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Peptides for Women: Protocols for Hormones, Recovery, and Fat Loss

By Verum Health Medical Team  ·  April 1, 2026  ·  8 min read

Most peptide content on the internet is written for men — focused on muscle building, testosterone optimization, and performance. But peptide therapy is equally relevant, and often more nuanced, for women. The hormonal landscape is different, the goals are different, and the protocols should reflect that.

This guide covers the peptides most relevant to women's health goals: fat loss and body composition, recovery and injury healing, hormonal balance, skin quality, libido, and longevity. All of these are available through physician-prescribed protocols — not gray-market research compounds.

Why Women Respond Differently to Peptides

Estrogen, progesterone, and the cyclical hormonal shifts women experience throughout life create a different physiological context for peptide therapy. A few key differences:

Fat Loss and Metabolic Protocols

For women focused on fat loss, the GLP-1 class (semaglutide, tirzepatide) remains the most clinically validated option. Women in the STEP trials actually showed slightly higher percentage weight loss than men on average — likely due to estrogen's effect on GLP-1 receptor upregulation.

Semaglutide / Tirzepatide — Metabolic Protocol

Weekly subcutaneous injection. Titrated over 8–16 weeks to maintenance dose. Produces 15–22% average body weight reduction. Especially effective for women with insulin resistance, PCOS, or perimenopause-related metabolic slowing. See our peptides for weight loss guide for full protocol details.

For women who aren't candidates for GLP-1 agonists or who want a complementary approach, AOD-9604 (a fragment of growth hormone) has shown specific activity on adipocytes without the systemic growth hormone effects — making it a useful adjunct for stubborn fat areas, particularly around the hips and abdomen.

Recovery and Injury Healing

Women are statistically more prone to certain connective tissue injuries — ACL tears, stress fractures, and joint hypermobility — in part due to hormonal effects on ligament laxity. Peptides in the repair category are directly relevant here.

BPC-157 — Connective Tissue and Gut Repair

200–400mcg/day, subcutaneous injection near the injury site or systemic. Accelerates tendon, ligament, and cartilage repair via upregulation of growth hormone receptors in local tissue. Also powerfully anti-inflammatory in the GI tract. See our full BPC-157 guide →

TB-500 (Thymosin Beta-4) — Systemic Recovery

2–2.5mg twice weekly for 4–6 weeks, then 2mg/month maintenance. Promotes actin polymerization, cell migration, and angiogenesis. Particularly useful for systemic recovery from overtraining, post-surgical healing, or chronic injury patterns.

Skin, Hair, and Anti-Aging

Collagen density peaks in the mid-twenties and declines roughly 1% per year thereafter. By 50, most women have lost 30–35% of their baseline collagen. Several peptides directly address this:

Hormonal Balance and Perimenopause

Peptides don't replace hormone therapy for women in perimenopause or menopause — estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone replacement remain the foundation of hormonal optimization. But several peptides work synergistically with HRT:

Building a Protocol: Where to Start

The most common mistake women make when exploring peptide therapy is trying to run multiple protocols simultaneously without physician guidance. Stacking five peptides at once makes it impossible to assess what's working and dramatically increases the chance of hormonal disruption.

A sensible starting framework:

All Verum Health protocols start with a physician consultation and baseline labs. Your physician designs the protocol around your specific hormonal context, health history, and goals — not a one-size-fits-all stack. Explore our full women's protocol options →

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