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Peptide 101 PRESERVE 2 min read

TB-500: what Thymosin Beta-4 is and why it matters

TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a naturally occurring protein found in nearly every cell of the body. Here is what it is, how it differs from full Thymosin Beta-4, and why it matters.

TB-500: what Thymosin Beta-4 is and why it matters

TB-500: what Thymosin Beta-4 is and why it matters

A synthetic fragment of a naturally occurring protein found in virtually every cell of the body — and one of the most-studied peptides in tissue-repair preclinical research.

TL;DR

  • TB-500 is a synthetic peptide based on a fragment of Thymosin Beta-4 (Tβ4), a 43-amino-acid protein that occurs naturally in nearly every cell type in the human body.
  • Thymosin Beta-4’s primary cellular function is regulating actin — the protein that gives cells their structure and the ability to move and reshape themselves. This actin-binding role underlies most of the proposed biological effects.
  • As of April 2026, TB-500 is classified by the FDA as Category 2 and is not available through licensed 503A compounding pharmacies. Halftime Health does not offer it.

What it is

Thymosin Beta-4 is one of the most abundant proteins in human cells. It was first identified in the thymus gland — hence the name — but has since been characterized as ubiquitous in cell types throughout the body, with particularly high concentrations in white blood cells, platelets, and tissues undergoing repair (Goldstein et al., Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2012). TB-500, the peptide most commonly discussed in protocol contexts, is a synthetic fragment based on a biologically active sequence within full-length Thymosin Beta-4.

How it differs from full Thymosin Beta-4

The full-length Thymosin Beta-4 protein is 43 amino acids long. TB-500 corresponds to a shorter synthesized sequence drawn from that protein. The two molecules are related and share much of the proposed biology, but they are not identical, and the term “TB-500” in peptide-protocol contexts refers to the synthetic form specifically. Most of the published preclinical literature uses recombinant or synthetic Thymosin Beta-4 (or its fragments) and is broadly applicable to TB-500 in mechanism terms.

Who asks about it

People come to this topic when they have heard TB-500 mentioned in a tissue-repair or recovery context — often paired with BPC-157 — and want to understand what the peptide actually is. They also ask when they are trying to understand why it cannot be prescribed through a licensed pharmacy as of 2026.

What the research says

The research base for Thymosin Beta-4 and TB-500 spans cell biology, tissue repair, cardiac injury, and dermal wound healing. The actin-binding mechanism is well characterized at the molecular level. Whole-organism preclinical research is substantial. Robust randomized human clinical trials are limited, and that gap is one of the central reasons TB-500 is currently classified as Category 2 (Crockford et al., Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2010).

What to know before considering it

TB-500 is not currently available through Halftime Health and cannot legally be obtained through a U.S. 503A compounding pharmacy. The reclassification process proposed in February 2026 may eventually change that, but as of the publication date of this article, the formal regulatory status remains Category 2.

The Halftime POV

TB-500’s biology is genuinely interesting — actin regulation is one of the more fundamental processes in cell biology, and a peptide that influences it has plausible reasons to affect tissue repair. The honest framing is that the molecular biology is well characterized, and the human clinical trial base is not yet at the standard required for compounding eligibility.


Related reading:

FAQ

Q: What is TB-500? A: TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4, a naturally occurring 43-amino-acid protein found in nearly every cell type in the body. The ‘TB-500’ designation refers to a specific synthesized peptide sequence corresponding to a biologically active region of full-length Thymosin Beta-4.

Q: Is TB-500 the same as Thymosin Beta-4? A: Not quite. Thymosin Beta-4 is the full naturally occurring 43-amino-acid protein. TB-500 is a synthetic fragment based on a portion of that sequence. They are related and share much of the proposed biology, but the molecules are not identical, and most of the popular discussion uses ‘TB-500’ to refer specifically to the synthetic form.

Q: Is TB-500 available through Halftime Health? A: No. TB-500 is currently classified by the FDA as a Category 2 peptide and cannot legally be prepared by 503A compounding pharmacies. A February 2026 HHS announcement proposed returning TB-500 to Category 1, but as of April 2026 that change is not yet effective. Halftime Health does not offer Category 2 peptides.


Disclaimer

As of April 2026, TB-500 is classified by the FDA as a Category 2 peptide and is not available through licensed 503A compounding pharmacies. A February 2026 HHS announcement proposed returning TB-500 to Category 1 pending formal FDA Federal Register notice. Halftime Health does not currently offer TB-500. This article is educational only and is not medical advice. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. Clinical outcomes depend on individual factors and require physician evaluation.

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Sources



This article discusses compounds that are currently under FDA Category 2 review (see our FDA categorization explainer). These compounds are not currently part of Halftime Health’s published protocol catalog. This article is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice or an offer to sell.

Sources & references

  1. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22399079/
  2. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3306779/