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Bacteriostatic vs. Sterile Water: What's the Difference?

July 16, 2026 · 4 min read · The Vial Post Research Desk

Bacteriostatic water contains a preservative that inhibits bacterial growth, making it suitable for multi-use research vials; sterile water has no preservative and is single-use. Here's how they differ.


# Bacteriostatic vs. Sterile Water: What's the Difference?

Short answer: The difference is the preservative. Bacteriostatic water contains a small amount of benzyl alcohol that inhibits bacterial growth, so a vial can be entered multiple times over several weeks. Sterile water has no preservative — it's sterile when sealed but has no ongoing protection once opened, making it single-use.

> TL;DR — Bacteriostatic water = has a preservative → multi-use, lasts ~28 days once opened. Sterile water = no preservative → single-use. For reconstituting research peptides that you'll draw from more than once, bacteriostatic water is the standard choice.

Bacteriostatic water - Contains ~0.9% benzyl alcohol, a bacteriostatic (growth-inhibiting) preservative. - Because it resists bacterial contamination, a single vial can be accessed multiple times — typically for up to about 28 days after first entry when refrigerated. - This makes it the preferred solvent for reconstituting lyophilized research peptides, which are usually used across several sessions.

Sterile water - Simply purified water that has been sterilized, with no preservative added. - Sterile when the vial is sealed, but once opened there is nothing to inhibit microbial growth, so it is intended for single use. - Better suited to one-time preparations rather than a vial you'll return to repeatedly.

Which to use for reconstitution For most research peptide work — where a reconstituted vial is drawn from more than once — bacteriostatic water is the standard because its preservative keeps the solution usable over the working period. If a protocol specifically requires no preservative, sterile water may be used, understanding it should be treated as single-use.

Quick comparison - Preservative: Bacteriostatic = yes (benzyl alcohol) · Sterile = no - Reuse: Bacteriostatic = multi-use (~28 days) · Sterile = single-use - Best for: Bacteriostatic = reconstituting research peptides · Sterile = one-time preparations

See our companion guide on how to reconstitute research peptides. All materials and products are for in-vitro laboratory research use only — not for human or animal consumption.

Sourcing note

Researching this compound? See where to buy research peptides — what to look for in third-party testing, purity, and a Certificate of Analysis.

For research and educational use only. Not medical advice. Compounds discussed are for laboratory research use only and are not for human or veterinary consumption.