Most posts about starting a peptide company are written by people who’ve never actually done it. They tell you to “build a brand” and “find a niche” without explaining what your first wire transfer looks like, what your payment processor situation is going to be in month three, or how to handle the moment your supplier stops answering emails.
This is the version we’d hand to a friend who told us they wanted to launch a peptide reseller business. Concrete numbers, real timeline, honest about what’s hard. Read it twice before you spend any money.
Before you start: is this actually a business for you?
Three questions to be honest with yourself about before you spend a dollar.
Are you comfortable with regulated-category friction? Peptides are sold for research use only. That means no mainstream card processor (Stripe, Square, PayPal merchant accounts) will touch you. Your payment stack is going to be a mix of card-to-crypto onramps, ACH, wire transfers, and alternative payment apps. Customers will sometimes need to be walked through paying. If you’re allergic to that operational friction, this isn’t your business.
Do you have $8,000-15,000 you can put at risk? Realistic total launch budget. You’ll spend $3,000-5,000 on initial inventory, $1,500-6,000 on storefront + brand setup, and the rest on payments setup, ads tests, and operating buffer. None of this is recoverable if you abandon the project in month three.
Are you willing to actually run the business? Demand and margins are real – operators who execute this seriously can hit break-even inside 2-3 months. But the failure mode in this niche isn’t slow growth. It’s founders who try to do everything themselves (fulfillment + support + content + ads + bookkeeping) and burn out by month four. The brands that survive past the first 90 days are the ones who treat it as a real operation – hiring help, outsourcing fulfillment when volume warrants it, and not turning themselves into the bottleneck.
If all three are yes, keep reading. If any are no, this guide will save you the money you would have lost finding out the hard way.
The 12-week launch timeline (realistic)
Here’s the cadence we see work. Faster than this and corners get cut; much slower than this and momentum dies.
| Weeks | Phase | Key outputs |
|---|---|---|
| 1-2 | Legal & financial setup | LLC, EIN, business bank account, resale certificate (if applicable) |
| 2-4 | Supplier vetting + first wholesale order | Account opened, ~$3,000-5,000 first order placed |
| 3-6 | Storefront build | Domain, hosting, store template, all product pages, COA library |
| 5-8 | Payment processing setup | Card-to-crypto onramp, ACH/wire setup, alternative payment apps, all live and tested |
| 6-9 | Brand + content prep | Logo, brand identity, product photography, 8-12 blog posts drafted, social presence seeded |
| 8-10 | Soft launch | Friends/family orders, fulfillment workflow test, support process stress-test |
| 10-12 | Public launch | First ads tests, organic content publishing rhythm, customer support live |
Most of these phases overlap. The serial dependencies are: legal must come before supplier (suppliers need your business entity), supplier must come before storefront (you can’t build product pages until you know what you’re selling), and payments must work before any public launch.
Phase 1: Legal & financial foundation
Don’t run this as a sole proprietor. The personal-liability exposure on a regulated-category business that’s also handling shipping logistics, customer disputes, and large wire transfers is not worth saving the LLC filing fee.
Business entity (LLC, ~$200-500 depending on state):
– Single-member LLC is fine for solo founders
– File in your home state – the “Delaware/Wyoming for everyone” advice doesn’t apply unless you’re raising venture capital
– ZenBusiness, Northwest Registered Agent, or your state’s Secretary of State website all work
EIN (free, 10 minutes):
– IRS.gov – file directly, don’t pay a service
– Required for the business bank account and to give to your wholesaler
Business bank account ($0-25/mo):
– Mercury and Relay are the standard answers for online businesses. Both online-only, both free or near-free at startup volume
– Tied to your LLC and EIN
– Critical: keep all wholesale orders and customer revenue flowing through this account, never through your personal account
Resale certificate (varies by state):
– Some wholesalers require it to waive sales tax on your orders
– Your state’s department of revenue handles it – usually a one-page application, no fee or minimal fee
– Worth getting even if your first wholesaler doesn’t require it – others will
Bookkeeping (free at this scale):
– Wave Apps or QuickBooks Self-Employed are both fine for the first year
– Track every wholesale order as inventory expense, every sale as revenue
– Save yourself the year-end tax pain by doing this monthly from day one
This phase costs ~$300-700 total. Most of it is the LLC filing.
