Wholesale peptide sourcing for clinics, run by an operator.
Direct relationships with licensed 503A patient-specific compounding pharmacies and 503B FDA-registered outsourcing facilities. Free Standard account, per-order pricing, no subscription.

Sourcing is the foundation service at Revival RX Partners. Every clinic in the roster opens a Standard sourcing account first, because supply is the spine of any peptide program — and getting it right means deciding which partner pharmacy handles which compound, opening the right accounts in the right order, and keeping an operator on the phone for the protocol changes that happen month over month as the program grows. The Standard account is free. There is no subscription, no minimum order, and no opening fee. Revival earns margin per order, on volume only — the clinic only pays for the compounds it ships to patients.
How sourcing works at Revival
The onboarding arc is built to get a clinic ordering inside five business days. The sequence is intentional — application, intro call, partner-pharmacy account setup, first order — and each step has Brad on the phone rather than a portal handoff. The mechanics:
- Day 1 · Application — five-minute intake covering the clinic's licensure, the protocols it plans to run, and the states it will serve. Used to scope which partner pharmacies fit the clinic's footprint.
- Day 1–2 · Intro call — Brad personally reviews the application, maps the clinic's launch compounds against partner pharmacy fit, and confirms which 503A and 503B partners to open accounts at first.
- Day 2–4 · Partner-pharmacy account setup — Revival opens the partner accounts on the clinic's behalf, handles the credentialing paperwork with each pharmacy, and confirms the clinic's prescriber licensure is on file at each partner.
- Day 3–5 · First order — most clinics place their first order within five business days of the intro call. Peptides ship directly from the licensed partner pharmacy to the clinic or to the patient against a valid prescription.
- Ongoing · Re-orders run through the Revival account. Brad stays on call as protocols expand, as new peptides come into the catalog, and as the clinic scales.
Catalog overview
Every compound on the catalog is dispensed by a licensed 503A or 503B partner pharmacy against a valid prescription. Revival does not manufacture, dispense, or hold inventory — the partner pharmacies do that under the federal compounding sections of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. The catalog is organized around the protocols clinics actually run, not around abstract compound categories. Standard catalog families:
- GLP-1 weight management — Semaglutide, Tirzepatide, and GLP-1/GIP combinations. Individualized titration through 503A partners or standardized office-use inventory through 503B partners depending on the clinic's operating model.
- Recovery — BPC-157 and TB-500, the soft-tissue and gut-healing protocols that anchor post-procedure recovery programs in med spas and recovery-focused TRT clinics.
- Longevity — NAD+ in IV, IM, and SQ delivery formats. 503B partners for in-office IV inventory, 503A partners for take-home injectable dispensing.
- Growth hormone secretagogues — Sermorelin, Ipamorelin, and CJC-1295. Typical second-protocol expansion after a stable GLP-1 or TRT program.
- Custom physician-supervised protocols — patient-specific compounding through 503A partners for protocols outside the standard catalog. Common for functional medicine clinics with individualized treatment plans.
Live per-compound pricing is shared after the intro call. Pricing varies by partner pharmacy, compound, and clinic order volume — quoting against the clinic's real protocols and real volume produces an honest number rather than a marketing-page placeholder.
503A versus 503B routing logic
The decision of which compound runs through 503A and which runs through 503B is the most consequential sourcing choice a clinic makes. The wrong routing decision turns a profitable protocol into an operational drag — patient-specific dispensing where office-use would be cleaner, or office-use inventory where patient-specific would be more flexible. The routing principles Revival applies during onboarding:
- Single-compound, high-volume, standardized dosing → 503B partner opened. Office-use inventory eliminates prescription-to-fulfillment lag for protocols where every patient gets the same dose schedule.
- Multi-compound, individualized dosing, lower volume → 503A partner opened. Patient-specific compounding allows per-patient titration, custom stack sizing, and dose changes without inventory waste.
