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ForumsCompounding & FormulationHow I verify my compounded peptide — my results so far

How I verify my compounded peptide — my results so far

marco_milano Sun, May 4, 2025 at 1:54 AM 10 replies 1,423 viewsPage 1 of 2
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marco_milano
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Milan, IT
May 4, 2025 at 3:19 AM#1
I've been thinking about this for a while and want to float the idea. Several compounding pharmacies offer volume discounts — Empower, for example, drops their per-vial price by about 15% for orders of 10+ vials. Some overseas API suppliers offer even steeper discounts at quantity. The concept: Organize a group of 10-20 community members, place a bulk order, and pass the savings on. For a domestic 503B pharmacy: - Individual price: $195/vial (5mg semaglutide) - 10-vial price: ~$166/vial (15% discount) - 20-vial price: ~$156/vial (20% discount) - Savings: $29-$39 per vial per person For an overseas API supplier (bulk lyophilized): - Individual price (5x 5mg): $395 ($79/vial) - Bulk price (50x 5mg): $2,750 ($55/vial) - Savings: $24/vial per person (30% discount) Logistics I've thought through: 1. One organizer places the order and receives the shipment 2. Repackages and ships to participants via USPS Priority Mail 3. Each participant pays their share + shipping (~$9-12 flat rate) 4. Payment collected upfront via Zelle/PayPal Concerns I already know about: - Trust: who handles the money? How do we prevent a scam? - Legal: is redistributing compounded medications legal? (Spoiler: it's complicated) - Quality: does repackaging/reshipping affect stability? - Prescription: 503B vials require a prescription per person. Bulk ordering might not work for Rx products. Looking for feedback before I invest more time into this. Is the juice worth the squeeze?
41 12kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE, mike_mealprep and 38 others
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marco_milano
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Jul 2024
Milan, IT
May 4, 2025 at 3:36 AM#2
I need to pump the brakes here. I'm an attorney (not giving legal advice, just sharing knowledge): For prescription compounded medications (503A/503B): You absolutely cannot organize a group buy. Each vial requires an individual prescription for a specific patient. Buying 20 vials and redistributing them is illegal redistribution of prescription medication. Full stop. Federal offense under 18 U.S.C. § 331. For research-grade peptides: The legal landscape is murkier. They're sold as "not for human consumption," so technically there's no prescription requirement. But organizing a group buy and redistributing could trigger state-level pharmaceutical distribution laws depending on your jurisdiction. The real risk: If someone in the group has an adverse event and it comes out that they got the product through an informal redistribution scheme, the organizer could face criminal liability. Not worth it. I understand the desire to save money, but this particular approach has serious legal exposure. The savings of $25-$39/vial aren't worth the risk.
8 20alex_tucson, kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE and 5 others
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SkepticalSean
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Maine
May 4, 2025 at 3:53 AM#3
Appreciate the reality check Lisa. You're right about the Rx side — I should have been clearer that I was primarily thinking about research-grade lyophilized peptides, not prescription products. But your point about liability is well-taken even for research stuff. If I organize a buy, receive 50 vials, and reship them, I'm essentially acting as an unlicensed distributor. That's a liability I hadn't fully thought through. What if we modified the concept? Instead of one person buying and reshipping: - Group identifies a supplier willing to offer bulk pricing - Supplier ships individually to each participant - No one person handles the product - We just coordinate to hit the quantity threshold Basically a "buying club" model where the savings come from collective negotiating power. Does that change the legal calculus?
7 23emma_london, tammy_FL, Dr.LipidDallas and 4 others
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TirzTom
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May 4, 2025 at 4:10 AM#4
The buying club model is significantly better from a legal standpoint. If the supplier ships directly to each participant, no individual member is acting as a distributor. You're essentially just negotiating a discount — which is perfectly legal. Remaining considerations: - Get the pricing commitment in writing from the supplier - Make sure each participant places their own order (even if coordinated) - Don't pool money through one person — each participant pays the supplier directly - Document everything in case of disputes This is how things like Costco or wholesale clubs work, just informally. The key legal distinction is that product never passes through an intermediary's hands.
Last edited: May 4, 2025 at 8:10 AM
38 12SandraNC_45, Dr.EndoIndy, tom_AK and 35 others
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hyun_seoul
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Seoul, KR
May 4, 2025 at 4:27 AM#5
Even with the buying club model, I'm not sure the savings justify the hassle. Let me do the math: Scenario: 15 people coordinate to buy from an overseas supplier - Individual price: $79/vial - Bulk-negotiated price: $59/vial - Savings: $20/vial - Average person buys 2 vials every 10 weeks - Annual savings: ~$104/person/year So you're saving about $104/year per person. That's $8.67/month. For that, you need to: - Find 14 other trustworthy people - Coordinate order timing - Negotiate with the supplier - Deal with inevitable dropouts and delays - Handle disputes when someone's order arrives damaged Compare that to just... buying individually and eating the $20/vial premium. Or switching to Hallandale at $155/vial with no coordination required. I've organized group buys for other products and they always seem great in theory. In practice, you spend hours herding cats and someone always causes drama. My two cents: not worth it for this category.
26 12LipidDoc_ATL, BariatricNurseD, MASHdoc_SA and 23 others
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