The Only Peptide Community on Skool Run by the Vendor
Five peptide education communities compete for attention on Skool right now. Four of them are run by independent educators or enthusiasts. One is run by the company that actually sells the peptides.
That one is Mile High Compounds.
For $10 a month, Max Radovanic’s community promises exclusive cheat sheets, infographics, deep dives, and tutorials on research compounds. The 339-member community sits in a competitive set where Peptide Researchers offers free access to 6,600 members and The Peptide Community delivers 356 modules for $5. The question behind every Mile High Compounds review isn’t whether the content is good. It’s whether direct access to the vendor’s CEO justifies paying more for less content than you’d get elsewhere.
The answer depends on what you’re actually buying.
A 22-Year-Old Entrepreneur With a 200-Pound Story
Max Radovanic’s path to running a peptide company started with a scale reading 430 pounds. At 18, he was consuming roughly 15,000 calories daily: two breakfast burritos with ham, sausage, bacon, potatoes, eggs, and cheese; eight McDonald’s burgers for lunch; double takeaway dinners with milkshakes. The transformation that followed, covered by Surrey Live as a human interest piece, took roughly four years and centered entirely on behavioral changes. Walking a mile near his home. Then longer distances. Then whole foods, after calorie tracking triggered anxiety and binging cycles.
That 200-plus-pound loss is the foundation of his personal brand. His Instagram (@maxrfat2fit, 21,000 followers) positions him as a “Men’s Transformation Coach” and CEO of Mile High Compounds. He references being 3 to 4 years sober across multiple social media platforms, a consistent thread in his public narrative.
The detail that matters most for this Mile High Compounds review: the Surrey Live coverage attributes his transformation entirely to behavioral changes. No mention of peptides. His later social media references being “on my peptide journey.” The press account tells a simpler story: walking and eating differently. Both timelines can coexist. But when someone sells peptides and educates people about them, the framing distinction carries weight.
Radovanic studied Business Administration and Marketing at Colorado Mesa University, graduating with a 4.0 GPA, earning President’s List recognition, and serving as president of the Alpha Chi Honor Society. He received a 2022 scholarship from the Honor Society Foundation. A leadership presentation (MANG 370) is hosted on the university’s platform. His academic record is strong.
His pharmaceutical credentials are nonexistent.
He’s a business graduate running a peptide company, not a pharmacologist who started a business. That distinction matters less than you might think for a vendor community, and more than you might think for the education inside it. The company itself, Mile High Compounds LLC, was registered in Colorado on May 16, 2025. Less than one year old. Yet the Trustpilot review count (324, with 97% five-star ratings) and two active USPTO trademark applications suggest operations that predate the formal LLC. That gap remains unexplained.
The founder’s weight loss transformation was covered by UK regional press and attributed entirely to behavioral changes, not peptides. His personal brand later links sobriety and weight loss to a “peptide journey,” but the independent press account makes no mention of compounds.
90 Modules, 2 Courses, and a Content Gap Worth Measuring
From the outside, the community’s educational library looks structured: 2 courses containing 90 total modules, promising cheat sheets, infographics, deep dives, and tutorials. The format variety is a positive signal. Infographics and cheat sheets suggest practical reference material rather than walls of text you’ll never revisit.
The problem is context.
The Peptide Community on Skool charges $5 a month and delivers 56 courses with 356 modules. That is roughly four times the structured content at half the price. It also offers weekly live Q&A sessions and a 7-day free trial. Mile High Compounds offers neither a trial nor visible course titles. Without membership, you can count the modules but learn nothing about what they teach, how recently they were updated, or whether the “deep dives” go deeper than the free content available on Peptide Researchers. Module count is measurable from the outside. Whether those modules constitute genuine education or extended product documentation is not. In a vendor-operated community, that’s the question that matters most.
The company’s main website references “daily Mile High Compounds LIVE sessions,” though whether these happen inside the Skool community, on TikTok, or both isn’t clear without membership. If the live sessions occur within Skool, that meaningfully changes the value equation. If they happen on TikTok, freely accessible to anyone, the $10 membership buys you pre-recorded content and a discussion feed.
Ninety modules beats The Peptide Collective’s four modules at $75 a month. It loses badly to the $5 competitor offering four times the library. What no independent community can offer is the perspective of the company that tested, sourced, and shipped the compounds you’re researching. Whether that counts as an advantage or a bias depends entirely on which side of the transaction you’re standing on. For a buyer researching BPC-157 dosing, the vendor’s perspective is the one that matters. For a buyer comparing vendors, it’s the one perspective you should never rely on alone.
