Copper peptideTopical cosmetic useMixed evidence
GHK-Cu is a naturally occurring copper-binding tripeptide studied for skin and tissue, with the most human evidence in topical cosmetic applications.
GHK-Cu (glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine bound to copper) is a small peptide that occurs naturally in human plasma and declines with age. It is widely used in topical skincare, where it has more human data than most peptides discussed in optimization circles, and is studied preclinically for broader tissue effects.
GHK-Cu is a copper-bound tripeptide. It appears in cosmetic formulations (topical) and is also sold as a research compound for other routes, which carry less evidence and more uncertainty.
Proposed and partially supported mechanisms include:
Topical skin effects have the most support; systemic/other-route claims are less established.
Evidence is strongest for topical cosmetic skin use; broader claims are preclinical or limited.
| Evidence type | Status |
|---|---|
| Topical skin (human) | Reasonable cosmetic-science support for appearance-related skin benefits. |
| Other routes / systemic | Largely preclinical; human evidence is limited. |
Topical skin appearance is the best-supported area. Other applications are research-stage.
If you're considering GHK-Cu beyond cosmetic skincare, discuss it with a licensed provider. This page is not a recommendation.
Yes — it occurs naturally in human plasma and declines with age.
It has more human (cosmetic) data than many peptides, specifically for skin appearance.
If you'd like help applying this information to your own health, schedule a consultation with the Bearing team.
Request a ConsultationReferences are provided for further reading. Bearing summarizes the literature conservatively and updates pages as evidence evolves.
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