Main Differences
- Cosmetic grade GHK-Cu:
- Specifically produced and certified for topical skincare applications (creams, serums, DIY formulations).
- Tested to meet cosmetic safety standards: low heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic often <10 ppm), microbial limits (bacteria, yeast, mold counts), no excessive endotoxins or irritants, and often verified for skin compatibility.
- Purity is high (typically ≥98–99% by HPLC), but the focus is on topical safety rather than injectable sterility.
- Often sold in larger bulk quantities (e.g., 1g, 5g, 10g tubes or jars) for formulators/DIY users, sometimes as loose powder rather than sealed vials.
- Labeled explicitly for cosmetic use, and many suppliers provide it for adding to face creams, scalp serums, etc.
- Examples include products from cosmetic ingredient suppliers (e.g., Spec-Chem, or DIY vendors on Amazon/eBay calling it "cosmetic-grade" for skin/hair).
- Lyophilized peptide in vials (the classic "research vial" style):
- Usually sold as research-grade (or sometimes "pharma-grade" for injectables), in small sealed vials (e.g., 5mg, 50mg, 100mg, 200mg per vial) with rubber stoppers for reconstitution.
- Primarily intended for lab research, subcutaneous injection studies, or systemic use — not necessarily optimized/tested for direct topical application.
- Purity is often very high (≥98–99%), but testing emphasizes things like endotoxin levels (critical for injectables) over cosmetic-specific impurities (e.g., certain residual solvents or microbial specs for skin).
- Many are labeled "research use only — not for human/cosmetic use," even if the molecule is identical.
- Some suppliers sell "lyophilized GHK-Cu" explicitly for topical/DIY, blurring the line, but the default vial format leans toward research/injectable.
Overlap and Practical Reality
- The molecule is the same: both are lyophilized GHK-Cu powder (freeze-dried for long-term stability — it's the gold standard format to prevent degradation).
- Many "cosmetic grade" versions are also lyophilized and come in vial-like formats, especially from Chinese suppliers or peptide vendors.
- Some people successfully use research-grade lyophilized vials for DIY topicals (reconstitute and mix into cream), and it often works fine if purity is high and storage was good — but it's not guaranteed to meet cosmetic impurity limits, so there's a slightly higher theoretical risk of irritation or suboptimal safety for daily skin use.
- Cosmetic suppliers sometimes note that their grade is "cheaper per gram" for large batches in topicals, while vial formats are more expensive per mg due to smaller packaging and research-oriented testing.
Bottom Line for Your Use CaseIf you're mixing into a face cream:
- Prefer cosmetic-grade if possible — it's explicitly made/sold/tested for that purpose, often in convenient bulk for DIY, and minimizes risks.
- Lyophilized vial peptide can work (and many do it), especially if it's ≥98% pure from a reputable source — but it's not inherently "cosmetic grade" unless the supplier says so.
- Always check the COA (certificate of analysis) for purity, heavy metals, microbes, etc., regardless of label. Patch test any DIY mix, start low (0.5–2%), and store properly (cool, dry, dark).
In short: The grade is about regulatory intent and testing focus (topical safety vs. research/injectable), not the lyophilized form itself. If your old powder was from a cosmetic/DIY supplier, it's likely closer to cosmetic grade; if from a peptide research vendor in small vials, it's probably research-oriented.