Timing & pharmacokinetics
How long does Selank take to work?
Onset timing for Selank varies in the clinical literature. Onset timing is not well-quantified in our dataset — refer to clinical citations on the main entry.
Onset
—
Half-life
—
Duration
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Timing
AM/midday
Key facts
- typical dose
- 0.4–0.9 mg
- dose frequency
- 1-2 doses
- timing
- AM/midday
- with food
- n/a
- safety score
- 3/5
- evidence grade
- C
- class
- peptide
- PubMed citations
- 50
- legal status (US)
- Research-chemical category
- legal status (UK)
- Research-chemical category
- legal status (EU)
- Research-chemical category
- legal status (AU)
- Prescription-only
- primary mechanism
- Heptapeptide structurally analogous to tuftsin, an endogenous tetrapeptide with immunomodulating activity.
Onset window
Selank onset times in the published literature vary widely. Refer to the citations on the main Selank entry for compound-specific pharmacokinetic data.
Food effect:
Half-life and dosing frequency
Half-life is not characterised in our dataset.
Acute vs. chronic effect
Some nootropics work the first time you take them (Selank may or may not). Others — adaptogens, racetams, and most botanicals targeting BDNF or NGF pathways — require 2–4 weeks of daily dosing before the full effect emerges.
If you don’t feel anything after a single dose and the compound is in the chronic-effect category, that is normal — extend the trial to 2–4 weeks before evaluating. If it is in the acute category and you feel nothing, consider dose, vendor sourcing, or whether the compound matches your goal.
Protocol note from the Selank entry
Intranasal.
Mechanism, safety, and citations for Selank are on the main reference page — see Selank. For full dose protocol see Selank dosage. To check for stack-level pharmacokinetic conflicts, use the interaction checker.
Onset and pharmacokinetic data reflect the published literature for healthy adults at typical doses. Individual variation in absorption, metabolism (CYP genotype), and gut transit can shift onset by ±50%. This page is informational and not medical advice. See our full disclaimer.