Which peptide vendors do third-party testing?
By The Merit Research Team
Merit Verified has indexed independent COA records for 57 vendors — out of 106 tracked — across 22 independent testing laboratories. A vendor with a COA on file has had at least one lot independently tested; a vendor absent from this list has no verifiable independent test evidence on record.
- COAs indexed
- 5,617
- Vendors tested
- 57
- Independent labs
- 22
Vendors with independent COAs on file
Sorted by number of independent COA records. A COA count is evidence breadth, not an endorsement — Merit Verified does not rank, recommend, or certify any vendor.
57 vendors shown. 49 additional vendors tracked have no independent COAs on file yet. Data updates each build.
What "third-party tested" actually means
A COA from an independent lab is the strongest publicly available evidence that a peptide vendor's product matches their claims. "Third-party" means the testing laboratory is not owned or controlled by the vendor — the lab's results stand regardless of what the vendor wants them to say.
Not all COAs are equal. In-house tests, vendor-produced PDFs, and tests from labs that only appear in vendor marketing materials are not independent COAs. A genuine independent COA names a lab you can find separately — with its own website, physical address, and accreditation (ISO 17025 or CLIA).
A COA covers a tested lot, not every vial. When evaluating a vendor, look for a pattern of testing across multiple peptides, lots, and time periods — not a single certificate from years ago. Merit Verified tracks COA recency and breadth in the Merit Score on every vendor profile.
COA evidence is not an endorsement. Merit Verified surfaces observable verification data. A high COA count means a vendor has accumulated substantial independent test records — it is not a safety certification, a regulatory clearance, or a purchasing recommendation.
Frequently asked questions
Which peptide vendors do third-party testing?
Merit Verified has indexed independent certificate-of-analysis (COA) records for 57 peptide vendors as of the latest build. These vendors have at least one COA on file from an independent laboratory — meaning a lab that is not owned or controlled by the vendor. The number of COAs on file varies widely: some vendors have a single lot tested; others have accumulated hundreds of independent test records across multiple peptides, labs, and years. The full list is searchable at meritverified.org/vendors.
How do I know if a peptide vendor uses an independent lab?
An independent lab is one that the vendor does not own, fund, or control. Red flags for non-independent testing include: the lab name only appears on that vendor's site, no separate Google presence for the lab, no lab address or accreditation listed, or the COA header uses the vendor's own branding. Genuinely independent labs in the peptide space — Janoshik Analytical, Benchmark Analytical (now Analytical Resource Center), and Research Resource Center — have their own public websites, physical addresses, and ISO 17025 or CLIA accreditation.
What does "third-party tested" mean for peptides?
"Third-party tested" means the peptide lot was sent to a laboratory that is independent of the vendor for analysis. The lab issues a COA (Certificate of Analysis) confirming the compound identity, measured purity, lot number, test date, and method (typically HPLC or HPLC-MS). Because the vendor cannot control the lab's output, a COA from a genuinely independent lab is the strongest publicly available evidence of product quality. Not all vendors that claim to be third-party tested have verifiable independent COAs on file.
How many peptide vendors have COAs on file at Merit Verified?
Merit Verified has indexed 5,617 independent COA records from 57 vendors across 22 independent testing laboratories. These are third-party test results — not vendor-produced marketing documents. The count updates each time the catalog re-indexes. The full database is browsable at meritverified.org/coas.
What is a COA and why does it matter for peptide verification?
A COA (Certificate of Analysis) is a document issued by an independent laboratory that certifies the results of testing a specific product lot. For peptides, a COA typically reports: compound identity (confirmed by mass spectrometry), measured purity (by HPLC or HPLC-MS), lot number, test date, and issuing lab. A COA from a genuine independent lab is the primary tool for verifying that a peptide vendor's product is what they claim. Without a COA, a vendor's purity claims are unverifiable.