FIELD REPORT // INDEPENDENT // NO AFFILIATES EST. 2024 // PEPTIDE FRONTIER
Wild West & Peptides The Frontier Reporter on Research Peptides
No affiliate links · No vendor partnerships · Just data, comparisons, and straight talk.

The unregulated peptide market attracts scammers. Below are the most common scam types, how to identify them, and protect yourself.

Common Peptide Scams

Scam Type How It Works Red Flags Frequency Victim Loss
Exit Scam Vendor collects orders for 2-4 weeks, then disappears with money New site, too-good prices, crypto only, no phone number Common $100-500+ per victim
Fake/Underdosed Product Selling sugar powder or severely underdosed peptides as "real" No COA, prices 50%+ below market, sketch website Very Common Product cost + wasted time
Fake COA Photoshopped or altered certificates of analysis Perfect purity scores, unverifiable lab, mismatched batch numbers Common You get bunk product
Bait and Switch Advertise tested product, ship untested cheaper version COA doesn't match batch, different labeling than website Moderate Overpay for inferior product
Phishing/Identity Theft Fake site clones real vendor to steal payment info Slightly misspelled domain, new site, identical to known vendor Moderate Financial fraud + identity theft
"Pharmacy Grade" Premium Charge 2-3x for same product with meaningless marketing terms "Pharma grade," "medical grade" with no actual certification Very Common Overpay 100-200%
Proprietary Blend Scam Hide actual doses/ingredients, use cheap fillers "Proprietary formula," won't disclose exact amounts Common Pay for filler, not active peptides
Expired/Degraded Stock Sell old inventory that's lost potency Clearance sales with no expiration dates, COA >18 months old Moderate Ineffective product
Customs Seizure "Reship" Scam Claim package seized, ask for more money to reship (never shipped original) International vendors with no tracking, repeated "seizures" Less Common Double payment for nothing
Fake "Doctor Recommended" Claim medical endorsements that don't exist "Recommended by doctors," testimonials from "Dr. Smith" Common Trust in unverified product
Subscription Trap Hide recurring charges in fine print Automatic monthly shipments without clear disclosure Less Common Unwanted recurring charges
Fake Domestic Source (International) Claim US domestic but actually ship from China/India Delayed shipping, no tracking, customs issues Moderate Seizure risk + delays

Scam Detection Checklist

Check This Safe Indicator Scam Indicator How to Verify
Domain Age >1 year old <6 months old Use who.is domain lookup
Payment Methods Credit card, established processors Crypto only, gift cards only, Zelle only Check payment page
Contact Info Phone number, email, business address Email only, no verifiable address Try calling number, Google address
COA Availability Posted publicly or immediately sent None available, "coming soon," or requires large order first Request before ordering
Testing Lab Freedom Diagnostics, Janoshik, Colmaric, other known labs Unknown lab, generic "third-party," or none listed Google the lab name
Pricing Within 30% of market average 50%+ below market or way above with no justification Compare to 3+ established vendors
Website Quality Professional, no medical claims, "research only" disclaimer Medical claims, "cures," no disclaimer, stolen content Read homepage and disclaimers
Community Feedback Reviews on Reddit, forums (unaffiliated) Only testimonials on own site, no independent reviews Search "vendor name reddit" and "vendor name scam"
Batch Numbers Match between vial label and COA Generic COA, no batch #, or mismatched numbers Compare when product arrives
Response Time Answer within 24-48 hours No response, defensive answers, pressure tactics Send test email before ordering

Price-Based Scam Indicators

Peptide Normal Range (5mg) Scam Price (Too Low) Scam Price (Too High)
BPC-157 $28-48 <$20 >$70 (without unique justification)
TB-500 $35-60 <$25 >$90
Ipamorelin $22-38 <$15 >$55
CJC-1295 No DAC $15-32 (2mg), $32-48 (5mg) <$10 (2mg) >$65 (5mg)
GHK-Cu $38-58 (50mg) <$25 >$85

Common Scammer Tactics & Responses

Scammer Claim Your Response Legitimate Vendor Response
"We test in-house, don't need third-party" "I need independent verification. Can you provide that?" Either provides third-party COA or admits they don't have it (move on)
"This sale ends tonight!" Walk away - artificial urgency is a red flag Legitimate vendors don't pressure; sales are regular and announced in advance
"Pay with Bitcoin for 20% discount" Acceptable if also offer credit card; sus if crypto only Offer crypto discount but also accept traceable payment methods
"COA available after you order" "I need to see it before purchasing" Send COA immediately upon request, no purchase required
"We're the same lab that supplies [famous clinic]" "Can you prove that with documentation?" Can't prove it (it's a lie) or deflects question
"99.9% purity guaranteed!" "Show me the COA with that purity" Either provides legit COA (rare to see 99.9%) or can't back up claim
"Don't trust those other sites, we're the real deal" Red flag - legitimate vendors don't badmouth competition Professional vendors focus on their own quality, not bashing others

