Several fake websites are copying the look of real peptide vendors
Watch the domain name carefully — clones often differ by one letter.
by Trust & Safety
What's happening
Our Trust & Safety team identified at least seven cloned websites in the last two weeks. Each one mimics a real, well-known peptide vendor — usually copying logos, photography, and even product pages verbatim.
The differences are subtle: a single swapped letter in the domain (rn instead of m, 0 instead of o), a different top-level domain (.cc, .shop, .store), or an extra word like 'official' or 'shop'.
How to protect yourself
Type the URL by hand, or use a bookmark you trust. Do not rely on search ads — clones routinely buy paid placement on the vendor's own brand name.
Check the domain registration date. Most clones are days or weeks old. Real vendors usually have multi-year domain histories. WHOIS lookups are free.
Cross-reference the vendor on our rankings page. If it's a real vendor, we link to their canonical domain directly.
What to do if you already ordered
Contact your card issuer or PayPal and dispute the charge as 'goods not received' or 'misrepresented.' Save screenshots of the site and order confirmation. Do not inject any product you cannot verify came from a real, tested source.
