Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500)
Also known as: GLOW Mix, Repair & Glow, Glow Blend, GHK-Cu/BPC-157/TB-500 blend
Glow is a marketing name for a blend of three peptides, GHK-Cu (a copper tripeptide) plus BPC-157 and TB-500, marketed for skin, hair, and tissue recovery. It is sold under names such as Glow, GLOW Mix, Repair & Glow, and Glow Blend. It is not a single drug or an FDA-approved product; it is a combination that licensed compounding pharmacies prepare and telehealth clinics prescribe. Its effects are the combined effects of its components, which have been studied mostly outside of controlled human trials.
What's in this blend
Glow combines the following peptides. The blend's effects and risks are those of its components together; open each for its own evidence and safety.
- GHK-Cu (Copper Tripeptide-1)A copper-bound tripeptide studied for wound healing and skin support, used mainly as a topical cosmetic ingredient and not approved as a drug.
- BPC-157BPC-157 is a synthetic peptide studied in animals for tissue repair. It is not FDA-approved and remains investigational in humans.
- TB-500A synthetic peptide related to thymosin beta-4, studied in animal models for tissue repair and not approved for human use.
How it works
GHK-Cu is a naturally occurring copper-binding tripeptide studied in laboratory and skin research for effects on collagen and wound repair, and it is used in some cosmetic products. BPC-157 and TB-500 are synthetic peptides reported in animal models to affect tissue repair, blood vessel formation, and cell migration. The Glow blend itself has not been evaluated as a single combined product in controlled human studies.
Researched uses
- Marketed for skin quality, hair, and cosmetic 'glow' (GHK-Cu is the component with the most skin-focused research)
- Marketed for wound healing and tissue recovery (based on animal data for BPC-157 and TB-500)
- Used cosmetically and for recovery, though the three-peptide combination is unproven in humans
There is no FDA-approved Glow product. GHK-Cu is used in cosmetics but is not an approved drug; BPC-157 is not on the FDA's list of bulk substances permitted for compounding and remains under regulatory review; TB-500 is sold as a research chemical and is not an established compounding substance. Providers listed here dispense with a prescription and describe a licensed pharmacy, but because these peptides sit outside the settled compounding rules the legal pathway is not clear-cut, so review each provider's own sourcing. BPC-157 and TB-500 appear on the WADA Prohibited List; GHK-Cu is not specifically listed.
Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500) providers compared
Providers that have passed our rubric review are listed first, then ordered by the total cost of a 3-month protocol. We average every cost to a standard 3-month protocol, which our medical advisors consider the best basis for comparing cost and value, and the headline figure folds in any one-time consult or provider-review fee plus three months of membership. Use the calculator below to adjust the length and see the same total broken out.
5 of 8 providers here have completed our rubric review, so they are listed first. This reflects review status, not a quality or price ranking. Sort by price to compare on cost.
| Provider | Sourcing | What's included | Verified | Visit provider | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Live VitalVerified Glow (GHK-Cu/BPC-157/TB-500) Free live doctor consult | 503A pharmacy | $447 for 3 months $149 per month | No consult fee · no membership · shipping included | Jul 8, 2026 | View |
Better Med SpaVerified Repair & Glow (GHK-Cu/BPC-157/TB-500) | 503A pharmacy | $1,110 for 3 months $370 per month + fees may apply (not published) | Consult fee not published · membership not published | Jul 8, 2026 | View |
GLOW Mix (BPC-157/TB-500/GHK-Cu) | 503A pharmacy | $1,317 for 3 months $439 per month + fees may apply (not published) | Consult fee not published · membership not published | Jul 8, 2026 | View |
GLOW Mix (BPC-157/TB-500/GHK-Cu) | 503A pharmacy | $1,317 for 3 months $439 per month + fees may apply (not published) | Consult fee not published · membership not published | Jul 8, 2026 | View |
TelewellnessMDVerified GLOW Wolverine (GHK-Cu/BPC-157) | 503A pharmacy | pricing not published | Consult fee not published · membership not published | not checked | View |
GLOW Mix (GHK-Cu/BPC-157/TB-500) | Not yet verified | pricing not published | Consult fee not published · membership not published | not checked | View |
GLOW Peptide | Not yet verified | pricing not published | Consult fee not published · membership not published | not checked | View |
Glow Blend (BPC-157/GHK-Cu/TB-500) | Not yet verified | pricing not published | Consult fee not published · membership not published | not checked | View |
We average every cost to a standard 3-month protocol, which our medical advisors consider the best window for comparing cost and value. Monthly plans are multiplied by 3 and 3-month programs are taken as billed; each provider's own sticker price and cadence are shown underneath.
The headline figure is the total 3-month cost: the medication plus any one-time consult or provider-review fee (for example RxPepsDirect's $39) and three months of any membership fee. Where a fee is not published we fold in what is known and flag that other fees may apply.
Per-vial providers are averaged to a 3-month protocol at roughly one vial per month (3 vials), marked "est.", with the per-vial price shown underneath. Actual vial count depends on your dose and protocol.
Prices are gathered from each provider's public pages. The "Verified" date is when we last checked the provider's sticker price; for per-vial providers it is the vial price that was verified, not the averaged 3-month total.
Value check: total cost of therapy
This is the real value comparison. A sticker price hides consult and membership fees, so this adds everything up for a full protocol of Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500) and ranks by true total cost. We default to a 3-month protocol, the window our medical advisors consider best for judging value.
Safety notes
The safety of the Glow blend has not been established in humans. GHK-Cu has the most supporting research of the three, largely in topical and laboratory settings, while injectable BPC-157 and TB-500 rest mostly on animal data. Combining three investigational peptides compounds the uncertainty, and composition varies between providers. Products sold outside the licensed pharmacy system are not verified for identity, purity, or sterility.
In the news
- Inside the booming, gray-market world of injectable peptides The Hill
Reporting on the gray market for research-use-only injectable peptides sold outside the licensed pharmacy system, and the associated health concerns.
Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500) questions
How much does Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500) cost?
Across the licensed providers tracked here, a full 3-month protocol of Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500) totals $447 to $1,317, depending on the provider, dose, and what is included. We average every cost to a standard 3-month protocol, which our medical advisors consider the best basis for comparing cost and value, and the total folds in any one-time consult or provider-review fee and three months of membership. Some providers listing Glow (GHK-Cu / BPC-157 / TB-500) do not publish their consult or membership fees, so the top of that range may be higher. Each price shows the date the provider's sticker price was verified.
What is in Glow?
Glow typically combines GHK-Cu, BPC-157, and TB-500. The exact doses and ratios vary by provider, so review each provider's specific product.
Is Glow FDA-approved?
No. There is no FDA-approved Glow product. GHK-Cu is used in cosmetics but is not an approved drug, and BPC-157 and TB-500 are investigational. The blend as a whole is unproven in humans.
How is Glow different from Klow?
Klow is the Glow blend with a fourth peptide, KPV, added. KPV is studied for anti-inflammatory effects, so Klow is marketed as Glow plus an anti-inflammatory component.