What to Do If You've Been Scammed

Step Action Timeline
1. Payment Dispute If credit card: file chargeback immediately. If crypto: you're likely SOL. Within 60 days for CC
2. Warn Community Post on Reddit (r/Peptides), forums with evidence (order confirmations, emails) ASAP to prevent others
3. Report to Authorities File FTC complaint (ftc.gov/complaint), IC3 for internet fraud Within days
4. Monitor Accounts If you gave banking info, watch for unauthorized charges; consider freezing credit Ongoing
5. Document Everything Screenshot website, emails, payment confirmations before site vanishes Immediately

Vendor Verification Process (Before First Order)

  1. Check domain age: Use who.is - must be >6 months old minimum
  2. Google vendor name + "scam" / "review" / "reddit" - see what comes up
  3. Request COA - legitimate vendors send within 24 hours, no purchase needed
  4. Verify testing lab exists - Google lab name, check if they have website/contact
  5. Try contacting vendor - send email with questions, gauge response quality/speed
  6. Compare pricing - check against 3+ established vendors; if 50%+ cheaper, investigate why
  7. Look for business entity - LLC, address, phone number should be listed
  8. Check payment methods - if ONLY crypto/gift cards/Zelle, walk away
  9. Read website carefully - medical claims = red flag; professional disclaimers = good sign
  10. Start small - even if everything checks out, first order should be minimal to test reliability

Trusted Community Resources for Vendor Vetting

Resource What to Look For Limitations
Reddit r/Peptides Search vendor name, read experiences (good and bad) Some shill accounts exist; look for account history
Peptide Discord Servers Real-time community feedback, vendor discussions Smaller communities may have bias; cross-reference
PeptidesUK Forum International perspective, detailed vendor logs EU-focused; US vendor coverage limited
Generic Bodybuilding Forums Search peptide vendor sections Often outdated info; verify dates on posts

The Ultimate Scam Avoidance Rule

If you can't verify the testing independently, don't order. Period.

Every excuse for why they "can't" provide a COA is a reason to walk away. Legitimate vendors want you to verify quality - it's their competitive advantage. Scammers avoid verification because they're selling garbage.

Related Pages

External References

The Five Schemes That Recur

Patterns in vendor fraud are not subtle. After cataloging approximately three hundred documented scam events over the past four years — from reader submissions, public complaints, and our own monitoring — five archetypes account for nearly all of them. Naming them is the first defense.

1. The Cut-and-Filler Substitution

The vendor sells a lyophilized vial that visually resembles the labeled peptide but contains substantially less of the active compound and substantially more of an inert bulking agent — mannitol, sucrose, or sometimes plain microcrystalline cellulose. The reconstituted solution looks correct, dissolves correctly, and injects correctly. Independent assay reveals 20-60% of stated mass. Common targets: BPC-157, TB-500, Ipamorelin. Common signs in advance: pricing 30-50% below the legitimate market for that compound, no published COA, batch numbers that repeat across orders.

2. The Real-Then-Switch

The vendor begins with legitimate, well-tested product to build community reputation. Reviews accumulate. Trust builds. Then, typically at the six-to-eighteen-month mark, the vendor begins substituting cheaper material for the same retail price. The COA on the website continues to show the old assay results. This is the most common scheme we have catalogued because it exploits exactly the dynamic that consumer-review sites are designed to measure: prior reputation. A vendor with twenty positive Reddit posts from twelve months ago can sell undercut product for another year before the community notices the drift.

The defense against this scheme is to demand a current, batch-specific COA, not a website "we test our products" page. The defense against the COA being forged is to commission independent testing on a sample from your own order.

3. The Disappear-After-Bulk

The vendor offers aggressive bulk-purchase discounts — typically a "buy six, get one free" or a "20% off orders over $500" structure. Customers place large prepaid orders. The vendor ships smaller initial orders to establish trust, then collects a large round of bulk orders, then closes the website and stops responding to email. Recovery is essentially impossible because most research-peptide vendors operate offshore corporate structures and accept payment in cryptocurrency or wire transfer with no chargeback path. The defense: cap individual order size to what you can afford to lose, regardless of advertised discount. Aggressive bulk discounting is a red flag, not a value opportunity.

