Peptide Therapy Near Me

Find peptide therapy clinics in your area.

Nearby Peptide Therapy Clinics

Displaying peptide clinics near: Los Angeles, California US

What Is Peptide Therapy?

Peptide therapy uses short chains of amino acids to target specific biological pathways in the body. These compounds occur naturally. Insulin, oxytocin, and GLP-1 are all peptides. Synthetic versions amplify or mimic those signals, helping the body heal, lose weight, fight aging, recover from injury, or sharpen cognitive function. Clinics across the country now offer personalized peptide protocols prescribed by licensed providers and sourced from regulated compounding pharmacies.

Common Peptide Treatments

Peptide clinics typically offer compounds across several categories. Weight loss peptides like semaglutide and tirzepatide (GLP-1 receptor agonists) are the most in demand. Healing and recovery peptides like BPC-157 and TB-500 promote tissue repair. Growth hormone peptides like CJC-1295/Ipamorelin and Sermorelin support anti-aging, sleep, and body composition. Sexual health peptides like PT-141 address libido. Cognitive peptides like Semax and Selank support focus and neuroprotection.

How to Choose a Peptide Clinic

Look for clinics led by licensed physicians (MD or DO) or nurse practitioners with peptide training. Ask about compounding pharmacy partnerships (503A or 503B licensed pharmacies with third party testing). Reputable clinics order baseline lab work before prescribing and include follow up monitoring. Most peptide therapy is cash pay. Monthly costs typically range from $150 to $700 depending on the compound and protocol. For a deeper dive, read our complete guide to peptide therapy.

Peptide Therapy FAQs

How We Vet Peptide Clinics in Our Directory

The peptide space is loaded with doorway domains and telehealth-only lead-gen sites pretending to be local clinics. It’s one of the messier verticals in wellness, and we’ve watched content farms chase the SEO without doing any of the real work of verifying whether the clinic actually exists. So before a peptide clinic lands in our directory, we run it through the same checks every time — and publish our rubric here so you can hold us to it.

The 4 checks every listing has to pass

  1. Named physician or licensed provider. We look for a real MD, DO, NP, or PA with credentials we can verify — not anonymous “our medical team” boilerplate. If there’s no named provider, it doesn’t list.
  2. Specific peptide compounds published on the clinic’s own first-party website. “Peptide therapy” as a vague service line doesn’t cut it. The clinic has to name what they actually prescribe — BPC-157, CJC-1295, Sermorelin, Semaglutide, whatever the stack is — on a page we can link to.
  3. Pharmacy sourcing disclosed. Compounded peptides should come from a 503A or 503B FDA-registered compounding pharmacy. Clinics that disclose this openly get weighted higher than ones that don’t, and clinics sourcing from research-grade vendors don’t list at all.
  4. Real brick-and-mortar address we can independently confirm. Telehealth-only brands that fake a local address to target “near me” searches get rejected. If the clinic’s only physical location is two states away, we list them in that state’s market — not where they happen to ship prescriptions.

What we skip

  • SEO doorway subdomains — sites like peptidebalanceclinic.com, renewalpeptides.com, peptidebonds.com, testosterone-level.com, peptidehealers.com, peptidetherapy.info and similar lead-gen templates. These aren’t clinics, they’re marketing funnels.
  • Telehealth-only services pretending to have a local office. Telehealth is fine; misrepresenting geography isn’t.
  • National chains by default. Brands like Restore Hyper Wellness and Gameday Men’s Health only list if a specific location has a real named provider and a published peptide menu at that location.
  • Research-grade peptide vendors operating without clinical oversight.

What we look for beyond the minimum bar

  • Depth of the published peptide menu — more named compounds usually signals a more experienced program.
  • Specific credentialing beyond “MD” — board certifications, A4M or ABAAHP fellowships, dual certifications in relevant specialties.
  • Transparent pricing or published program structure.
  • Stated consultation requirements and lab work before prescribing.

We re-audit the directory periodically and remove clinics that close, stop publishing their peptide program, or fail re-verification. If you spot a listing that doesn’t meet this bar, tell us — we want to know.

See also: — related HealingMaps coverage.

See also: — related HealingMaps coverage.