Semaglutide Reconstitution Calculator & Complete Mixing Guide

FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY. This content discusses research compounds intended exclusively for laboratory and in vitro research purposes. These compounds are not intended for human consumption, diagnostic use, or therapeutic applications. All information is provided for educational and research planning purposes only.

Getting semaglutide reconstitution wrong means wasting an expensive research peptide. Too much bacteriostatic water and your concentrations are off. Too little and you risk incomplete dissolution. And if your math is wrong, every downstream measurement in your study is compromised.

This guide gives you a free semaglutide reconstitution calculator to get the math right instantly, plus a complete step-by-step mixing protocol. Whether you're working with 2mg, 5mg, or 10mg vials, we'll cover exactly how much water to add, how to mix properly, and how to store your reconstituted solution for maximum stability.

🧮 Semaglutide Reconstitution Calculator

How the Calculator Works

The reconstitution math is straightforward but easy to mess up when you're rushing. Here's the formula:

Water Volume (mL) = Peptide Amount (mg) ÷ Desired Concentration (mg/mL)

For example, if you have a 5mg vial of semaglutide and want a concentration of 2.5 mg/mL, you'd add 2mL of bacteriostatic water. That gives you a solution where every 0.1mL (10 units on a standard insulin syringe) contains 0.25mg of semaglutide.

The calculator above handles all of this automatically, including the syringe-unit conversion that trips up most researchers. Just plug in your numbers and it does the rest.

Common Semaglutide Reconstitution Volumes

Here are the most common configurations researchers use, pre-calculated for quick reference:

Vial Size Water Added Concentration 0.25mg Dose Volume
2mg0.8mL2.5 mg/mL0.1mL (10 units)
2mg1.0mL2.0 mg/mL0.125mL (12.5 units)
5mg2.0mL2.5 mg/mL0.1mL (10 units)
5mg2.5mL2.0 mg/mL0.125mL (12.5 units)
10mg4.0mL2.5 mg/mL0.1mL (10 units)
10mg5.0mL2.0 mg/mL0.125mL (12.5 units)

Most researchers working with semaglutide prefer the 2.5 mg/mL concentration because it makes dosing math clean—0.1mL equals 0.25mg, which is a common starting research dose.

What You'll Need Before Starting

Before you touch the vial, gather everything. Stopping mid-reconstitution to find a supply compromises sterile technique.

Required Materials

Optional but Recommended

Step-by-Step Semaglutide Reconstitution Protocol

Follow these steps exactly. Reconstitution is simple when you follow procedure—and expensive when you don't. For a more general reconstitution overview, see our detailed peptide reconstitution guide.

Step 1: Prepare Your Workspace

Wipe down your entire work surface with 70% isopropyl alcohol. Lay out all materials. Wash your hands thoroughly and put on nitrile gloves if available. Reconstitution should be done in a clean, low-traffic area—avoid drafty spots near HVAC vents.

Step 2: Inspect the Vial

Check the lyophilized semaglutide vial before opening. The powder should be a white to off-white cake or powder stuck to the bottom or sides of the vial. If the powder looks discolored (yellow, brown) or the vial seal appears compromised, do not use it.

Confirm the vial has reached room temperature. Reconstituting a frozen vial can cause cracking or incomplete dissolution.

Step 3: Swab the Vial Stoppers

Wipe the rubber stopper of both the semaglutide vial and the bacteriostatic water vial with separate alcohol swabs. Allow them to air dry completely—this takes about 15-30 seconds. Don't blow on them or wave them around.

Step 4: Draw the Bacteriostatic Water

Using a clean sterile syringe, draw the calculated volume of bacteriostatic water from the BAC water vial. Pull back the plunger slightly beyond your target volume, then push forward to expel any air bubbles. Verify the volume at eye level.

For the common 5mg vial at 2.5 mg/mL concentration, you're drawing exactly 2.0mL of bacteriostatic water.

Step 5: Add Water to the Peptide Vial

This is the critical step where most mistakes happen. Insert the needle through the rubber stopper at a slight angle. Aim the stream of water at the inside wall of the vial, not directly at the powder. Depress the plunger slowly—let the water trickle down the glass wall and pool at the bottom.

Why this matters: Shooting water directly onto lyophilized peptide can damage the molecular structure through localized high-concentration effects and physical force. The gentle wall-stream method preserves peptide integrity.

Step 6: Allow Dissolution

After adding all the water, remove the syringe and set the vial on your clean surface. Do not shake. Gently swirl the vial in small circles, tilting slightly. Many researchers simply let the vial sit for 5-10 minutes and gravity does the work.

Semaglutide typically dissolves relatively quickly—within 2-5 minutes. If after 10 minutes of gentle swirling there's still undissolved powder, you may have an issue with the peptide or your water. Never vortex or vigorously shake the vial.

Step 7: Inspect the Solution

The reconstituted solution should be completely clear and colorless. Hold the vial up to a light source and look for:

If the solution is cloudy, contains particles, or is discolored, do not use it for research. This may indicate degraded peptide, contamination, or incompatible reconstitution solution.

Step 8: Label and Store

Immediately label the vial with:

Store at 2-8°C (refrigerator) immediately. Do not freeze reconstituted solution. For detailed storage guidelines, see our peptide storage guide.

Critical Mistakes to Avoid

These are the errors that ruin reconstituted semaglutide—and unfortunately, they're common:

1. Shooting Water Directly onto the Powder

We said it above, but it bears repeating. High-pressure water hitting lyophilized peptide creates localized denaturing conditions. Always aim at the vial wall.

