Slicker site. Thinner catalog.
Eden built one of the slickest consumer telehealth brands in the wellness space. Their UX is genuinely better than most peptide providers, including ours. What Eden does not do is the deep catalog. They prescribe sermorelin, NAD+, methylene blue, glutathione, and GLP-1s; they do not prescribe BPC-157, CJC-1295, PT-141, tesamorelin, or any of the recovery-and-longevity peptides PeptideRx (rxpepsdirect.com) considers core. This is the honest comparison.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Jonathan Snipes, MD (NPI 1821250077). Last verified May 6, 2026. Read time 6 min.
30–55%
Cheaper on every overlap
10+
Peptides Eden does not offer
$0
Subscription fee
Live
COAs published
The catalog gap
Ten peptides Eden does not prescribe.
Eden built a clean, focused brand around sermorelin, NAD+, GLP-1s, and a handful of wellness adjacencies. They explicitly avoid the deeper-catalog peptides most longevity-and-recovery patients are looking for.
- BPC-157PeptideRx-only
- CJC-1295 / IpamorelinPeptideRx-only
- Sermorelin / Ipamorelin comboPeptideRx-only
- TesamorelinPeptideRx-only
- PT-141 (any form)PeptideRx-only
- KisspeptinPeptideRx-only
- Oxytocin (injection or nasal)PeptideRx-only
- GHK-Cu (injectable)PeptideRx-only
- Wolverine StackPeptideRx-only
- Thymosin Alpha-1PeptideRx-only
Eden carries roughly a dozen products total. PeptideRx carries 55+ compounded peptides plus their formulation variants. Both depths fit different patient profiles; the question is which one fits yours.
Where they overlap
Eden’s prices, side by side.
On the SKUs Eden does carry, PeptideRx is 30 to 55 percent cheaper. Eden’s lower advertised prices kick in only on a 3-month subscription commitment.
Sermorelin
Save $96 (55% less)
Eden's price drops to $126 only on a 3-month subscription; ongoing rate is $176.
GHK-Cu Injectable
PeptideRx-only
Eden offers topical GHK-Cu foam for hair only. No injectable.
Methylene Blue
PeptideRx-only
Eden's catalog mentions methylene blue but pricing is not publicly displayed.
Real stacks
Two stacks priced both ways.
For multi-peptide stacks, the gap widens because Eden charges per product while PeptideRx covers up to 3 peptides per $39 visit.
GH support stack
Sermorelin · CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin
PeptideRx
$219
per month total
Eden
$176
per month total
Sermorelin + NAD+
Save $102 / mo
Sermorelin · NAD+ injectable
PeptideRx
$219
per month total
Eden
$321
per month total
The honest read
Where each provider actually wins.
Eden built the cleaner consumer brand. Their UX is genuinely better than most peptide telehealth sites, including ours. Acknowledging that is part of being honest about the tradeoff.
Where Eden actually wins
- Brand presence and consumer UX. Eden's site flows better than most peptide providers.
- Single-product flat pricing with shipping bundled. The patient never sees a separate visit fee or shipping line.
- Strong adjacent women's HRT and weight-loss product lines that PeptideRx does not carry.
- GHK-Cu hair-care foam. PeptideRx only offers GHK-Cu as a sterile injectable.
Where PeptideRx wins
- Catalog depth. PeptideRx prescribes BPC-157, CJC-1295, PT-141, tesamorelin, kisspeptin, oxytocin, and a dozen other peptides Eden does not offer.
- Pricing on every overlapping SKU. Sermorelin: 30 to 55 percent cheaper. NAD+: 30 percent cheaper.
- No subscription. Eden's lower advertised prices require a 3-month commitment; PeptideRx's $39 visit is one-time per order.
- Published Certificate of Analysis per batch (Eagle Analytical Services). Eden lists FDA/DEA-registered third-party testing but does not publish individual lot reports.
- Up to 3 peptides per $39 visit. Eden charges per-product.
Sourcing
Pricing verified 2026-05-06 from publicly visible Eden (TryEden) product pages and publicly visible PeptideRx product pages. Eden's sermorelin price drops to $126 only on a 3-month subscription commitment; the $176 ongoing rate is what you pay after the first 3 months.
See Eden’s full catalog for their current pricing.
Frequently asked questions
- Does Eden actually carry BPC-157 or PT-141?
- No. Eden's public catalog covers sermorelin (injection and tablet), GLP-1s, NAD+ injectable and nasal spray, NAD+ face cream, glutathione, MIC + B12, methylene blue, GHK-Cu foam (topical only), Vardenafil + Tadalafil, and women's HRT. They do not publicly list BPC-157, CJC-1295/Ipamorelin, PT-141 (any form), tesamorelin, kisspeptin, oxytocin, or injectable GHK-Cu.
- Is Eden's pharmacy 503A?
- Eden states they use "a state-licensed pharmacy in our network" with FDA/DEA-registered third-party testing. They do not name the specific pharmacy or confirm 503A status publicly. PeptideRx names Optimal Balance Pharmacy as the dispensing pharmacy and confirms their 503A license is active in Texas.
- Why is Eden's sermorelin more expensive than PeptideRx's?
- Eden's pricing model bundles consultation, shipping, and product into one monthly subscription cost. PeptideRx separates the medical visit ($39 flat) from the pharmacy product cost ($80 for the 15 mg sermorelin vial). For most patients the unbundled model is 30 to 50 percent cheaper per dose.
- Can I get methylene blue capsules from Eden?
- Eden lists methylene blue in their catalog but does not display public pricing. PeptideRx prescribes pharmaceutical-grade methylene blue capsules at four strengths (5 mg, 10 mg, 15 mg, 25 mg) priced from $1.75 to $2.50 per capsule. The auto-deny screening for SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs, and G6PD applies on both providers per standard methylene blue safety protocol.
- Should I switch from Eden to PeptideRx?
- If your protocol is sermorelin or NAD+ only, the price difference favors PeptideRx but the convenience of staying on Eden may matter more to you. If you want to add BPC-157, CJC-1295, PT-141, tesamorelin, or any peptide outside Eden's catalog, switching to PeptideRx is the only way to get those prescribed alongside what you already use.