Growth hormone secretagogue blend

CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin Dosage Calculator

CJC-1295 (a GHRH analog) and Ipamorelin (a selective growth-hormone-releasing peptide) are frequently sold together as a single lyophilized blend. Both are investigational research compounds and are not FDA-approved. This page treats the vial as a combined milligram total — enter the blend total printed on your vial.

Because a blend vial carries two peptides, the "dose" you draw is the combined micrograms. The calculator converts your combined dose, vial size, and bacteriostatic water into the exact volume to draw and the tick on a U-100 insulin syringe (1 IU = 0.01 mL).

The dosage chart shows how commonly-referenced combined dose points map to a draw at your vial size and water volume. Every number is illustrative arithmetic, not a recommendation.

Concentration
5000 mcg/mL
Draw per dose
0.060 mL
On a U-100 syringe
6 IU
Doses per vial
33.33

Tip: adding 3.30 mL of bacteriostatic water would put this dose on a clean, easy-to-read mark on a U-100 insulin syringe.

Educational math only — not medical advice, and not a dose recommendation. The dose above is the value you entered. Always follow a licensed clinician’s instructions. Investigational compounds are not FDA-approved.

CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin Dosage Chart

Commonly-cited dose points (combined blend, commonly-cited research range) at a 10 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water. The volume and syringe columns are computed from those inputs — illustrative math, never a dose recommendation.

CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin dosing chart at a 10 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water (5,000 mcg/mL). Example figures, not a recommendation.
Example doseVolume to drawU-100 syringeNotes
200 mcg (combined)0.040 mL4 IU
250 mcg (combined)0.050 mL5 IU
300 mcg (combined)0.060 mL6 IU

How to use this calculator

  1. Vial size — the milligrams printed on your CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin vial (commonly 10 or 5 or 15 mg).
  2. Bacteriostatic water — how much you add to dissolve the powder. More water = a larger, easier-to-read draw at the same dose.
  3. Dose — the amount you intend to draw, in micrograms. This is your number, not a recommendation.
  4. Read the IU mark — on a U-100 insulin syringe, 1 IU = 0.01 mL. The calculator shows the exact tick to fill to.

CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin FAQ

How do I calculate a dose for a CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin blend?
Enter the combined milligram total on your vial as the vial size, the bacteriostatic water you are adding, and your intended combined dose in micrograms. The calculator returns the mL to draw and the U-100 insulin-syringe units for that combined draw.
What vial size does a CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin blend usually ship as?
Blends commonly ship as a combined 5 mg or 10 mg total (for example 5 mg of each peptide). Always use the exact total printed on your own vial rather than an assumed figure.
Is this dosage chart medical advice?
No. It lists commonly-cited research figures only to illustrate the reconstitution math for the blend. It is educational, not medical advice, and not a dose recommendation.
How is a blend stored after mixing?
Reconstituted peptide blends are generally refrigerated (about 2–8 °C), protected from light, and the dry powder is kept frozen. Follow the storage guidance for your specific product.

Related calculators

Get the free peptide tracking starter kit

The dosing calculator, the cited guides, and a simple way to track your protocol — straight to your inbox. No spam.

Educational only — not medical advice. Unsubscribe anytime.

Track CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin the right way

Log every dose, chart your biomarkers against reference ranges, and never miss a lab — in one place. PeptidePanel is the neutral monitoring layer for whatever your clinician prescribes. Free 60-day trial.

Start Free Trial

Educational math only — not medical advice, and not a dose recommendation. PeptidePanel does not promote, source, or supply any compound. CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin is an investigational research compound discussed for educational purposes and is not FDA-approved. Always consult a licensed clinician.