544 Posts, 339 Members, and a Quiet Room
Pull up the Skool community page and you’ll find 339 members, 544 total posts, and at the time of this review, 2 people online.
Two out of 339.
That is a 0.6% concurrent user rate. Active Skool communities typically show 2 to 5% of members online during peak hours. This isn’t a bustling discussion forum where peptide researchers swap protocols late into the evening. It’s a reference library with a chat room attached: quiet, functional, and occasionally lonely.
The lifetime post math tells the same story. 544 posts across 339 members works out to roughly 1.6 posts per member. Some of that activity concentrates among the 4 admins (including Radovanic) and a handful of regulars. Calendar functionality is enabled, indicating scheduled events of some kind. The specifics aren’t visible without joining.
They didn’t just offer compounds but had a whole education community on SKOOL.
Trustpilot mentions of the Skool community paint a warmer picture than the activity data. One reviewer praised the “excellent Skool support community.” A third joined because a friend recommended the education alongside the products.
Another described the community as “pretty good.” That’s the warmest independent endorsement on record.
These are e-commerce customers who discovered the community as a bonus. Nobody searched Skool looking for peptide education and landed here. Existing customers first, education-seekers second.
None of this means the community fails. Some members prefer quiet spaces where a specific question gets a direct answer from someone who knows the products. But if you’re picturing a vibrant forum with daily protocol debates, recalibrate. This is a reference desk, not a trading floor.
One operational detail: the Mile High Compounds TikTok account was banned at some point, prompting the company to create backup accounts and launch a Discord community. Social media platforms flag peptide content routinely. The ban likely says more about TikTok’s content moderation than about the business itself. But for a company that built its brand through social video, losing that primary channel matters. The Skool community may be absorbing the audience that once engaged through TikTok.
Products ship from a temperature-controlled facility in Arizona, not Colorado. Mile High is a brand name, not a shipping address. Every order includes a Certificate of Analysis from a 7-point testing protocol covering purity, identity, net content, sterility, endotoxins, heavy metals, and variance. The company sources from cGMP-certified, FDA-audited manufacturers and explicitly states it is not a compounding pharmacy.
Is $10 Per Month the Right Price for Vendor Access?
Ten dollars a month. Most American cities charge more for a large coffee. The question isn’t whether $10 is affordable. It’s whether it’s the best $10 you can spend on peptide education.
The Peptide Community charges $5 per month (or $48 per year) and includes a 7-day free trial. For half the price, you get 56 courses, 356 modules, weekly live Q&A sessions, blood panel education, and affiliate discount partnerships with three different vendors: Limitless Life Nootropics (20% off), Bio Longevity Labs (15% off), and Peptira (10% off).
Peptide Researchers is free. 6,600 members. Vendor-agnostic education. No paywall.
On the premium end, The Peptide Collective charges $75 per month for group buy protocols and collaborative research. A fundamentally different product for a fundamentally different user.
Mile High Compounds’ pricing makes sense only if you value one specific thing above all others: direct, unmediated access to the vendor. No independent educator can answer “what’s the purity result on your latest batch?” because they don’t make the product. Mile High Compounds can. That is the product being sold here. Not a course library. Proximity.
Now do the math from the other side. 339 members at $10 each. $3,390 a month.
For a company with 324 Trustpilot reviews and two pending trademarks, that’s a rounding error. The Skool community isn’t the revenue source. It’s the retention tool. Nothing wrong with that. But it reframes what you’re paying for.
No free trial. No money-back guarantee documented on the Skool page. The Peptide Community lets you browse for a week before committing $5. Mile High Compounds asks for $10 before you can see a single module title. For a community that needs to prove its value against cheaper and free alternatives, that friction matters.
Who This Community Actually Serves
The ideal Mile High Compounds member isn’t browsing Skool searching for peptide education. They’re already buying peptides from Mile High Compounds and want product-specific context from the team that makes them.
If you’ve already committed to the vendor, the $10 community is an obvious add-on. Direct access to the CEO, product-specific Q&A from four admins, and educational material calibrated to the exact compounds you purchased. No independent community replicates that relationship.
