Home / Trust & Sourcing / How to Read a COA
The one skill that separates a legit vendor from a scam.
A certificate of analysis (COA) is a lab report that documents what's actually in a vial. It is the single most important document in this entire space — and the fastest way to tell a real vendor from a repackager.
Look for a third-party lab, not the vendor's own claim. A COA from an independent lab (named, with contact info) is worth far more than a number printed on a label.
A real COA is batch-specific — it references the exact lot number on the vial you're getting. A generic COA that could apply to anything is a red flag.
High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) measures purity as a percentage. The research-grade benchmark most serious vendors hit is 98–99%+. Anything materially lower, or missing, should give you pause.
Mass spec confirms the compound is actually what it claims to be, by molecular weight. Purity without identity is meaningless — you want both.
For many research applications, an endotoxin test matters. Top vendors publish it. Its presence signals a vendor that takes documentation seriously.
Every compound below is stocked locally and lab-tested, with a COA on every batch. Walk in, call, text, or fill out the form. Fresno's premium-grade research peptides, stocked locally. Research use only.
Local pickup at Express Peptides · 6592 N. First Street, Fresno, CA 93710
Products are sold strictly for laboratory and research purposes — not for human consumption.
Lab-tested peptides you can pick up locally, plus honest answers from a real person. Mention code EXPRESS559.