Home Compounds SARMs and receptor modulators
Category guide

SARMs & receptor mods.

Selective androgen receptor modulators — ostarine to RAD-140 — plus cardarine and adjacent.

7Compounds
in category
328,000Total monthly
searches
QuarterlyReview
cadence

SARMs (selective androgen receptor modulators) are non-steroidal compounds that bind the androgen receptor with tissue selectivity — anabolic effect in muscle and bone, minimal effect on prostate and skin. They were developed as testosterone replacements for sarcopenia and cancer cachexia; none have been approved.

In practice, SARMs are sold as research chemicals with highly variable quality. They produce ~half to two-thirds of testosterone's anabolic effect with proportionally less androgenic side effect, but they still suppress the HPG axis and require PCT. Cardarine (GW-501516), often included with SARMs, is technically a PPAR-δ agonist — included here because of category overlap.

All compounds

Every compound in this category.

Side by side

Compare the major options.

OstarineRAD-140LGD-4033Cardarine
Anabolic effectMildStrongStrongEndurance only
SuppressionMildHeavyHeavyNone
Use caseRecomp, bridgeMass / strengthLean strengthCardio / fat-loss
Toxicity flagLowestHepatotoxic reportsHPG-heavyRodent tumors
Frequently asked

Common questions.

Are SARMs legal?

SARMs are not controlled substances in the US but cannot legally be sold for human consumption. They are sold as "research chemicals," and possession-for-personal-use is in a gray zone. All SARMs are banned by WADA.

Do SARMs need PCT?

Yes. SARMs suppress LH/FSH and endogenous testosterone, especially LGD-4033, RAD-140, and S-23. A 4-week Nolvadex or Enclomiphene PCT is standard practice after most SARM cycles.

Which SARM is the safest?

Ostarine (MK-2866) has the most human-trial data and the mildest suppression and side-effect profile. RAD-140 and S-23 are the most potent and most suppressive.

Track your protocol.

Epti is the first training app built around your peptide protocol — workouts, dosing, side-effects, and bloodwork on one timeline.