Phase 2: Supplier vetting + first order
This is the most consequential decision you’ll make in the entire business. The supplier you pick in month one is the supplier you’re still ordering from in month twelve – if you’re still in business in month twelve.
We covered this in painful detail in our complete guide to peptide wholesale, including the full red-flag / green-flag vetting checklist, US vs overseas tradeoffs, and the standard tier pricing structure you should see from a real wholesaler. If you haven’t read that yet, stop here and read it first. The TL;DR:
- Avoid: Telegram-only contact, vague purity claims, crypto-only payment with no fallback, no US sales team, no public COA library
- Look for: Registered US (or other Tier-1 jurisdiction) entity, real sales team you can call, published purity spec, multiple payment paths, public COA library, confidence-statement guarantee on independent testing
- Budget for first order: $3,000-5,000 buys you enough inventory to launch a small catalog without overcommitting
The Peptide Wholesale Vetting Checklist
A printable two-page PDF with the full red-flag / green-flag checklist plus the eight questions to ask any wholesaler on your first call. Email it to yourself or your business partner.
No spam. We'll send the PDF and you can unsubscribe any time.
Plan your first order around 5-10 SKUs, not your entire catalog. You’re learning your supplier’s actual restock time and quality consistency before betting bigger. Once you’ve placed three orders and confirmed everything works as promised, scale the order size.
Phase 3: Storefront build
Three platform paths, ordered by what we see actually work:
WooCommerce on WordPress (~$200-500/yr hosting + theme). What most serious peptide resellers run. Full control over payment integrations (critical for this category), no platform restrictions on what you can sell, and the largest plugin ecosystem for the operational features you’ll need (COA library, volume discounts, tracking integration). Steepest setup curve of the three, but the only one that won’t fight you long-term.
Shopify ($29-79/mo). Easier setup, slicker checkout. The catch: Shopify Payments will not process for peptides, so you’re going to be running an alternative gateway anyway. You also occasionally see Shopify accounts shut down without much warning in this category – their AUP is permissive enough to allow research peptides, but their risk team sometimes makes independent calls. Workable if you accept the platform risk; see our full Shopify-for-peptides breakdown for the details.
Custom build (don’t). Unless you have engineering as a core competency and a specific reason custom is better, the WordPress + WooCommerce stack does everything you need for a fraction of the development cost.
Storefront must-haves regardless of platform:
– Product pages with clear research-use-only framing on every page
– A COA library (public, browsable, with COAs for as many products as you have batches for)
– A clear “How to Pay” page explaining your accepted methods (this matters because customers in this category often haven’t bought via crypto before)
– A track-and-trace setup for shipments (we use 17Track; most wholesale operations need something similar)
– Volume discount logic at the cart level (most B2B customers expect tiered pricing)
Budget for storefront: $1,500-6,000 depending on whether you DIY in WooCommerce, hire someone, or use a launch service.
Phase 4: Payment processing
This is the part most new entrants underestimate. Plan on running at least three payment methods in parallel; you cannot put all your eggs in one basket because every option in this category has tail risk of getting shut down.
The realistic stack:
| Method | Purpose | What it costs |
|---|---|---|
| ACH / bank wire | Whales who don’t want to pay processing fees, B2B accounts | $0-25 per wire on your bank’s side |
| Crypto checkout (Confirmo, BitPay, etc.) | Customers who already hold crypto | ~1% processor fee, settles to USD or stablecoin |
| Card-to-crypto onramp (paygate.to, MoonPay flows, etc.) | Customers who only have a card | 5-8% to the customer (passed as surcharge) |
| Alternative payment apps (Venmo, Cash App, PayPal, Zelle) | Lower-friction US retail | Direct customer-to-merchant, no chargeback risk |
The mainstream-card-processor question gets asked a lot. The honest answer: no Stripe, no Square, no traditional merchant account will approve a peptide research-supply business. You can get a high-risk merchant account from specific providers, but the rates are punishing (5-12% per transaction plus high reserve requirements) and they get shut down regularly. Most operators skip this entirely and use the alternative stack above.
