PeptideResearch
02
Product Organisation

Peptide Research Categories

Why categories exist, how they are named, and what they help you navigate.

Why categories
exist

Peptides are grouped into categories to make a catalogue easier to browse. The names are not always consistent from one brand to another, but the purpose is the same: to organise products by broader research theme so people can find what they are looking for faster.

Why names
vary

One brand may group a product under recovery, while another places it under anti-aging or metabolic research. This often reflects how the catalogue is structured, not a strict scientific standard.

Common groupings

01Recovery

Products commonly grouped under research into tissue and biological recovery processes. Often referenced in post-exercise and injury recovery research contexts.

Examples

BPC-157TB-500PEG-MGF
02Metabolic / Weight Mgmt

Includes peptides associated with metabolic pathway research, appetite signalling, and body composition studies.

Examples

RetatrutideTirzepatideSemaglutideCJC-1295
03Anti-Aging

Categories associated with cellular longevity research, skin quality studies, and age-related biological pathway investigation.

Examples

GHK-CuEpithalonThymalin
04Cognitive

Peptides often referenced in neurological, memory, and cognitive function research settings.

Examples

SelankSemaxDihexaNA-Semax Amidate
05Research Peptides

A broad general category for materials that do not fit neatly under a single research theme. Used as a catch-all by many catalogues.

Examples

GHRP-2GHRP-6Ipamorelin
06Peptide Blends

Pre-combined formulations developed for multi-target or synergistic research purposes. May combine peptides from multiple categories.

Examples

PT-141 + BPC-157

A clear category structure helps people move through a site faster. If category names are too mixed or inconsistent, the site starts to feel harder to trust.