Proper peptide storage is one of the most overlooked aspects of research — and one of the most consequential. A compound that arrives intact can degrade significantly within weeks if stored incorrectly. This guide covers everything researchers need to know: what degrades peptides, how to store them before and after reconstitution, and what shelf life actually means in practice.
Why Storage Conditions Matter
Peptides are chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds. Those bonds are chemically stable under the right conditions but vulnerable to three main threats:
- Heat — accelerates hydrolysis and oxidation, breaking peptide bonds
- Light — UV exposure generates free radicals that damage amino acid residues, especially tryptophan, tyrosine, and cysteine
- Moisture — triggers hydrolysis even in lyophilized powder; water is the primary catalyst for peptide degradation
Getting storage right isn’t complicated — it mostly comes down to keeping peptides cold, dark, and dry.
Storing Lyophilized (Freeze-Dried) Peptides
Lyophilized peptides — the powder form most research suppliers ship — are significantly more stable than reconstituted peptides. The freeze-drying process removes water, which removes the primary degradation vector.
Short-term storage (up to 4–6 weeks)
Store in a standard refrigerator at 2–8°C (36–46°F). Keep the vial sealed, away from the refrigerator door (temperature fluctuates there), and out of direct light.
Long-term storage (months to years)
Store at -20°C (-4°F) or lower. A standard lab freezer is ideal. Most lyophilized peptides stored this way remain stable for 12–24 months, with some remaining potent well beyond that.
Key rules for lyophilized storage:
- Always store in the original sealed vial when possible
- Keep desiccant packets nearby if storing in humid environments
- Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles — each cycle introduces moisture risk
- Never store next to strong-smelling compounds; some vial septa can absorb vapors
Storing Reconstituted Peptides
Once you’ve added BAC water (bacteriostatic water) to a peptide, the clock starts ticking. Dissolved peptides are far more chemically active and degrade faster.
Refrigerator storage (2–8°C)
Most reconstituted peptides remain stable for 4–6 weeks when refrigerated properly. Use BAC water rather than sterile water — the 0.9% benzyl alcohol acts as a preservative and extends usable life.
Freezer storage (-20°C)
If you’re not using a reconstituted peptide within a few weeks, freeze it. This extends stability significantly, but:
- Freeze in aliquots — divide into single-use portions before freezing so you’re not repeatedly freeze-thawing the same vial
- Use siliconized low-adsorption tubes if available; some peptides (particularly short sequences) can adsorb to standard plastic
- Let frozen vials thaw in the refrigerator or at room temperature — never use heat
How many freeze-thaw cycles are acceptable?
General guidance from peptide stability literature: 3–5 cycles maximum. Beyond that, degradation compounds. Aliquoting before freezing solves this entirely.
Light Exposure: More Damaging Than Most Researchers Realize
UV and visible light can degrade certain amino acid residues rapidly. Peptides containing tryptophan (W), tyrosine (Y), phenylalanine (F), methionine (M), or cysteine (C) are particularly photosensitive.
Practical steps:
- Store all vials in opaque containers or wrapped in foil
- Minimize time under lab fluorescent lighting when handling
- Use amber vials when transferring between containers
- Never leave vials on a bench near a window
Compound-Specific Storage Notes
Different peptides have different stability profiles. Here’s a quick reference for common research compounds:
| Compound | Lyophilized Stability | Reconstituted Stability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| BPC-157 | 24+ months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | Stable; no unusual light sensitivity |
| TB-500 (Thymosin β4) | 18–24 months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | Prone to adsorption on some plastics |
| Semaglutide | 24+ months at -20°C | Up to 8 weeks refrigerated | Good stability per manufacturer data |
| CJC-1295 | 24+ months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | DAC form more stable than non-DAC |
| Ipamorelin | 18–24 months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | Stable; straightforward storage |
| Melanotan II | 24+ months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | Light sensitive; use amber vials |
| Epithalon | 24+ months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | Very stable tetrapeptide |
| BPC-157 Arginate | 24+ months at -20°C | 4–6 weeks refrigerated | Oral form; stable at room temp when sealed |
Signs a Peptide Has Degraded
In lyophilized form, visual cues are limited — color change (yellowing) or clumping after moisture exposure are red flags. In reconstituted form, watch for:
- Cloudiness or particulates — indicates contamination or aggregation
- Color change — most peptides reconstitute clear; yellowing suggests oxidation
- Unusual viscosity — can indicate aggregation
- No expected biological activity in research models (a practical indicator, not a storage test)
When in doubt, don’t use it. Degraded peptides can produce confounding research results and, in some cases, unexpected byproducts.
Shipping and Handling
FenaLife ships all peptides lyophilized with temperature-controlled packaging. Upon receipt:
- Inspect the vial — confirm the powder is intact and the seal is undamaged
- Refrigerate immediately if using within 4–6 weeks
- Freeze at -20°C if storing longer
Don’t leave peptide shipments sitting at room temperature, especially in warmer months.
Quick Reference Cheat Sheet
| Situation | Recommended Storage |
|---|---|
| Lyophilized, using within 6 weeks | Refrigerator (2–8°C), sealed, dark |
| Lyophilized, long-term | Freezer (-20°C), sealed, dark |
| Reconstituted, using within 6 weeks | Refrigerator (2–8°C), BAC water |
| Reconstituted, not using soon | Freeze in aliquots at -20°C |
| Any peptide with aromatic residues | Amber vial + foil wrap |
Final Notes
Getting storage right is straightforward once it’s a habit. Cold, dark, and dry covers 90% of what you need. The details — aliquoting before freezing, using BAC water, minimizing light exposure for sensitive compounds — make the difference between a peptide that lasts its full shelf life and one that loses potency weeks before you’ve finished your research.
All peptides from FenaLife ship with a Certificate of Analysis and are batch-tested for purity. Need help with reconstitution? Use our free reconstitution calculator to get precise BAC water volumes for any vial.
All compounds are sold for research purposes only.
🔬 Research Compounds Referenced: BAC Water 10ml | BPC-157 10mg | Semaglutide 10mg | Ipamorelin 10mg
