CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin Reconstitution Calculator
Enter a CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin vial size, the bacteriostatic water added, and the amount you need to measure. Get the exact insulin-syringe units to draw — live on the syringe below. Because amounts discussed in CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin research are at the microgram scale, exact syringe-unit math matters more than usual. This page performs measurement math only. It’s the same arithmetic built into the PeptideWiz app.
Research compounds. CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin are research compounds. They are not FDA approved and have no established human dosing. This page performs measurement arithmetic only — it does not suggest any dose, and dosing decisions belong to a licensed provider.
Common vial sizes
To draw an amount of 300 mcg, pull the plunger to 12.0 units.
Not medical advice. This calculator performs arithmetic on the numbers you enter. It does not recommend a dose, confirm that CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, or any protocol is safe or appropriate for you, or replace your provider. CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin have no established human dosing. Always verify everything with a licensed medical professional.
Example mixing math (arithmetic only)
The water volume you add sets the concentration — it never changes the amount itself, only how big the draw is on the syringe. Here’s how a 5 mg vial reads on a U-100 insulin syringe for three example amounts at three water volumes, shown purely to demonstrate the arithmetic:
| Amount to measure | 1 mL · 5,000 mcg/mL | 2 mL · 2,500 mcg/mL | 3 mL · 1,667 mcg/mL |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 mcg | 2 units | 4 units | 6 units |
| 200 mcg | 4 units | 8 units | 12 units |
| 300 mcg | 6 units | 12 units | 18 units |
These rows are example calculations and formula demonstrations, not suggested doses — CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin have no established human dosing. Using a 10 mg vial? Tap the preset above — the calculator redoes every number instantly.
About CJC-1295 & Ipamorelin (research status)
CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin are synthetic peptides classed as growth-hormone secretagogues, studied in preclinical and research contexts. They are frequently combined and sold together as a single blend — a vial often contains both compounds, and the total is dosed in micrograms. Both have no FDA approval and no established human dosing — they are sold only as research chemicals. Because they are dosed in micrograms, the mixing math and syringe-unit reading are identical to any other reconstituted peptide: the water you add sets the concentration, and the amount you enter sets the draw. Small measurement errors are proportionally large at the microgram scale, which is why exact syringe math matters. Nothing on this page is a dose recommendation.
How to reconstitute a CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin vial
- Gather supplies. The lyophilized CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin vial, bacteriostatic water, a sterile mixing syringe, alcohol wipes, and your insulin syringes.
- Sanitize. Wash your hands and wipe both vial stoppers with a fresh alcohol wipe.
- Draw the water. Pull your chosen volume (for example 2 mL) into the mixing syringe — that volume sets the concentration, so enter the same number in the calculator above.
- Add it slowly. Let the water run gently down the inside wall of the vial. Don’t jet it straight onto the powder.
- Swirl, don’t shake. Gently swirl until the solution is completely clear — shaking can degrade peptides.
- Label and refrigerate. Write the date and concentration on the vial, store it cold, and track draws, remaining volume, and the reconstitution date in the PeptideWiz app.
Full walkthrough: How to reconstitute peptides, step by step →
How the calculation works
vial (mcg) ÷ water (mL)
How much CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin is in every millilitre after reconstitution.
amount (mcg) ÷ concentration
The millilitres that contain exactly the entered amount.
mL × 100
A U-100 insulin syringe holds 100 units per millilitre.
Worked example (arithmetic only): a 5 mg vial (5,000 mcg) with 2 mL of water gives 2,500 mcg/mL. An example 300 mcg amount is 300 ÷ 2,500 = 0.12 mL, and 0.12 × 100 = 12 units — with about 16.7 such example draws in the vial. This is an example calculation, not a recommended dose.
Frequently asked questions
How much bacteriostatic water should I add to a 5 mg CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin vial?
There’s no single correct volume — water only sets the concentration, never the amount you draw. Adding 2 mL to a 5 mg vial gives 2,500 mcg/mL, so an example 300 mcg draw is a clean 12-unit measurement; 1 mL doubles the concentration and halves every draw. Pick a volume that makes your measurement land on easy-to-read syringe marks — the calculator lets you compare instantly. These figures demonstrate the arithmetic only; CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin have no established human dosing.
How many units is 300 mcg of a CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin blend?
It depends entirely on the vial’s concentration. At 2,500 mcg/mL (5 mg vial + 2 mL water) 300 mcg is 12 units; at 5,000 mcg/mL (same vial + 1 mL) it’s 6 units. Never reuse someone else’s unit figure — calculate from the actual vial amount and water volume. These are example calculations, not recommended doses.
Why is CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin dosed in mcg instead of mg?
Amounts discussed in CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin research are typically at the microgram scale — a fraction of a milligram. Since 1 mg = 1,000 mcg, a 5 mg vial contains 5,000 mcg. Working in mcg avoids small decimals, but it also means conversion mistakes are proportionally large — see the unit converter and the units of measure glossary entry for the full mg/mcg breakdown.
Is this calculator medical advice?
No. It is an educational arithmetic tool. It does not recommend a dose, verify that CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, or any protocol is appropriate for you, or replace guidance from a licensed medical provider. CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin are not FDA approved and have no established human dosing.
Track your measurements in the PeptideWiz app →
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