If you’re still comparing vendors, still deciding whether peptide research is worth your money at all, the independent alternatives serve you better at lower cost. Peptide Researchers delivers vendor-agnostic perspectives for free. The Peptide Community delivers four times the structured content at half the price with a trial period that lets you evaluate before spending anything.
- You already buy from Mile High Compounds and want product-specific guidance from the vendor's CEO and admin team for $10 per month.
- You value direct vendor access over large content libraries, and you prefer asking the source rather than reading a third party's interpretation.
- You want a small, quiet community where your question gets personal attention from 4 admins rather than crowdsourced answers from 6,600 strangers.
- You want deep, structured peptide education with free trial access. The Peptide Community delivers 356 modules for $5 per month.
- You want vendor-agnostic discussion without commercial influence. Peptide Researchers has 6,600 members and is completely free.
- You expect an active daily forum. With 2 concurrent users out of 339 members at time of research, this community is a quiet reference space.
- You need credentialed scientific guidance. The founder's background is Business Administration, not pharmacology or medicine.
One more consideration. Mile High Compounds sells research compounds explicitly labeled “not for human consumption.” The company is not a compounding pharmacy, and it says so directly on its website. The FDA restricted 19 peptides to Category 2 in late 2023 before restoring approximately 14 to Category 1 in February 2026. The Skool community teaches you about the compounds the company sells for “research purposes only.” Draw your own line between education and implied guidance.
The Bottom Line
Mile High Compounds earns a 3.3 out of 5, a Mixed verdict.
The strengths are concrete. An affordable price point. Genuine vendor access that no independent community can replicate. A parent company with a 4.9 Trustpilot rating across 324 reviews and a documented 7-point testing protocol with published Certificates of Analysis. Max Radovanic’s personal responsiveness shows up repeatedly in customer reviews. The trust signals are real.
The gaps are equally concrete. Ninety modules for $10 when a competitor offers 356 for $5. A concurrent user rate below 1%. A founder who brings strong business instincts and zero scientific credentials to a science-adjacent product. And a structural question that doesn’t go away with more modules: when the teacher sells the product, the curriculum is never fully separable from the catalog. Mile High Compounds LLC is less than a year old, though the review volume suggests the business predates the incorporation by some margin.
Remember those five peptide communities on Skool? Four separate the educator from the vendor. Mile High Compounds bets that combining them is a feature, not a conflict.
For existing customers who trust the brand, that bet works. The $10 is barely noticeable alongside a product order, and the vendor access has genuine value. For everyone else weighing peptide education options, the independent alternatives offer more content, more perspectives, and lower prices. Every peptide community on Skool is selling something. Mile High Compounds is the only one that also ships it to your door. Whether that makes them the most transparent voice in the room or the least objective is the $10 question only your first order can answer.
Pros & Cons
What We Like
- At $10/month, the community is among the most affordable paid peptide education options on Skool — only The Peptide Community ($5/month) charges less.
- Direct access to the vendor's CEO and team is a genuine differentiator that independent education communities cannot replicate.
- The parent company's 4.9/5 Trustpilot rating across 324 reviews and 7-point testing protocol provide a documented trust foundation.
- 90 modules of structured educational content including cheat sheets, infographics, and tutorials offer practical reference material for research.
What Could Improve
- The community is operated by the peptide vendor, creating a single-vendor education model where product recommendations may reflect commercial interests.
- The Peptide Community offers 56 courses and 356 modules for $5/month — significantly more structured content at half the price.
- No free trial or money-back guarantee is visible on the Skool page, unlike The Peptide Community which offers a 7-day trial.
- Community engagement metrics show 544 total posts across 339 members with 2 concurrent users at time of research.
- The founder holds business administration credentials rather than pharmaceutical or scientific qualifications.
Pricing
Monthly Membership
$10/mo
- 2 courses with 90 modules
- Cheat sheets, infographics, and deep dives
- Community discussion feed
- Direct access to CEO and 3 admins
- Scheduled events and live sessions
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Mile High Compounds Skool community worth $10 a month?
Is Mile High Compounds a legitimate company?
Who is Max Radovanic, the founder of Mile High Compounds?
What do you actually get inside the Mile High Compounds Skool community?
How does Mile High Compounds compare to other peptide communities on Skool?
Are Mile High Compounds' peptides tested for safety?
Why was the Mile High Compounds TikTok account banned?
Affiliate Disclosure: CommunityHunter may earn a commission if you join through our links. This does not affect our ratings or editorial independence. Read our methodology.
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