Reconstitution Calculator

Draw the exact dose, every time.

Enter your vial, your mixing water, and your target dose. See precisely where to fill an insulin syringe — no guesswork.

Total amount of powder in the vial (on the label).
mg
How much liquid you're mixing into the vial.
mL
The amount you want per injection.
mcg
U-100 insulin syringe is standard (100 units = 1 mL).
5 units
Draw to this mark
Fill the syringe to the green line
Concentration5 mg/mL
Volume to inject0.05 mL
Doses per vial40

How to reconstitute a peptide

Reconstitution is the math of turning a dry peptide vial into a measured liquid dose. It comes down to three numbers you already have: the milligrams of peptide in the vial, the milliliters of bacteriostatic water you mix in, and the dose you're aiming for.

Divide the peptide amount by the water to get your concentration. Divide your dose by that concentration to get the volume to inject. Because insulin syringes are marked in units rather than milliliters, the last step converts that volume into units — on a U-100 syringe, one milliliter is 100 units. The calculator above does all three steps live, and the diagram shows where the fill line lands.

The amount of water you add is a choice, not a fixed rule. More water means a lower concentration and a larger, easier-to-read draw; less water means a smaller, more concentrated one. A good habit is to adjust the water until your target dose lands on a clean number of units.

Common questions

Divide the total peptide in the vial (mg) by the bacteriostatic water you add (mL) to get concentration in mg/mL. Divide your target dose by that concentration to get the volume to inject, then multiply by 100 to convert milliliters into units on a U-100 insulin syringe.

There's no single right amount. More water lowers the concentration so each dose is a larger, easier-to-measure volume; less water makes a smaller draw. Many people pick an amount that makes their target dose land on a round number of units. Try different values above and watch the units change.

It depends on concentration. A 10 mg vial mixed with 2 mL of water is 5 mg/mL, so 250 mcg works out to 0.05 mL — which is 5 units on a U-100 syringe. Change the vial size or water and the units shift, so always run your own numbers.

It's a syringe marked so that 100 units equals 1 milliliter — the standard for measuring small volumes. On a U-100 syringe, 10 units is 0.1 mL and 50 units is 0.5 mL.

One milligram equals 1000 micrograms. Vials are usually labeled in mg, while doses are often given in mcg. The calculator converts between them automatically based on the unit you pick.

Informational tool only. This calculator performs unit-conversion math on the numbers you enter. It is not medical advice and does not recommend any substance, dose, or treatment. Peptides sold for research are not approved for human use in many places. Always follow the guidance of a licensed healthcare professional and verify every calculation independently before acting on it.