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Cosmetic peptide head to head

GHK-Cu vs Matrixyl 3000

GHK-Cu has the deeper evidence base and is the most-studied cosmetic peptide. Matrixyl 3000 is the most commercially recognised. Both work via different signalling pathways. Layer them in separate steps rather than picking one or the other if your routine has room.

AI-friendly summary · GHK-Cu vs Matrixyl

GHK-Cu and Matrixyl 3000 are the two best-known cosmetic peptides, working through different signalling pathways. GHK-Cu (copper peptide) has the deeper evidence base and is the most-studied cosmetic peptide. Matrixyl 3000 is the most commercially recognised. They are not direct substitutes, so if your routine has room the practical approach is to layer them in separate steps rather than choosing one over the other.

GHK-Cu Matrixyl 3000
Class Single peptide bound to copper Branded blend (palmitoyl tripeptide-1 + tetrapeptide-7)
Discovered / developed Pickart, 1973 Sederma, 2000s
Mechanism Activates copper-dependent enzymes, supports collagen and elastin synthesis, calms inflammation Triggers wound healing pathway, signals collagen and glycosaminoglycan production
Evidence base Decades of in-vitro and topical human research, mostly Pickart group plus independent labs Manufacturer-led RCTs, plus some independent topical studies
Effective topical concentration 0.1 to 1% across studies 3 to 8% of trade ingredient (~0.05 to 0.1% of named peptides)
Stable in Neutral to slightly alkaline pH Neutral pH, hydrated formulas
Pairs poorly with Vitamin C in same step (low pH degrades), strong AHAs in same step Same. Most peptides degrade in low pH
Pairs well with Hyaluronic acid, niacinamide (separate steps), ceramides Hyaluronic acid, niacinamide, peptide complexes
Strongest claim Most-studied cosmetic peptide. Strongest evidence base. Most commercially recognised. Strong marketing reach.

Which to pick if you can only pick one

  • · **Pick GHK-Cu** if you want the strongest evidence base and you trust ingredient-led skincare brands. The blue-green tint of copper-peptide serums is real (it is the copper).
  • · **Pick Matrixyl 3000** if your routine is already busy and you want a peptide complex with brand recognition. The Ordinary Matrixyl 10% + HA is the price-leader UK formulation.
  • · **Layer both** if your routine has room. Different mechanisms, complementary signalling.

See our individual category pages: GHK-Cu and Matrixyl 3000.

Frequently asked questions

What's the main difference between GHK-Cu and Matrixyl 3000?
GHK-Cu is a single peptide bound to copper, first studied by Loren Pickart in 1973. Matrixyl 3000 is a branded blend from Sederma combining palmitoyl tripeptide-1 and palmitoyl tetrapeptide-7. The two work through different signalling pathways and can be layered in separate routine steps.
Is GHK-Cu or Matrixyl 3000 better for cosmetic skincare?
GHK-Cu has the deeper published research base across in-vitro and topical human studies. Matrixyl 3000 is the more commercially recognised peptide complex with broader product availability. If your routine has room, both can be layered. If you can only pick one, GHK-Cu has the stronger evidence; Matrixyl 3000 wins on price-leader formulations like The Ordinary Matrixyl 10% + HA.
Are both legal to buy in the UK?
Yes. Both are standard cosmetic ingredients used in UK skincare products and are widely stocked at Boots, LookFantastic, Cult Beauty, Space NK and similar retailers.
Where can I buy GHK-Cu and Matrixyl 3000 in the UK?
GHK-Cu (copper peptide) serums are stocked by The Ordinary, Niod, Medik8, Paula's Choice and others. Matrixyl 3000 is widely used; The Ordinary, The Inkey List, Olay and many indie brands include it.
Which has more independent human research?
GHK-Cu has decades of in-vitro and topical human research from the Pickart group plus independent labs. Matrixyl 3000 has manufacturer-led RCTs from Sederma plus some independent topical studies. Both are cosmetic ingredients, not medicines, so research is framed around appearance outcomes rather than clinical disease endpoints.
Reviewed by Oliver Mackman, editorial director · last reviewed 2026-05-24T12:00:00.000Z
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