🧬 Tirzepatide vs Retatrutide – Community Poll Results Are In! 📊

Hey friends! 👋

So I ran another poll recently (it’s still open btw, you can check it out here 🔗).

Even though it’s only been open a few hours when writing this, the results are pretty clear...
👉 Tirzepatide is still the fan favorite with nearly 3:1 vs Reta! 💥

Now, you’ve probably seen everyone online yelling “Reta! Reta! Reta!” and yeah, I get it. The buzz is real. But let’s be honest… one of the biggest reasons is simple:

🚫 Most RUO companies and compounders can’t sell Tirz, so all the promotional posts are pushing Reta instead.
And if your only choices are Semaglutide or Reta, well, that’s a no-brainer choice. 😅

But when you’ve got the same access we do... the community data speaks for itself. 💪

⚖️ Quick Comparison Breakdown:

Semaglutide:
🥄 Major appetite suppression, but lots of reports of nausea and fatigue.

Tirzepatide:
👌 Excellent appetite control at lower doses vs Reta, meaning smoother sailing toward your weight-loss goals.

Retatrutide:
🔺 Triple agonist (GLP-1 + GIP + glucagon). That glucagon side can feel rough for some, especially since effective appetite suppression usually happens at higher dose ranges.

And that’s the beauty of peptides, you’ve gotta experiment and see what feels best for you. 🙌
What works for your buddy might not work for your biology.

Some people split their weekly dose into two smaller ones 💉
Others do every-other-day dosing 🔁
At the end of the day, it’s all about biofeedback, how you feel is the only metric that truly counts.

You might even get a way with 1/10 of the “standard” dose, what is standard anyways? Well that is determined by the studies designed by the manufacturers to maximize results AND !? drum roll please……..PROFITS.

Hope you found this little breakdown useful ❤️
The poll’s still open, so feel free to jump in and see how it’s trending!

👉 Join the discussion on Skool the community’s buzzing and we’re having a blast there lately 🎉

Catch you inside,
– TK

P.S. Research purposes only. Not medical advice. Talk to your clinician always!