Get the exact mL of bacteriostatic water for any compounded tirzepatide vial — instantly.
The reconstitution formula is straightforward:
The calculator above applies this formula automatically and also calculates your draw volume based on your prescribed dose — so you know exactly how many units to pull for each injection.
Your compounding pharmacy will specify which concentration your vial is prepared at. These are the most common combinations:
| Vial Size | Bacteriostatic Water | Concentration | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 mg | 2.0 mL | 2.5 mg/mL | Starting dose (2.5 mg weekly) |
| 5 mg | 1.0 mL | 5.0 mg/mL | Escalation (5 mg weekly) |
| 10 mg | 2.0 mL | 5.0 mg/mL | Mid-protocol doses |
| 10 mg | 1.0 mL | 10 mg/mL | Higher doses (10–12.5 mg) |
| 15 mg | 1.5 mL | 10 mg/mL | Maintenance / maximum |
| 20 mg | 2.0 mL | 10 mg/mL | Multi-week supply |
These are the errors GLP-1 patients make most often — each one can result in dramatically wrong doses or a contaminated vial.
Sterile water has no preservative. After the first draw, bacterial contamination is a real risk. Always use bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol).
If you don't know your vial's concentration, you cannot calculate a correct dose. Check your pharmacy label — if unclear, call before mixing anything.
Angle the needle so water runs down the side of the vial, not onto the powder. Direct injection causes foaming that can degrade the peptide.
Shaking creates bubbles and can denature the peptide. Swirl gently between your palms until dissolved — it should be completely clear within 60 seconds.
Freezing causes permanent protein aggregation. A frozen vial may look normal but is likely ineffective or unsafe. Discard any vial that has been frozen.
Reconstituted tirzepatide should be used within 28 days when refrigerated. Without a date label, you have no way to know when to discard it.