Infiniwell BPC-157 Files

Infiniwell BPC-157 Ingredients

A line-by-line look at what's inside Infiniwell BPC-157 Rapid Pro, including active components and excipients.

Infiniwell keeps it refreshingly basic — one active, no blend. That is a good thing: you are paying for the peptide, not a pile of glutamine and zinc carnosine slapped on to fatten the label. The amount below is what is on the current capsule, so double-check your bottle.

Active Ingredients

What is in the pill, plus the one delivery detail that matters most:

Other Ingredients (Excipients)

Since Infiniwell sells the peptide by itself, there is barely any 'other stuff' — a veggie capsule shell and not much more, no blend, no marketing fillers. The thing that actually matters here is not excipients, it is storage. BPC-157 is a peptide, so it is heat-sensitive — leave it in a hot car or next to the stove and it can fall apart. Keep it somewhere cool. Your current label is the final word on exactly what is in the capsule.

Allergens and Sensitivities

As a single-peptide pill in a veggie capsule, this does not carry the usual allergy baggage — no shellfish-based glucosamine, no dairy, no herb blend to react to. The honest 'watch out' for a peptide is different: it is a synthetic compound that has not been through the human safety testing a real drug would, so the cautions that matter are about who you are (cancer, pregnancy, immune drugs), not a classic allergy warning. If you react to capsule ingredients in general, still read the label.

Sourcing and Quality Notes

For a peptide, where you buy it matters more than usual. BPC-157 is not a normal supplement and the market is a bit wild, so the difference between a clean practitioner-channel bottle and a sketchy marketplace one is big — you do not want to be guessing whether the Amazon listing is real, dosed right, and not cooked in a warehouse. Buying through a practitioner store or authorized dispensary (like a Fullscript store) is the safest way to get the real thing kept cool on its way to you. the plain-language BPC-157 review at Dr Bell Health digs into where to buy and how to spot the legit version. A practitioner's evaluation of Infiniwell's sourcing standards is included in this the plain-language BPC-157 review at Dr Bell Health.

How Ingredients Compare to Similar Products

Two comparisons matter. First, pill versus shot: almost all the famous research used injections, which you get through doctors and compounding pharmacies, while Infiniwell's capsule is the easy, lower-barrier option that does its best work in the gut. Gut goal? The pill fits. Far-off tendon goal? The pill is the weaker bet and the proof is thin. Second, single peptide versus 'recovery blend': Infiniwell sells BPC-157 straight instead of hiding it in a proprietary stack, so you can actually see the dose, which is usually the better deal. And be clear about what it is not — not a proven drug, not a replacement for rehab, not a forever pill. It is a short experiment that works best bolted onto a real plan.

← Side effects · Read the FAQ →

This site provides educational information about Infiniwell BPC-157 Rapid Pro and similar nutraceutical products. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting or stopping any supplement. Infiniwell BPC-157 is a registered trademark of Infiniwell; this site is independent and not affiliated with Infiniwell.