4. The Counterfeit COA

The vendor publishes a Certificate of Analysis bearing the logo and formatting of a known independent lab — typically Freedom Diagnostics, Janoshik, or Colmaric. The COA is professionally formatted, contains plausible numbers, and references batch identifiers. It is also fabricated. The lab never tested that batch and may never have heard of the vendor. The defense: cross-check the COA directly with the lab. Freedom Diagnostics, Janoshik, and Colmaric all publish verification mechanisms on their own websites — usually a QR code, a unique identifier, or a direct email-confirmation channel. If a vendor's COA cannot be verified through the lab's own channel, treat it as fabricated until proven otherwise.

5. The Phantom Inventory

The vendor advertises rare, hard-to-source compounds at competitive pricing — typically combinations like Tesamorelin, MOTS-c, or SS-31 that have only a few legitimate global suppliers. The site accepts orders and processes payment. Shipping is delayed. Customer service blames "supply chain disruption." Eventually the customer receives either no product, a different (cheaper) peptide labeled as the ordered compound, or a partial refund. The defense: if you cannot find at least three other independent confirmations that a vendor actually ships a particular compound (not just lists it), treat the listing as marketing rather than inventory.

The Linguistic Tells

Scam vendor copy reuses a remarkably consistent set of phrases. After running a frequency analysis across approximately two hundred archived snapshots of vendor websites that we later confirmed to be fraudulent, the following phrases appear at rates two to five times higher than on legitimate vendor sites:

  • "Pharmaceutical grade" — undefined for research peptides; legitimate vendors specify "research grade ≥98% by HPLC" with a specific lab.
  • "Top quality at unbeatable prices" — high-quality peptide synthesis has a cost floor; competing on price aggressively below that floor is a signal.
  • "100% satisfaction guaranteed" — a legal-meaningless phrase that legitimate research-supply vendors avoid because they sell unregulated compounds.
  • "As featured in" without specifying where or providing a link.
  • "Trusted by researchers worldwide" — generic appeal-to-authority with no traceable basis.
  • "All products independently tested" with no identification of the testing lab.

Payment Friction Is Diagnostic

How a vendor wants to be paid is one of the strongest available signals about how legitimate they intend to be. The hierarchy, roughly from safer to riskier from a fraud-recovery standpoint:

Payment MethodRecoverabilityFraud Signal
Credit card via standard processorStrong (chargeback within 60-120 days)Lowest — vendor accepts ongoing scrutiny from card network
PayPal Goods & ServicesModerate (buyer protection)Low — but PayPal frequently bans peptide sellers
Zelle / Venmo (Friends & Family)Effectively noneModerate — common request from sketchy vendors
Bitcoin / EthereumNoneModerate-to-High — common but inherently unrecoverable
Wire transfer / Western UnionNoneHigh — almost never legitimate at retail scale
Gift cardsNoneMaximum — universal scam indicator

A vendor who accepts cards is exposing themselves to chargeback risk and processor scrutiny, which means they have a business model that survives those constraints. A vendor who insists on cryptocurrency is signaling — accurately or not — that they expect the relationship to be one-way at some point.

What To Do When You Have Been Scammed

The recovery options for a research-peptide scam are limited, and we are obligated to be honest about that. You will not get a federal agency to recover your money. The FDA's enforcement priorities do not include recovering retail purchases of unapproved compounds; the FTC handles consumer fraud but is overwhelmed and rarely pursues sub-$10,000 individual matters; state attorneys general can sometimes be useful for in-state perpetrators but rarely for offshore. The practical steps that have produced occasional recovery in cases we have documented:

  1. Card chargeback within the 60-120 day window if paid by credit card. Cite "goods not as described" or "merchandise never received."
  2. PayPal dispute if paid by PayPal Goods & Services. Approximately 40% of cases we have observed result in refund.
  3. Public posting on community boards (Reddit r/Peptides, peptide-specific Discord servers, BodyBuilding.com forums) — public pressure occasionally produces refunds from vendors who do not want their reputation damaged further.
  4. Submission to the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3.gov) for U.S. residents — creates a paper trail even if no immediate recovery results.
  5. Submission to the editorial desk here at Wild West & Peptides — we add documented cases to our scam-vendor database, which has, on occasion, led to vendors quietly refunding to avoid further publicity.

Where To Go From Here

Reading any individual page on this site is a slice of the picture. The full investigation continues across the related desks. The article above catalogues the patterns; if what you actually want is a list of specific suppliers we have tested end-to-end, with the ones that held up named alongside the ones that did not, that is documented in the audit linked first below.

Editorial Standards

This report is updated periodically. Discrepancies between our reporting and reality are taken seriously — if you have observed something that contradicts what is published here, send it to the editorial desk with documentation and we will revise. Our reporting is constrained by what can be sourced, verified, or directly observed. Where evidence is weak we say so. Where it is absent we do not invent.

Wild West & Peptides receives no compensation from any vendor mentioned in this report, runs no affiliate program, and has no commercial relationship with the research-peptide industry it covers.