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Lab & Handling

Bacteriostatic vs Sterile Water for Peptide Reconstitution

Bacteriostatic vs sterile water diluent guide featured image

When reconstituting a research peptide, the choice of diluent matters. The two most common options are bacteriostatic water and sterile water. This guide explains the difference and when each is used in a laboratory setting.

  • Sterile water: purified water with no preservative.
  • Bacteriostatic water: sterile water plus a small amount of benzyl alcohol that inhibits bacterial growth.
  • Main difference: bacteriostatic water supports multi-use storage over time.

The key difference

Both are purified and free of contaminants. The distinction is the preservative: bacteriostatic water contains about 0.9% benzyl alcohol, which inhibits the growth of bacteria. That makes it suited to solutions that will be drawn from more than once over a period of time, whereas plain sterile water has no such protection.

Sterile waterBacteriostatic water
PreservativeNone~0.9% benzyl alcohol
Best forSingle-use preparationMulti-use storage over time
Shelf life once openedShortLonger (preservative-protected)

How researchers choose

  • Multi-use solution? Bacteriostatic water is commonly preferred for stability over repeated access.
  • Single use, used immediately? Sterile water may be appropriate.
  • Compatibility: some experiments require a preservative-free diluent — check the protocol.

Next steps

Once you’ve chosen a diluent, see our step-by-step guide to reconstituting lyophilized peptides and storage mistakes to avoid.

Research use only. For educational purposes. This article describes general laboratory handling, not instructions for human or veterinary use. Compounds are sold strictly for in vitro laboratory research by qualified professionals.

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