Skip to content
Information only — we do not sell or supply products, and nothing here is professional advice.
Peptide Help USA

Contact

Ask a Question

Last updated 2026-06-16 · Reviewed for accuracy by Editorial Team

This is where to send a general question about peptide therapy in the US — how access works, what things cost, what to check in a provider. It's an educational resource, not a clinic, pharmacy, or store, so there's no sales pitch waiting on the other end.

What this page is for

If you’ve got a general question about peptide therapy in the United States — how access actually works, what a realistic cost range looks like, what separates a credible provider from a sketchy one, or what a piece of 2026 regulatory news means in plain English — this is the place to ask it. Send it through the form on this page and we’ll do our best to point you in the right direction.

The most important thing to know up front is what this page isn’t. Peptide Help USA is an independent educational resource. It is not a clinic, not a pharmacy, not a brand, and not a marketplace. There’s no product to sell you, so there’s no sales team, no follow-up call trying to close a deal, and no “limited-time offer” waiting on the other side of the form. You’re writing to people whose only job is to explain how things work — not to convert you into a customer.

Note: For anything specific to your own health — symptoms, a diagnosis, whether a given compound is right for you, what dose makes sense — the right person to ask is a licensed clinician who can actually evaluate you. We can explain the landscape; we can’t be your doctor.

What we can usually help with

A lot of the questions people send are really requests to be pointed at the right starting point. Those we’re glad to help with. Things like:

  • How access works in general. The legitimate route in the US runs through a licensed provider and, where a compound can be compounded, a licensed pharmacy — not a checkout button. We can explain that pathway and what each step involves.
  • What things tend to cost. Realistic US price ranges, what’s usually bundled into a program (consults, labs, the compound itself), and why a price that looks too good to be true usually is.
  • What to check before choosing a provider. The questions worth asking a telehealth service or in-person clinic, and the red flags that should make you walk away. Our how to choose a peptide clinic guide covers most of this.
  • Making sense of the regulatory picture. The 2026 FDA situation is genuinely in motion and easy to misread. If you’ve seen a headline claiming peptides are suddenly “legal again” or “banned,” we can help you understand what the current status actually is — see are peptides legal in the US? for the detailed version.

In many cases the fastest answer is a page we’ve already written. If you describe what you’re trying to understand, we can usually link you straight to it.

What we won’t do — and why

Some requests we decline on purpose, because answering them would cross from education into something unsafe or irresponsible for a public site to provide:

  • We don’t tell anyone where to buy. No vendor recommendations, no links to sellers, no nudging toward “research-only” or gray-market suppliers. Sourcing an unregulated injectable of unknown purity is exactly the risk this site exists to warn about, not to enable.
  • We don’t give dosing, titration, or reconstitution instructions. Dosing is individualized and set by a prescriber for a specific patient. A number lifted from a website — applied to a product of unverified strength — isn’t a shortcut; it’s a hazard. So we won’t hand one out, to anyone, for any compound.
  • We don’t diagnose, prescribe, or review your results. We’re not a medical practice and can’t act like one.
  • We’re not an emergency or crisis service. If something feels medically urgent, please contact a licensed clinician, and in an emergency call 911 or your local emergency number. A web form is the wrong tool for an urgent situation.

None of that is meant to be a brush-off. Drawing these lines clearly is part of how the site stays trustworthy: a resource that would tell you where to buy or how to dose isn’t an educational resource, it’s a liability dressed up as one.

Before you send a message

Two quick things that make the form more useful for both of us. First, keep it general. The more your question is about how things work rather than what you personally should do medically, the more we can actually help — the second kind belongs with a clinician who can assess you. Second, a lot of common questions are already answered in depth across the site, so it’s worth a quick look at the relevant guide first; you may not need to wait for a reply at all.

When you do submit something, your message is used for one thing: reading and responding to your question. We don’t sell your details, and we don’t pass them to vendors or advertisers. The privacy policy lays out exactly how information submitted here is handled, and the medical disclaimer covers the limits of everything published on the site. If you want the fuller picture of who’s behind it and why it’s built the way it is, the about page explains that, and the editorial policy describes how the content is researched and kept current.

With all that said — ask away. Use the form below and we’ll take it from there.

Frequently asked questions

Can you tell me where to buy peptides?

No. We don't recommend vendors, link to sellers, or point anyone toward gray-market or 'research-only' suppliers. What we can do is explain the legitimate route in general terms — a licensed provider evaluates you and, where appropriate, issues a prescription that a compounding pharmacy fills. The provider and pharmacy handle supply; we don't.

Can you give me a dose or a protocol?

No. Dosing is a medical decision a licensed prescriber makes for a specific person based on their goals, labs, and response — it isn't a number that's safe to copy from a website. We won't supply dosing, titration, or reconstitution instructions for anyone.

Is this a clinic? Can you prescribe or review my labs?

No. Peptide Help USA is an independent educational site, not a medical practice. We can't diagnose, treat, prescribe, or interpret your results. For anything specific to your health, that's a conversation for a licensed clinician.

Do you sell peptides or earn a commission if I buy?

No. We don't sell or supply anything, and the site isn't built around steering you to a particular product or company. That independence is the point — there's no checkout and nothing riding on what you decide.

What happens to my message — is it private?

Your message is used to read and respond to your question, nothing more. We don't sell your details or hand them to vendors. See the privacy page for how information submitted through the form is handled.

How quickly will I hear back, and is this for emergencies?

This is not an urgent or emergency channel and not a substitute for medical care. If you have a medical concern, contact a licensed clinician; in an emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number. General questions may receive a general, educational reply, and we can't promise to answer every message.

Ask a question

Get guidance for your situation

Send your question and we'll point you to the right information. General information only — never sales pressure.

  • General information only — never sales pressure.
  • Your details are used to reply to you, nothing else.
  • We usually respond within 1–2 business days.