About STACK Tracker

An indie tool, built for people who take their health protocols seriously.

STACK Tracker started as a personal problem.

I was managing my own protocols — TRT, peptides, GLP-1 medications, foundational supplements — and couldn’t find a single tool that handled the reality of what serious protocol users actually deal with. Nothing tracked injectable cycles properly. Nothing did reconstitution math. Nothing knew the difference between a research peptide and a prescription medication, or why that distinction matters.

So I built it.

What this is

STACK Tracker is a compound tracking and reference tool built for people who take their health protocols seriously. It combines a sourced, citation-backed compound library with dose tracking, reconstitution calculators, protocol templates, and an AI assistant that understands your stack — all in one place.

It is not a medical advice platform. Every compound entry links to its primary source — FDA labels, NIH fact sheets, peer-reviewed research. The information is here to inform, not to prescribe.

What this isn’t

STACK Tracker is not venture-funded. There are no investors to answer to, no growth targets to hit, and no advertising revenue to chase. Your health data is not the product.

It is an indie tool built by one person, maintained because it’s useful — to me first, and hopefully to you.

Your data

Your tracked compounds, dose history, protocols, and health information are yours. We never sell it, share it, or use it for advertising. You can export everything or delete your account at any time — no questions asked.

The business model

STACK Tracker is free to use. If a paid tier comes later — for advanced features or the native app — it will be opt-in, transparent, and fairly priced. The free tier will always exist.

The library

The compound library currently covers 55 entries spanning vitamins, minerals, supplements, GLP-1 medications, hormone therapy, thyroid medications, research peptides, and common prescription medications. Every entry is sourced. Every claim links to its reference. The library grows based on what users are actually tracking — if something is missing, let us know via the contact page.

Curious how the compound data is sourced? Read the methodology, or review the full disclaimer.