Blending peptides in one vial: what the maths can and can't tell you
Updated 3 July 2026 · 5 min read
Some people reconstitute two peptides in a single vial so they can draw both in one go. The arithmetic is straightforward, but it is worth being clear about what the maths does and does not tell you. This guide, and the calculator it links to, only handle the numbers — never whether combining anything is wise or safe for you.
What the blend maths does
When you put two peptides into the same volume of water, each has its own concentration based on its own mass. The calculator works out both concentrations and shows the syringe units for the amount you enter for each — pure arithmetic, exactly like the single-peptide case, just tracked separately for two substances.
What the maths cannot tell you
- Whether two peptides are chemically compatible in the same solution.
- Whether combining them is safe or sensible for any individual — that is a clinical question.
- Anything about the correct amount of either — you enter the numbers; the tool never suggests them.
Interaction and stacking information in the library is general and referenced, and it errs toward caution. It reports what the literature and community describe; it is never a recommendation to combine anything.
Every calculator result is arithmetic based on your inputs, not a dosing or combination recommendation. Aminove never suggests a dose or a stack. Consult a licensed clinician.