For the alternative payment apps specifically, you can either eat the verification work yourself (customer takes screenshot of payment, you confirm, you ship) or use a purpose-built gateway. Our own Pipe Pay is one such gateway – originally built for WWP, now sold to other peptide store operators because the verification logic is non-trivial.
Full breakdown of every payment processor that works in this category is in our payment processors for peptide merchants guide. The short version: budget 4-6 weeks for payment setup, not 4-6 days. Every provider has its own verification process.
Phase 5: Compliance & content rules
Three rules that are non-negotiable for every piece of content, every product description, every marketing email, and every social post you ever publish:
1. Research use only, no exceptions. Every product page, every email, every ad must frame the products as for research purposes only – not for human consumption. This isn’t a disclaimer at the bottom of the page; it’s the operating frame for everything.
2. No medical, therapeutic, or performance claims. Don’t say “burns fat”, “builds muscle”, “improves sleep”, or anything that implies an outcome in a human user. Stick to scientific descriptions of the compound, its mechanism of action, and published research findings. “Studied for X” is fine. “Helps you do X” is not.
3. No dosing or administration instructions. Don’t tell anyone how much of anything to use. Don’t provide reconstitution instructions framed as guidance for human use (reconstitution math as a research procedure is fine; “take 0.5mg three times a week” is not).
These aren’t suggestions. The FDA, FTC, and state AGs have brought enforcement actions against peptide resellers who treated these as marketing-language flexibility points. The rules cost you nothing if you follow them and can cost you your entire business if you don’t.
For details on the regulatory landscape, see our peptide license requirements post.
Phase 6: First inventory order math
Your first wholesale order is going to feel small and probably won’t last as long as you expect. Plan it deliberately.
A typical starter inventory:
| Category | SKUs | Approx cost @ wholesale |
|---|---|---|
| Top-volume compounds (Sema, Tirz, etc.) | 3-4 SKUs, 5 packs each | $1,500-2,200 |
| Mid-volume (BPC, TB-500, MOTS-c, etc.) | 4-6 SKUs, 2-3 packs each | $800-1,400 |
| Support products (BAC water, syringes if you carry them) | 2-3 SKUs, 3-5 packs each | $200-400 |
| Total | 9-13 SKUs | $2,500-4,000 |
Plus your wholesaler’s shipping ($50-100) and any duties if you’re sourcing internationally.
Why 9-13 SKUs and not your entire planned catalog? Three reasons:
1. You learn your supplier’s quality consistency without overcommitting capital
2. You learn what your customer base actually buys (your top-selling SKU is rarely the one you predicted)
3. If something goes wrong with the supplier in month two, you haven’t pre-paid for inventory you’ll never receive
Reorder cadence: aim for 3-4 week reorder windows. Faster than that and you’re tying up cash; slower than that and you’ll hit stockouts on your bestseller.
Phase 7: Launch funnel
You have three feasible customer-acquisition paths in this category:
Organic SEO (slow, compounding, free). Best long-term moat. Write the content nobody else is writing well – vetting guides, compound comparisons, honest reviews of payment processors, etc. This blog you’re reading is exactly that strategy. Takes 6-12 months to see meaningful traffic but then keeps paying for itself. Recommend starting this in month one even though it won’t drive sales until month six.
Paid ads (fast, expensive, limited platforms). Meta and Google heavily restrict peptide ads. Most of what works is Reddit, X (Twitter), and a small number of niche newsletter sponsorships. CPM is high because the category-restricted audience is small. Budget at least $1,500-3,000/mo for a meaningful ads test.