- Most clinics need both. The practical answer for almost every clinic running a real peptide program is a 503A account for individualized work and a 503B account for the high-volume single-protocol backbone. Forcing one path to do both jobs is the most common sourcing mistake.
The deep comparison is at /503a-vs-503b. The short version: Revival opens both account types during onboarding so the clinic's medical director has the right supply path per compound from day one.
Pricing structure
The Standard sourcing account is free. There is no opening fee, no monthly subscription, and no minimum order. The clinic only pays for the compounds it ships to patients, at the partner pharmacy's per-order pricing plus the standard Revival margin. The full pricing detail — including how Concierge ($1,500/mo) layers Marketing and Consultation onto the free sourcing relationship — is at /pricing.
Volume discounts are negotiated directly with partner pharmacies for multi-location operators, MSOs, and high-volume single-clinic programs. Custom volume pricing is part of the Concierge tier or quoted standalone for clinics whose sourcing volume justifies it without the marketing and consultation add-ons.
Why operator-led versus portal
The peptide-supply category has consolidated around large networks that operate as portals — log in, browse a catalog, place an order, receive an automated confirmation. Portals work for clinics whose ordering pattern fits the default workflow. They fail for clinics that need anything outside it: a protocol the catalog doesn't surface, a partner pharmacy whose licensure footprint matches an unusual state, a compounding question that needs an actual pharmacist on the other end of the call, a sourcing decision that depends on the clinic's specific operating model.
Revival is the operator-led alternative. Brad personally manages every clinic relationship and every partner-pharmacy relationship. There is no portal because the work is decided on calls — which compound, which partner, which routing — and the clinic gets the same answer from the same person every time. The trade-off is intentional: smaller clinic roster, deeper relationships, an operator who picks up the phone. The frame Revival uses: Blue Atlas is a portal, Revival is an operator. Same compounds, different operating model.
Sourcing questions.
Is the sourcing account really free?
Yes. Standard accounts are free to open. There is no subscription, no minimum order, and no opening fee. Revival earns per-order margin on the compounds the clinic actually orders — the same margin model used across the peptide-supply category, structured so the clinic does not pay for access it isn't using.
Are these peptides FDA-approved?
Compounded peptides are not FDA-approved as new drugs. They are dispensed by licensed 503A and 503B partner pharmacies under sections 503A and 503B of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, against a valid prescription. Revival's catalog is sourced only through licensed compounding pharmacies — never through research-use-only or grey-market suppliers.
How fast can the clinic place its first order?
Most clinics order within five business days of the intro call. The bottleneck is usually credentialing paperwork at the partner pharmacy — prescriber licensure verification, clinic information on file, payment method setup. Revival handles the paperwork on the clinic's behalf to compress the timeline.
What if the clinic already works with a compounding pharmacy?
Most clinics work with multiple pharmacies for different protocols. Revival adds depth — compounds the current pharmacy may not carry, alternative routing for protocols that fit a different partner better, and consolidation across multiple partner accounts under one operator relationship. The existing pharmacy relationship doesn't have to end.
Can the clinic cancel the account?
Yes. The account stays open until the clinic asks to close it. There is no cancellation fee because there is no subscription. The partner pharmacy accounts opened during onboarding belong to the clinic — closing the Revival relationship does not close the underlying pharmacy accounts unless the clinic asks.
Does Revival handle the prescription side?
No. The clinic's prescriber writes the prescription and signs off on each order, the same as any pharmacy relationship. Revival is the supply layer — the partner pharmacy fulfills against the valid prescription. We do not provide medical advice and do not dispense medications.
Which states can Revival serve?
Revival operates nationally across the United States. The state-licensure footprint depends on the partner pharmacy — some 503A partners are licensed in all fifty states, others are licensed in subsets. During the intro call Brad maps the clinic's state footprint against the partner pharmacies that fit, then opens accounts at the partners whose licensure matches the clinic's operating geography.