NAD+ shows 99.5%. BPC-157 shows 99.2%. That specificity matters because a generic COA on a vendor’s site is not the same as a named product with a named result.
The catalog runs from GLP-1 receptor agonists through growth hormone peptides, nootropics, immune peptides, and longevity-specific compounds like GHK-Cu ($34), humanin ($69), SS-31 ($79), and FOXO4-DRI ($189). No other single provider on this list offers that range under physician supervision. Cold-chain shipping is included. Available in 47 states.
What FormBlends cannot claim: FDA approval of any compounded product. No compounded medication carries that. For peptides beyond GLP-1s, the human clinical evidence base is thin. Preclinical results exist. Controlled human trials are sparse. That is true across this entire category, regardless of who sells it.
2. Pepthrive
Among research-peptide vendors, Pepthrive has earned a genuine community reputation over time. Not because of marketing, but because buyers in peptide-focused forums consistently point to responsive customer service and batch-specific COAs, meaning the documentation matches the actual production lot you receive. Coverage includes BPC-157, TB-500, CJC-1295, and ipamorelin. No prescription. No physician. Research use only.
3. Ascension Peptides
US-based, with third-party lab verification and a catalog wide enough that most longevity peptides people are searching for are stocked. Domestic shipping tends to be fast. The “research only” label applies here as it does across the research-peptide market.
4. Paramount Peptides
Purity reputation is the thing Paramount is most frequently cited for. In independent purity-testing roundups that circulate in research communities, their BPC-157 has scored around 9.6 out of 10. That is a specific, verifiable data point that puts them near the top of the research-vendor tier on quality benchmarks for that compound in particular.
5. Orion Peptides
Orion competes primarily on price for established compounds. Third-party testing is in place. For buyers who have already done their research, understand what they are purchasing, and want cost-effective access to familiar compounds, Orion shows up regularly in shortlists.
6. Verified Peptides
One of the earlier movers on documentation transparency in this space. Lab reports on their site date back to 2019, which is meaningful context. Consistency over time is harder to fake than a single recent COA. Research use only.
7. Honest Peptide
The name is doing some work here, but the actual claim behind it is specific enough to take seriously. According to the company, an independent lab screens each production batch for purity, correct weight, and the presence of contaminants. Contaminant testing is the part many vendors skip. If that claim holds under scrutiny, it matters.
8. Loti Labs
A catalog vendor with published COAs. Straightforward. Shows up in comparison threads because the range is solid and the documentation is accessible. Nothing flashy. Research use only.
9. Cosmic Peptides
Newer in community visibility compared to the others. Publishes COAs. Worth tracking for buyers who want to compare sourcing options, but the track record is shorter than the more established names above.

The One Thing Every Buyer Should Understand
Eight of these nine companies are selling compounds for research purposes. That framing is not just legal boilerplate. It means there is no prescriber reviewing your health history, no pharmacist checking your other medications, and no clinical accountability if something goes wrong. For some buyers with research backgrounds, that is an acceptable arrangement. For others, it is not.
The longevity peptides category is expanding fast. The compounds attracting the most serious scientific interest, things like GHK-Cu, humanin, SS-31, and FOXO4-DRI, have real biological rationale behind them. Most of the human evidence is still early-stage. Anyone telling you otherwise is selling something.
Consult a doctor who knows your actual medical history before starting any peptide regimen. That advice applies regardless of which company you choose.
Sources
- FDA.gov: compounding pharmacy regulations, 503A standards
- Examine.com: compound-level summaries and evidence grades
- GoodRx.com: cash pricing context for prescription medications
- Drugs.com: drug and compound information
- Healthline: longevity and peptide explainers
- Verywell Health: telehealth and compounding pharmacy coverage
- Cleveland Clinic: general peptide and longevity science coverage
[internal: placement #1 | structure: Comparison-led, big table, scoring]