Affiliate / influencer (medium-fast, depends on access). Some peptide-adjacent YouTubers and podcasters take affiliate deals. Conversion rates can be excellent if the audience match is right. Hardest part is finding the right partners – most large fitness/biohacking influencers won’t touch the category.
What doesn’t work: cold outreach to potential B2B buyers (they don’t trust unsolicited DMs in this category), generic Facebook ads (gets your account banned), and influencer deals with non-niche influencers (audience doesn’t convert).
For most new entrants, the right answer is organic SEO + Reddit + 1-2 niche affiliate partners. Skip paid ads until month 6.
What kills new peptide brands
We touched on this in Post #1 but it bears repeating with the launch-specific lens. After watching this market for years, the cause of death is almost always one of the following:
- Supplier picked badly. Cheap overseas wholesaler goes ghost in month four. Customer orders pile up. Bestseller is out of stock for six weeks. The brand never recovers from that customer trust hit.
- Payment processor goes down at scale. Founder built the entire revenue flow through one card-to-crypto provider. Provider freezes the account. Two weeks of no revenue while migrating to a backup. Cash flow problems compound.
- Compliance corner cut. Marketing copy drifts into “burns fat” / “builds muscle” territory. FDA letter arrives. Now legal fees are eating the runway.
- Founder trying to do every job themselves. Fulfillment, customer support, content, ads, bookkeeping, and supplier coordination all sitting on one person. By month four they’re burning out, customer support is slipping, the brand’s reputation is taking small hits weekly, and the will to push through has evaporated. The brands that scale past this point hire help early – a fulfillment assistant, a part-time customer support contractor, a freelance content writer – even when revenue feels too small to justify it. The bottleneck is almost never the market in this niche; it’s the founder doing every job.
- Picked a vertical that’s too commodified. Tried to launch as “another peptide shop” with no specific positioning. Got crushed by competitors with established trust. Failed before they ever got distribution.
The brands that survive past the first 3 months share four traits: they picked a supplier carefully, built a 3-method payment stack from day one, stayed disciplined on compliance language, and refused to let the founder become a single point of failure for every operational task.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to start a peptide business?
$8,000-15,000 for a lean launch. The biggest line items: initial wholesale inventory ($3,000-5,000), storefront / brand build ($1,500-6,000 depending on whether you DIY), payment processor setup ($500-1,500 in time and verification fees), small ads test budget ($1,500-3,000), and an operating buffer for the first 3-4 months.
Do I need a license to sell peptides?
Selling research peptides for research use only does not require a specific federal license in the US. You do need an LLC and EIN, you need to maintain the research-use framing in all marketing and labeling, and state-level licensing varies. This is not legal advice – consult an attorney for your specific situation. Our peptide license requirements post goes deeper on the regulatory landscape.
Can I sell peptides on Shopify?
Yes, but Shopify Payments won’t process for the category so you’ll need an alternative gateway. Shopify’s AUP allows research peptides, but their risk team sometimes makes independent shutdown decisions. Most serious operators run WooCommerce instead for full control over the payment stack. Full breakdown in our Shopify-for-peptides guide.
Is dropshipping peptides legal?
Dropshipping research peptides is legal in the US when the product is sold for research use only and properly labeled. The business model itself introduces quality control, shipping time, and supplier reliability risks that often make wholesale a better choice. We treat this in detail in wwpeptides.com/vip-services/#book.
For founders who’d rather skip the build-it-yourself phase entirely, we also offer productized launch packages that bundle storefront, brand, payment processing, supplier sourcing, and operations setup into a single engagement. Pricing and full scope at wwpeptides.com/vip-services/.
The bottom line
Starting a peptide reseller business in 2026 is harder than starting most ecommerce businesses, but the operators who do it well can build something durable. The path is well-trodden enough that the major decisions have known right answers – pick a real supplier, build a multi-method payment stack, stay disciplined on compliance, and put in the time.
Read this twice. Then re-read the wholesale guide. Then either commit to the 12-week timeline or save your money for a business with less category friction. Both are valid answers – just don’t half-commit and lose $10,000 finding out which one was right.