Retatrutide Reconstitution Calculator
Retatrutide is an investigational GLP-1 / GIP / glucagon triple-receptor agonist studied in clinical trials. This page shows how to reconstitute it and read the result on a syringe — the calculator does the arithmetic for you.
Status: Not approved for human use; sold as a research compound.
The math
Concentration = vial ÷ water · Units = (dose ÷ concentration) × 100
Retatrutide is supplied as a lyophilized powder and reconstituted with bacteriostatic water. Because it is dosed in small amounts, the concentration you mix decides how readable each draw is on the syringe.
Worked example
Illustrative numbers only — not a dose recommendation.
Example
Vial10 mg
Bacteriostatic water2 mL
Concentration5 mg/mL
Each 10 units (0.1 mL) contains500 mcg
How to use the calculator
- Open the calculator and enter your Retatrutide vial size.
- Enter your bacteriostatic water volume, then your dose.
- Read off the units to draw and doses per vial.
Planning a full cycle? Work out vials, syringes & swabs →
Frequently asked questions
How do I reconstitute Retatrutide?
Add bacteriostatic water to the lyophilized vial to reach a concentration you can measure. For example, 10 mg in 2 mL of water gives 5 mg/mL, so each 10 units (0.1 mL) on a U-100 syringe contains about 500 mcg of Retatrutide. Swirl gently rather than shaking.
How many units of Retatrutide do I draw?
Divide your intended dose by the concentration to get the volume in mL, then multiply by 100 for a U-100 syringe. The calculator does this automatically once you enter your vial size, water volume and dose.
What vial sizes does Retatrutide come in?
Retatrutide is commonly supplied as 5 mg, 10 mg, 15 mg. The amount in the vial does not change with how much water you add — water only sets the concentration.
Is Retatrutide approved for human use?
Not approved for human use; sold as a research compound. This calculator only performs arithmetic on the numbers you enter and does not recommend any dose.