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PepStack

Free Online Tool

Peptide Serum Level Visualizer

See how your serum levels build up over 60 days of repeated dosing. Enter your dose, injection interval, and half-life to visualize the pharmacokinetic curve and find your steady state.

Avg Level at Day 30

203.48 mg

Avg Level at Day 60

206.49 mg

Stable (±10%) from

Day 11

Understanding Pharmacokinetics

Every time you inject a peptide, hormone, or other compound, it enters your bloodstream and immediately begins to decay following exponential elimination kinetics. The formula is: C(t) = C₀ × 0.5^(t / t½)

With repeated dosing at fixed intervals, each new injection adds to the remaining concentration from previous doses. This creates an accumulation effect — over time, the peak and trough levels rise until they stabilize at a steady state.

The “Exact” view shows the raw serum curve with each peak and trough visible. The “Average” view applies a moving average to smooth the data, showing the effective steady-state concentration your body maintains between injections.

Common Half-Lives Reference

CompoundHalf-LifeTypical Dose
BPC-157~2 hours250-500 mcg
Semaglutide~7 days0.25-2.4 mg
Tirzepatide~5 days2.5-15 mg
Retatrutide~6 days1-12 mg
Testosterone Cypionate~8 days100-200 mg
Testosterone Enanthate~4.5 days100-200 mg
HGH (somatropin)~3 hours2-4 IU
CJC-1295 (DAC)~8 days1-2 mg
Ipamorelin~2 hours200-300 mcg

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a serum level visualizer?
A serum level visualizer models how a substance accumulates in your bloodstream over time based on repeated dosing. It uses pharmacokinetic principles — specifically the half-life of the compound — to calculate how blood concentration rises, peaks, and stabilizes.
What is half-life and why does it matter?
Half-life (t½) is the time it takes for the concentration of a substance in your blood to decrease by 50%. A short half-life (e.g., 2 hours for BPC-157) means the peptide is eliminated quickly, requiring more frequent dosing. A long half-life (e.g., 6 days for Retatrutide) means levels accumulate significantly over multiple doses.
What does 'steady state' mean?
Steady state occurs when the amount of substance entering the bloodstream per dose equals the amount being eliminated. At this point, peak and trough levels stabilize within a consistent range (typically ±10% variation). Most substances reach steady state after approximately 4-5 half-lives of repeated dosing.
How accurate is this calculator?
This calculator uses a standard one-compartment pharmacokinetic model with first-order elimination kinetics. It provides a reliable approximation for most peptides and hormones. However, individual absorption rates, body composition, injection site, and metabolism can all affect actual serum levels.
Can I use this for testosterone, GH, or other hormones?
Yes. The calculator works for any substance where you know the dose and half-life. Common examples include Testosterone Cypionate (t½ ≈ 8 days), Testosterone Enanthate (t½ ≈ 4.5 days), HGH (t½ ≈ 3 hours), and various peptides like BPC-157, Semaglutide, or Tirzepatide.

Need to calculate how much to draw from your syringe?

Try the Reconstitution Calculator →