Peptide supply for med spas, sourced through licensed partner pharmacies.
GLP-1, NAD+, recovery, and growth hormone secretagogues — sourced through Revival's 503A and 503B partner relationships, shipped direct against valid prescriptions.
Med spa operators carry a sourcing problem most other clinic types do not. Patients are walking in asking about semaglutide, NAD+, and BPC-157 by name, and the supply path has to be clean enough to sit next to neurotoxin and filler inventory without compromising the clinical posture of the practice. A patient who trusts your aesthetic judgment expects the same standard on the injectables they take home. Revival RX Partners is the supply layer that meets that bar.
What med spas actually source through Revival
Patient demand inside a med spa is concentrated. Across the operator network Revival serves, the same compounds show up on almost every order sheet. Building inventory and protocol depth around these first is faster, cleaner, and easier to staff.
Most of these compounds are dispensed patient-specific through 503A partner pharmacies. NAD+ and a few in-office injectables move through 503B partners when the practice administers them on-site. Revival opens both account types on your behalf during onboarding so your medical director has the right supply path per compound.
- Semaglutide and Tirzepatide — GLP-1 and GLP-1/GIP for weight management. The dominant volume driver across the med spa channel.
- NAD+ — cellular energy and longevity positioning. Pairs naturally with IV therapy if you offer it, dispenses as a standalone injectable if you do not.
- BPC-157 — soft-tissue and gut healing. The post-procedure recovery angle (post-laser, post-microneedling) cross-sells cleanly.
- Sermorelin and Ipamorelin — growth hormone secretagogues for recovery, sleep, and body composition. Typical second-protocol expansion after GLP-1 is stable.
- TB-500 — tissue repair, commonly stacked with BPC-157 for recovery-focused patients.
How the account works
A Standard Account with Revival is free to open. There is no subscription and no monthly minimum. You apply, then book an intro call with Brad Fogeltanz, who runs the relationship personally. On that call he maps the compounds your medical director wants to carry against the right partner pharmacies and outlines what onboarding looks like for your specific operation.
Inside five business days, partner-pharmacy accounts are opened on your behalf, your protocols are mapped to the right 503A or 503B path per compound, and your team can place the first order. Prescriptions route through Revival's account; partner pharmacies ship direct to the patient (503A) or to the clinic (503B). You pay per order. That is the entire structure.
White-glove is not a marketing line here. Brad answers the phone. When a pharmacy partner has a back-order, you hear about it from the founder before it affects a patient. When a new compound enters the partner network, you are told first. Med spa operators consistently flag this as the difference between Revival and the portal-only suppliers they previously used.
Why Revival vs. a portal
Most med spas have tried the self-serve portal model already. The pitch sounds clean — log in, select a compound, place an order, done. The reality of running an aesthetic practice is that supply questions are not self-serve. A back-ordered vial during a patient week, a new compound entering the market, a state-specific prescribing nuance, a question about whether 503A or 503B is the right path for a new in-office protocol — none of that is solved by a portal interface.
Blue Atlas is a portal. Revival is an operator. The partner pharmacy relationships are direct and deeper because they are managed by a person who has been operating in this category for years, not negotiated by a checkout flow. When a med spa is balancing peptide supply against the aesthetic positioning the practice was built on, an operator on the other end of the phone is the differentiator.
There is also a practical reason. Med spa owners care about brand. A supply partner who picks up the phone — and who treats your patient list as something to protect rather than a name to add to a sales funnel — is the kind of partner an aesthetic practice can actually stand behind.
Pricing — free to open
The Standard Account is free. No subscription. No monthly minimum. No setup fee. You pay per order at the partner pharmacy's published rate plus Revival's margin, which is built into the listed price. Multi-location med spas and groups running serious peptide volume can move to the Concierge tier, which is custom-quoted based on order volume and account complexity rather than a fixed monthly fee.
Compliance and operational fit
Compounded peptides are not FDA-approved as new drugs. They are dispensed by licensed 503A and 503B pharmacies under sections 503A and 503B of the FD&C Act, against a valid prescription written by a licensed prescriber after a documented patient evaluation. That framing belongs on your website, in your marketing, and in your patient consultations. Any partner who blurs that line — or implies these are interchangeable with brand-name pharmaceutical products — is creating regulatory exposure for your practice.
Med spa operators carry an additional layer because of LegitScript certification, payment processor requirements, and platform-specific ad policies. Revival's partner pharmacies operate under documented compliance posture, and Brad personally walks you through the language your front desk, your marketing collateral, and your patient consent forms should reflect. The goal is supply you can defend, not supply that creates problems downstream.
Med spa peptide questions.
What does it cost to open an account?
Nothing. The Standard Account is free, with no subscription and no monthly minimum. You pay per order at the partner pharmacy rate plus Revival's margin, which is included in the listed price. Concierge is custom-quoted for multi-location operators and high-volume practices.
Which peptides should a med spa start carrying first?
Semaglutide and Tirzepatide for GLP-1 weight management almost always lead because patient demand is overwhelming. NAD+ is a strong second for any practice with a longevity or IV angle. BPC-157 cross-sells with post-procedure recovery, and Sermorelin or Ipamorelin tend to be the second-protocol expansion after the GLP-1 program is stable.
How long does onboarding take?
Most med spas can place their first order within five business days of the intro call with Brad. Partner-pharmacy accounts are opened on your behalf, compounds are mapped to the right 503A or 503B path, and your medical director is briefed before the first prescription routes through.
Do you support both 503A and 503B sourcing?
Yes. 503A partner pharmacies handle patient-specific compounded prescriptions — the right path for most med spa take-home peptide work. 503B partner pharmacies are FDA-registered outsourcing facilities that supply office-use inventory in larger batches, which is the right path for in-office injectables you administer during a patient visit. Revival opens accounts on both sides.
Are compounded peptides FDA-approved?
No. Compounded peptides are dispensed by licensed 503A and 503B pharmacies under federal compounding regulations against a valid prescription. They are not FDA-approved as new drugs. Any marketing or patient education your practice publishes should reflect that distinction accurately.
What kind of support comes with the account?
Direct access to Brad by phone and email. Pharmacy partner introductions, supply continuity updates, protocol guidance, new-compound notifications, and operational support on questions specific to your practice. Operator-led, not ticket-based.
Will adding peptides hurt our aesthetic positioning?
Only if the program is run carelessly. Med spas that protect their aesthetic brand keep peptide consultations on a separate intake track, hold pricing to clinical depth rather than volume discounting, and let the medical director own the protocol. Done that way, peptide patients become the highest-LTV patients in the practice and frequently cross-convert to aesthetics.