The Optimal Health Manifesto
Peptide profile

Melanotan II

MT-II · MT-2
AHuman-validated 🔴Red See the side-effect detail ↓
What do these badges mean?

Evidence tier

  • AHuman-validated — Human trials showing positive results and good safety.
  • BAnimal-grade — No human trials yet, but solid animal/preclinical evidence of effect and safety.
  • CAnecdotal — No human or animal trials — only anecdotal/observational reports.
  • DInsufficient evidence — No or insufficient evidence (encyclopedia only — never recommended by the builder).

Safety light

  • 🟢 Green — Only mild, manageable side effects; reasonable safety data.
  • 🟡 Yellow — Needs active management, has a meaningful contraindication/interaction, or has thin long-term data.
  • 🔴 Red — Risk of a hospital-level event — treat with serious caution.
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Question 1

What is it?

“Melanotan” refers to two distinct molecules, and the names get used loosely, so here’s the clean split:

  • Melanotan I (afamelanotide, brand SCENESSE) — an FDA-approved drug (2019), administered as a clinician-placed implant, used for a rare genetic condition (erythropoietic protoporphyria, EPP) where sunlight causes severe pain. Relatively selective for the MC1R “tanning” receptor.
  • Melanotan II (MT-II) — a synthetic cyclic analog of alpha-MSH, the body’s own melanocyte-stimulating hormone. It’s a non-selective melanocortin agonist (hits MC1R, MC3R, MC4R, MC5R), which is why it drives tanning and libido/appetite effects. This is the molecule Alyve sells, the one bodybuilders and tanners have used since the 1990s, and the subject of the rest of this page.

MT-II’s appeal is simple: it tells your melanocytes to produce melanin, so users tan with dramatically less UV exposure than they’d otherwise need, plus it produces noticeable libido and appetite effects. It came out of melanocortin research at the University of Arizona; the same line of work later produced PT-141 (bremelanotide), which is FDA-approved for low sexual desire — so this receptor system is well-validated, and MT-II is its broad-spectrum cousin.

Question 2

What does it do in my body?

Both Melanotans are synthetic analogs of alpha-MSH (alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone), the natural signal that tells melanocytes to make melanin (pigment).

  • MT-II is a non-selective agonist. It activates MC1R (the tanning receptor — increases eumelanin, the protective brown pigment) plus MC3R, MC4R, and MC5R. The MC3R/MC4R activity is why MT-II also drives increased libido, spontaneous erections, appetite suppression, and the characteristic “stretching and yawning” response.
  • Because tanning is melanocyte-driven rather than UV-driven, MT-II produces pigment with much less sun — that’s the entire point of the compound. It’s central/systemic, not a topical bronzer.
  • The breadth of receptor activity is the trade-off: more receptors hit means more effects, both the wanted tan/libido ones and the off-target nausea/flushing ones.
Question 3

How can it help me?

The peptide people use to tan with far less sun exposure, with libido effects as a well-documented bonus. Alyve sells Melanotan II. This is the complete, honest guide: how it works, what the research shows, the real-world protocol people run, the side effects and how users manage them, the regulatory facts, and where to get a verified vial. One important naming note up front — there are two different “Melanotans,” and knowing which is which makes everything below clearer.

The full evidence — every human, animal, and lab study, graded — is one tap away: use the See the deeper science → toggle at the top.

Question 4 & 5

Is it dangerous? What are the side effects?

MT-II’s side effects are well documented from both the small trials and three decades of use. Here they are as information, with how users actually manage them.

Common / expected:

  • Nausea — the most consistent effect, dose-dependent. Users manage it by starting low, injecting before sleep, and occasionally with antihistamines. It typically eases as the body adjusts.
  • Facial flushing, appetite loss, the stretch/yawn response, and spontaneous (sometimes inconvenient) erections — direct MC3R/MC4R effects, expected and generally transient.
  • Uneven skin darkening and darkening of existing moles/freckles — a direct melanocyte effect. This is both the mechanism working and the reason for the mole-monitoring practice below.

Serious, documented in published case reports (these are individual cases, not population incidence rates — that distinction matters):

  • Rhabdomyolysis + acute kidney injury, 3-day ICU stay — a 39-year-old who injected 6 mg (≈24x the conventional dose) bought online; CPK peaked at 17,773 IU/L. He recovered fully. The dose is the headline here.
  • Renal infarction — after ~6 months of use; thrombotic and direct-toxic mechanisms proposed.
  • Cutaneous melanoma — in a 20-year-old woman after a 3–4 week MT-II + sunbed course; and multiple new atypical (dysplastic) moles within a week of two injections. A 2025 case report also raises MT-II nasal spray as a possible risk factor for oral-mucosal malignant melanoma — note the nasal-spray route, a different and unverified-dose delivery than the injectable convention. Causation can’t be proven from single cases, but the biology is plausible: MT-II stimulates all melanocytes, including those in moles, and combining that with UV (sunbeds) is the pattern flagged in these reports.
  • Persistent oral mucosal pigmentation after 64 days of use, mostly resolving after stopping.
  • Priapism (erection >4 hours, a urological emergency) noted in clinical summaries [web, WebMD].

Practical risk management that falls straight out of the above: stay near the conventional 250 mcg dose rather than escalating; be cautious about stacking MT-II with sunbeds, since that’s the combination in the melanoma/mole reports; get a baseline mole check and watch existing moles for changes (the same bi-annual skin-check practice used with the approved MT-I); and avoid it if you have a personal or family history of melanoma/atypical-mole syndrome, cardiovascular or kidney disease, or are pregnant. None of this requires fear — it’s the same kind of informed self-management an adult applies to any active compound.

