Hormonal & EndocrineFDA Approved (indication-specific)S

Clomiphene

Clomid

SERM approved for ovulation induction; used off-label in endocrine/TRT-adjacent protocols.

Observational report only — live community data. Not medical advice. Does not recommend doses, protocols, or treatments.
Studies cited
2
Research grade
S
Community score
115

Trend index

Trackers
2,650

Overview

About Clomiphene

SERM approved for ovulation induction; used off-label in endocrine/TRT-adjacent protocols.

Category
Hormonal & Endocrine
Regulatory status
FDA Approved (indication-specific)
Also known as
Clomid
Self-reports
25

Community

What 25 users report

25 community reports

Positive 97% · Neutral 3% · Negative 0%

Most reported benefits

Libido
166

Most reported side effects

Headache
5

Dose distribution

Median: 2000+ mcg · Most common: 2000+ mcg

0–25
0
25–50
0
50–100
0
100–200
0
200–400
0
400–600
0
600–1000
0
1000–2000
0
2000+
166

How repeat users are trending

Among repeat reporters, 83% said they felt similar to their last entry, 17% more positive, and 0% more negative.

Overall, repeat reporters leaned more positive than their previous entry.

Median gap between entries: 175 days · Based on 23 repeat reporters

Research

Cited research (1)

Help

Frequently asked

What do PeptIQ users report about Clomiphene?

This page summarizes 25 anonymized self-reports from PeptIQ users who track Clomiphene, including commonly reported effects and co-tracked peptides. These are observational patterns, not clinical outcomes.

What research is cited for Clomiphene?

1 sources are linked on this page, including PubMed articles, clinical trial registries, and FDA labels where applicable. Citations describe published research — not recommendations.

Is Clomiphene safe to use?

This wiki does not assess safety or recommend use. Clomiphene is listed as FDA Approved (indication-specific). Consult a licensed clinician for personal medical decisions.

What are the purported benefits and uses of Clomiphene?

Research, primarily in animal models, suggests Clomiphene may have a wide range of therapeutic potentials due to its ability to promote angiogenesis (formation of new blood vessels), stimulate collagen synthesis, and modulate inflammatory responses.

Source

What is the legal status of Clomiphene?

Clomiphene is not approved by the FDA for any human use. There is no legal basis for selling it as a drug, food, or dietary supplement in the United States. The FDA has classified Clomiphene as a Category 2 bulk drug substance, which explicitly prohibits licensed compounding pharmacies from using it in compounded medications.

Source

What are the known or theoretical side effects and risks of Clomiphene?

The safety and effectiveness of Clomiphene have not been thoroughly evaluated in humans through rigorous clinical trials. This lack of human data means that safe dosages, short-term side effects, and long-term health consequences are largely unknown.

Source

What is the current state of research on Clomiphene?

While there are over 200 published studies on Clomiphene, the vast majority are animal or in vitro (cell) studies. These preclinical studies consistently show positive results across various tissue types. However, there is a significant lack of comprehensive human clinical trial data.

Source