Pros and cons +5 −4
- ✓ Per-lot **certificate of analysis** — the 99%+ HPLC purity claim is checkable against the exact batch you receive, not a catalog-wide promise
- ✓ No KYC at any step: crypto checkout with no ID upload or account vetting — a delivery address is the only personal detail collected
- ✓ Deep 34-compound catalog, from staples like BPC-157 and IGF-1 to harder-to-source peptides like Retatrutide and GHK-Cu
- ✓ Free shipping on orders over $59
- ✓ Honest framing of a gray category: sold explicitly for research use, with no medical claims layered on top
- ✕ Physical goods mean a real shipping address is unavoidable — the privacy ceiling sits below that of purely digital no-KYC services
- ✕ Research-use-only is a real restriction, not a wink: these are not approved medicines, and the legality of possession varies by jurisdiction — checking yours is your responsibility
- ✕ Crypto is the only payment rail; there is no card or fiat fallback for buyers who do not hold coins
- ✕ A COA documents purity, but it is still paperwork — buyers wanting fully independent assurance need their own third-party testing
Quick facts
At a glance 4/4
Full review
What it sells
IGF1 Shop stocks 34 research peptides — BPC-157, Retatrutide, IGF-1, Ipamorelin, MT-2 and GHK-Cu headline the list, with 28 more behind them. The purity claim is 99%+ by HPLC, and it is backed the right way: every lot ships with its own certificate of analysis (COA), so you are checking the batch you actually received rather than a generic spec sheet. Orders over $59 ship free.
One thing this listing will not dance around: these are research chemicals, sold for research use. None of them are approved medicines, the shop offers no dosing guidance, and the legal status of possession varies by country. If you are browsing this category, know your jurisdiction's rules before you order — that part is on you.
KYC & privacy
Checkout is crypto and there is no identity verification at any point — no ID upload, no account vetting. The one piece of personal data the transaction cannot avoid is a shipping address, because peptides are physical goods that have to land somewhere. That puts the privacy ceiling below what a purely digital no-KYC service can offer: payment stays anonymous, delivery is only as private as the address you use. Buyers who care should treat the mailing side with the same discipline as the payment side.
Strengths and limits
The strong points are concrete: per-lot COAs instead of blanket purity claims, a catalog deep enough to cover both staples (BPC-157, IGF-1) and harder-to-source compounds (Retatrutide), and a checkout that asks for nothing beyond coins and a delivery address. The limits are mostly the category's own — gray-zone legality, research-use-only framing, and the irreducible address requirement. Within those bounds, this is one of the more transparent operations in the space: it documents what it sells and does not pretend the category is something it is not.
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