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How to Read a Certificate of Analysis (COA)

4 min read

A COA is your proof of identity and purity. Here's what each part means and what to look for.

What a COA proves

A Certificate of Analysis is a third-party lab report verifying two things: identity (the vial contains the compound on the label) and purity (how much of the sample is that compound vs. byproducts).

Reputable research suppliers make a batch-specific COA available. A generic or missing COA is a red flag.

The two tests that matter

HPLC (High-Performance Liquid Chromatography) separates the sample into its components and reports purity as a percentage — look for 98–99%+.

Mass Spectrometry (MS) confirms the molecular weight matches the expected peptide, proving identity. The best COAs include both.

What to check

Batch/lot number that matches your vial, a recent test date, the testing lab's name, and a purity figure. We make ours available on request via the Lab Tests page.

For laboratory research use only. Not medical advice. Not for human or veterinary consumption.

Research Use Only. Not for human or veterinary consumption.