2. Shaking the Vial

Vigorous shaking creates foam, introduces air bubbles, and can physically degrade the peptide at air-liquid interfaces. Swirl gently or let gravity work.

3. Using the Wrong Diluent

Bacteriostatic water (with 0.9% benzyl alcohol) is the standard for research peptide reconstitution. Normal saline, sterile water without preservative, or—worst case—tap water will compromise your solution. Sterile water without preservative can be used for immediate single-use, but won't preserve the solution for multi-dose use.

4. Reusing Syringes

Every draw from the vial should use a fresh, sterile syringe and needle. Reusing introduces contamination that degrades the peptide over time and compromises research validity.

5. Poor Temperature Management

Leaving reconstituted semaglutide at room temperature—even for a few hours—accelerates degradation. Get it into the fridge within minutes of reconstitution. During research sessions, minimize time at ambient temperature.

6. Getting the Math Wrong

This is why we built the calculator above. A 2x concentration error means every data point in your study is off by 2x. Always double-check volumes before adding water. Once mixed, you can't un-mix.

Understanding Syringe Units vs Milliliters

The most common source of dosing confusion is the unit-to-milliliter conversion on insulin syringes. Here's how it works:

The "units" on insulin syringes are NOT the same as international units (IU) of semaglutide or any other peptide. They're simply volumetric markings. This confuses almost everyone at first, so don't feel bad about double-checking.

With a concentration of 2.5 mg/mL, the dosing math becomes straightforward:

Desired Dose Volume to Draw Syringe Units (1mL syringe)
0.125mg0.05mL5 units
0.25mg0.1mL10 units
0.5mg0.2mL20 units
1.0mg0.4mL40 units
1.7mg0.68mL68 units
2.4mg0.96mL96 units

How Long Does Reconstituted Semaglutide Last?

Stability after reconstitution depends on three factors: the diluent used, storage temperature, and handling technique.

Semaglutide's acylated structure gives it better inherent stability than many research peptides, but it's still a peptide in aqueous solution. The 30-day guideline is conservative and well-supported by stability data.[1]

Semaglutide-Specific Reconstitution Tips

While the general reconstitution process applies to most research peptides, semaglutide has a few specific characteristics worth noting:

Dissolution Speed

Semaglutide tends to dissolve faster than many lyophilized peptides. The acylated fatty acid chain gives it amphiphilic properties that promote rapid solvation. If your semaglutide is taking more than 10 minutes to dissolve, consider whether the vial may have been exposed to adverse conditions during shipping or storage.

Concentration Limits

Semaglutide is soluble up to approximately 10 mg/mL in bacteriostatic water, but concentrations above 5 mg/mL may reduce long-term stability. For most research applications, 1-3 mg/mL is the practical sweet spot—concentrated enough to keep injection volumes small, dilute enough for reliable stability over the 30-day use window.

Compatibility with Other Research Peptides

Do not reconstitute semaglutide in the same vial with other peptides. Even chemically compatible compounds can interact at high concentrations during dissolution, and mixed vials make quality control impossible. Use separate vials for each compound.

Verifying Your Reconstituted Solution

For research applications requiring high confidence in concentration accuracy, consider these verification steps:

For critical research applications, third-party analytical testing of reconstituted solutions can verify concentration and purity. Check the vendor's HPLC and purity documentation before reconstitution to establish baseline quality.

Batch Planning for Extended Research Protocols

If your research protocol runs longer than 30 days, you'll need to plan multiple reconstitution batches. Here's how to minimize waste and maintain consistency:

  1. Calculate total peptide needed for the entire study duration
  2. Divide into 30-day batches based on reconstituted stability
  3. Order appropriate vial sizes — It's better to use a vial completely within 30 days than to reconstitute a large vial and discard half
  4. Stagger reconstitution dates so you're never working with solution older than 3 weeks
  5. Keep lyophilized backup vials stored at -20°C until needed—they'll be stable for 24+ months

For longer studies, many researchers find it more cost-effective to order multiple smaller vials rather than fewer large ones, since any unused reconstituted solution after 30 days should be discarded.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much bacteriostatic water do I add to semaglutide?
The volume depends on your desired concentration. For a 5mg vial, adding 2mL of bacteriostatic water yields 2.5mg/mL. Use the calculator above to determine the exact volume for your specific vial size and target concentration.
Can I use sterile water instead of bacteriostatic water?
Sterile water can be used but lacks the preservative (benzyl alcohol) found in bacteriostatic water. Without it, the reconstituted solution should be used within 24 hours. Bacteriostatic water allows storage for up to 30 days at 2-8°C.
How long does reconstituted semaglutide last?
When reconstituted with bacteriostatic water and stored at 2-8°C, semaglutide remains stable for approximately 30 days. Always label vials with the reconstitution date and discard after 30 days.
What if the solution looks cloudy after mixing?
A cloudy solution indicates incomplete dissolution, degradation, or contamination. Do not use it. Properly reconstituted semaglutide should be perfectly clear and colorless. Ensure you're using bacteriostatic water and the peptide hasn't been exposed to extreme temperatures.

References

  1. Lau J, Bloch P, Schäffer L, et al. Discovery of the Once-Weekly Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) Analogue Semaglutide. J Med Chem. 2015;58(18):7370-7380. doi:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b00726
  2. Manning MC, Chou DK, Murphy BM, et al. Stability of protein pharmaceuticals: an update. Pharm Res. 2010;27(4):544-575. doi:10.1007/s11095-009-0045-6
  3. Patel A, Cholkar K, Mitra AK. Recent developments in protein and peptide parenteral delivery approaches. Ther Deliv. 2014;5(3):337-365. doi:10.4155/tde.14.5

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