Interactive tools
GLP-1 microdosing tools
Small, transparent, fully client-side tools for sanity-checking the arithmetic and the scheduling that people discuss around low-dose GLP-1. Every figure is computed in your browser — nothing is sent anywhere. They are educational aids, not medical advice, and not a recommendation to microdose.
Read before you use these
Intentional GLP-1 microdosing is off-label and unproven — there are no dedicated randomized trials of sub-therapeutic GLP-1 dosing. These tools do arithmetic and build schedules; they do not know anything about you, your medication, or whether any of this is appropriate or safe for you. Dosing, titration, reconstitution, and injection technique must be directed and supervised by a licensed clinician. Compounded GLP-1s are not FDA-approved products. Treat every number here as a starting point to verify with your prescriber and the product label.
- Reconstitution math
Microdose & reconstitution calculator
Turn a compounded vial plus bacteriostatic water into the units to draw on a U-100 insulin syringe for a target microdose — with the concentration, volume, and doses-per-vial shown transparently. Math, not a dose recommendation.
Open tool - Schedule builder
Microdose titration planner
Sketch a week-by-week ramp from a starting microdose up to a ceiling, stepping by an amount you choose every N weeks. A planning aid for a clinician conversation — not a protocol, and not a recommendation to ramp at all.
Open tool
Understand the context first
A number on a syringe or a row in a schedule is the easy part. Whether low-dose GLP-1 is appropriate, safe, or worth doing at all is what actually matters — start here:
These tools are informational and not medical advice. They perform arithmetic and build schedules only and do not account for your individual health, the specific product, injection technique, or clinical appropriateness. GLP-1 medications are available by prescription after clinician review; compounded GLP-1s are not FDA-approved, and intentional microdosing is off-label with no dedicated clinical trials. Talk to a licensed provider before acting on anything here.