What Is the Wolverine Peptide Stack? BPC-157 and TB-500
Research & educational use only. This content is not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any peptide compound.
The Wolverine stack is the popular nickname for combining two research peptides — BPC-157 and TB-500 — that are frequently discussed together for tissue repair and recovery. Like all blends, it has no trials of its own: its evidence is the evidence behind its two ingredients, which is largely preclinical. This guide explains what the pair is, what the research does and does not support, and how to vet a source. It is for research and educational purposes only, is not medical advice, and PeptidesHub does not sell peptides.
What is the Wolverine peptide stack?
The Wolverine stack pairs BPC-157, a peptide derived from a protein found in gastric juice, with TB-500, a synthetic fragment related to Thymosin Beta-4. They are combined on the theory that their repair-related mechanisms are complementary. For a side-by-side of the two, see our BPC-157 vs TB-500 comparison.
What does the research show for BPC-157 and TB-500?
There are no human randomized controlled trials of the BPC-157 and TB-500 combination, and the individual human evidence for each is limited — most of the data comes from animal models. Check the evidence tier on each compound page and read how evidence tiers work before weighing any claims about the stack.
Is the Wolverine stack legal or FDA approved?
Neither BPC-157 nor TB-500 is FDA approved for human use; both are sold strictly as research chemicals. Legality varies by jurisdiction, and selling them for human consumption is generally prohibited. Nothing here is legal or medical advice, and the content is for an audience aged 18 or over.
How do you source BPC-157 and TB-500 safely?
Whether you buy a pre-mixed blend or two separate vials, demand a batch-specific certificate of analysis showing third-party identity and purity testing for each peptide — see how to read a COA. Compare sources in the ranked sellers directory and check the warnings feed first. You can jump to vetted sources for BPC-157 or TB-500.
Blend or separate vials?
A combined vial is simpler, but separate vials let you verify each peptide on its own COA and keep the ratio in your control. More vials means more reconstitution math — the calculator handles the arithmetic, which is math only and not dosing guidance. None of this recommends use of either compound.