GLOW

the skin, hair, and recovery blend

A copper-peptide-led blend discussed for skin, hair, and connective-tissue recovery.

What it is

GLOW is a three-part blend built around GHK-Cu (a copper-binding peptide) alongside the two most commonly discussed repair peptides, BPC-157 and TB-500. It is one of the most talked-about “cosmetic and recovery” stacks because its components are each associated with skin, hair, and tissue-repair research.

This page explains what GLOW contains and why those peptides are grouped together, using the component profiles. It is educational context, not a dosing schedule or a recommendation to combine anything.

Composition

What's in a 80mg vial

AGHK-CuTurn back the clock on your skin, hair, and body.75%60mg
ABPC-157Accelerates healing of tendons, ligaments, gut, and muscles throughout your body.13%10mg
BTB-500Promotes new blood vessel growth and reduces inflammation for stubborn injuries.13%10mg

Sold by vendors in 70mg (52.5 + 8.8 + 8.8mg), 90mg (67.5 + 11.3 + 11.3mg).

Dosing context

How GLOW is typically dosed

A common starting point is around 2 mg of GHK-Cu per dose. Because the vial is a fixed ratio, that sets how much of the other components come along. Adjust the amount to see the split.

Dose per injection

Set the GHK-Cu amount

mg

That draws about 2.67 mg of blend, which delivers:

  • GHK-Cu2 mg
  • BPC-1570.33 mg
  • TB-5000.33 mg

Schedule. Once daily, commonly 5 days on and 2 off, in the morning. Commonly discussed in 56-day (8-week) cycles.

GHK-Cu is the component people size the dose around, often starting near 0.5 mg and working up toward 2 mg over the cycle. Because a pre-mixed vial is a fixed ratio, the amounts of BPC-157 and TB-500 you get are whatever that GHK-Cu draw delivers, shown below.

Working out your reconstitution? See the GHK-Cu, BPC-157 and TB-500 calculators. These figures are educational context, not a dose recommendation.

Why these components

Why they're grouped together

  • GHK-Cu. The lead component and the reason for the name — a copper tripeptide studied for skin remodeling, collagen support, and hair follicle context.
  • BPC-157. A body-protection peptide widely discussed for gut and connective-tissue repair, included in small proportion.
  • TB-500. A thymosin-beta-4 fragment associated with tissue remodeling and recovery discussion, rounding out the repair side.

Who it's for

GLOW is a common research topic for people interested in the skin, hair, and recovery literature rather than metabolic or growth-hormone goals.

Where it's sold

Live vendor pricing

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Safety context

  • Each component has its own safety profile; blending does not average those away.
  • Copper-containing peptides are discussed with particular attention to cumulative copper exposure.
  • Sourcing and reconstitution quality vary by vendor — verify COAs and third-party testing per product.

Questions people ask

What is in the GLOW peptide blend?

GLOW combines GHK-Cu with BPC-157 and TB-500. GHK-Cu is the dominant component; BPC-157 and TB-500 are included in smaller proportion. The exact per-vial split depends on the total vial size a vendor sells.

What is GLOW used for?

It is most often discussed in the context of skin, hair, and connective-tissue recovery research because of its components. This page is educational and does not tell you to use it for any purpose.

Is GLOW safe?

GLOW combines research compounds (GHK-Cu, BPC-157, TB-500), each with its own safety profile that blending does not average away. This page is educational context, not medical advice, and does not tell you to start, stop, or combine anything. Whether any blend is appropriate is a decision for a licensed professional.

How is GLOW typically dosed?

GLOW is a fixed-ratio blend, so guidance usually describes a starting point around 2 mg of GHK-Cu per dose, with the other components delivered in proportion. Once daily, commonly 5 days on and 2 off, in the morning. This is educational context and not a dose recommendation or medical advice.

This page is for research and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice and does not diagnose, treat, prescribe, or tell you to start, stop, or combine any protocol. A licensed professional is the right person to evaluate any combination.

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