Regulatory status:

  • MT-I / afamelanotide (SCENESSE): FDA-approved 2019 (EU 2014) for EPP photoprotection only, as a clinician-administered implant. Not approved for cosmetic tanning.
  • MT-II (the Alyve product): not approved by any regulator for human use. The FDA issued a warning in 2007 that there’s “no evidence that the product is generally recognized as safe and effective”; Australia’s TGA and others have issued similar notices. It’s sold research-use-only. Those are the regulatory facts, stated plainly — MT-II is an unapproved research compound, and that’s the status to know it by.

Preparing it

Part 1 — How to reconstitute it

What you'll need: bacteriostatic water (sterile, preserved water you mix the powder with) and a separate, larger reconstitution syringe just for mixing — not the small syringe you inject with.

The exact bacteriostatic-water volume and resulting concentration for Melanotan II are covered in the dosing notes and the deeper-science view. Confirm the right volume for your vial before mixing.

How to mix it

  • Tilt the vial and let the bacteriostatic water run slowly down the inside glass wall — never squirt it straight onto the powder.
  • Swirl gently to dissolve. Never shake — shaking can damage the peptide.
  • Store the reconstituted vial refrigerated and out of light.
  • Use it within the beyond-use window your source specifies — reconstituted peptides are commonly used within a few weeks; confirm the window for your specific peptide.

Use the free reconstitution calculator to turn any vial size + water volume into exact units on an insulin syringe.

Dosing

Part 2 — Typical dosing

The doses and schedules here are for educational and informational purposes only. These peptides are sold for research use only and are not FDA-approved drugs. This is not medical advice. Consult a qualified physician before beginning any protocol.

The syringe. Use a 0.3 mL U-100 insulin syringe — it's sized for these small subcutaneous doses. Inject subcutaneously (into the fat just under the skin) and rotate injection sites.

The doses and schedules below are for educational and informational purposes only. These peptides are sold for research use only and are not FDA-approved drugs. This is not medical advice. Consult a qualified physician before beginning any protocol.

The de-facto community protocol, stated plainly:

  • Standard dose: 10 mg vial, reconstitute with 2 mL bacteriostatic (BAC) water5000 mcg/mL. Draw 250 mcg = 0.05 mL = 5 units on a U-100 insulin syringe. AM, 2x/week, in 8-week-on/off blocks.
  • Loading vs. maintenance: many users start at a low daily microdose (~250 mcg) to build pigment, then drop to ~2x/week maintenance once they’ve reached their target color. Some moderate UV exposure is still used to activate the tan; the point is you need far less of it.
  • Start low, go slow. Nausea is dose-dependent (see Section 5), so the practical move is to start at 250 mcg or below and only adjust upward if tolerated. The community has no single consensus dose, which is exactly why anchoring to the conventional 250 mcg and titrating from there is the sensible approach.
  • Important dosing context: the published systemic-toxicity case (Section 5) involved a man injecting 6 mg — roughly 24x the 250 mcg convention. The conventional dose and a 6 mg dose are not the same activity. Knowing where the convention sits, and staying near it, is the single most useful piece of practical risk management for this compound.
  • Reconstituted MT-II is stored refrigerated and, per Alyve’s handling copy, used within ~21 days.

A note on the cheat sheet: it lists this row as “Melanotan 1,” but the dosing math (10 mg vial, 250 mcg, 2x/week) is what the community runs for the MT-II powder that Alyve and other vendors actually sell.

Question 7 & 8

What should I avoid combining — and what's synergistic?

Melanotan II doesn't have a dedicated stacking protocol in our notes — the interactions that matter most are in the safety section above. For how people combine it with other peptides, the deeper-science view has the full detail.

Question 9

How can I buy this?

  • SKU: Melanotan II 10 mg — $38.00. In stock. (ALYVE-MT2-10MG) Sequence Ac-Nle-c[Asp-His-D-Phe-Arg-Trp-Lys]-NH2; non-selective MC1R–MC5R agonist; ≥98% (HPLC) per Alyve’s spec sheet.
  • COA: no third-party Freedom Diagnostics COA is on disk yet for the Melanotan SKU (unlike GHK-Cu, GLOW, KLOW, and the rest of the tested catalog, which run 99.01–99.91%). For a melanocortin compound where the gray market is known for mislabeled and contaminated product, batch-level purity verification is exactly what you’d want — so this is the SKU where the verified-vial story is currently a gap to close. (questions.md tracks whether a Melanotan COA is coming.) The practical takeaway for a buyer: identity and purity verification is the whole game with MT-II, because forum reports repeatedly describe people who didn’t know what they actually injected — one anecdote in the source material is a man who thought he was injecting retatrutide and “started getting darker,” i.e., it was Melanotan. A verified vial is how you avoid being that story.
  • Offer: coupon OHM-15 takes 15% off — Alyve’s pricing is very competitive, and buying 3 vials of any given peptide in one purchase gets you over 30% off retail. Whether OHM features MT-II in customer-facing content, and how prominently, is Rick’s call; this page gives him the complete, honest picture to decide from.

When you use my coupon code to buy peptides with these sellers, you enjoy a discount off retail price, and I make a small commission which helps me to continue to offer this peptide educational site to you for free. I only have affiliate relationships with peptide manufacturers that show evidence that their peptides are 100% manufactured in the US, 3rd party lab tested for purity, transparent COAs posted on their websites, and that have good customer service.

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