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Research Compounds · Quality Control · Supplier Vetting
Peptide Sourcing & Verification Guide: How to Spot Counterfeit Peptides
Published Jun 4, 2026 · New-U Team · 7 min read
Quick answer: Verify peptide authenticity by: (1) reviewing the Certificate of Analysis (COA)—check HPLC purity >98%, batch number matching, third-party lab accreditation (ISO 17025); (2) inspecting the vial—sealed cap, clear label, matching lot number; (3) confirming supplier credentials—company registration, transparent ordering, customer references; (4) testing if needed—HPLC, LCMS, or mass spectrometry. Counterfeit peptides are common; reputable suppliers provide full documentation and are transparent about manufacturing and testing.
The Certificate of Analysis: Your Primary Verification Tool
The COA is a third-party lab document certifying peptide identity and purity. Every legitimate supplier includes a COA with each batch. Here's what to verify:
- HPLC purity: Should be >95%, ideally >98%. Lower purity indicates impurities or degradation.
- Batch number match: The COA batch number must match the label on your vial. Mismatches indicate substitution or fraud.
- Lab accreditation: Look for ISO 17025 (international lab accreditation) or equivalent. Unknown labs lack credibility.
- Molecular weight confirmation: The COA should confirm peptide identity via mass spectrometry (MS) or LCMS.
- Date issued: Recent COAs (within the past year) suggest fresh material. Very old COAs may indicate warehouse age or degradation.
- Lab contact details: Legitimate labs list contact info. Cross-verify with the supplier if uncertain.
Vial Inspection Checklist
Physical inspection catches obvious counterfeits and damaged goods:
- Seal integrity: Cap should be tamper-evident and sealed. Any loose or broken seal is a red flag.
- Label clarity: Labels should be legible, aligned, not blurry or hand-written.
- Lot number: Vial must have a printed lot/batch number. No lot number = high risk.
- Peptide appearance: Lyophilised powder should be white to off-white. Yellowing, discoloration, or liquid leakage indicates degradation or contamination.
- Label-COA match: Cross-reference peptide name, concentration, mass, and lot number between vial label and COA.
- No off-odours: When vial is opened, peptide should have minimal odour. Strong ammonia or decay odours suggest contamination.
Supplier Vetting: Five Key Questions
- Is the supplier registered and legitimate? Check business registration, website SSL certificate, address verification, and years in operation.
- Are they transparent about sourcing and testing? Reputable suppliers explain manufacturing origin, quality control processes, and testing methods.
- Do they provide detailed COAs? Each batch should include a COA with full documentation. Suppliers without documentation are unreliable.
- Do they offer customer references or independent reviews? Ask for research institutions or known customers that vouch for product quality.
- Is there a clear customer support and return policy? Legitimate suppliers stand behind their product and address quality issues promptly.
Common Red Flags: Counterfeit Peptides
- Vials with no batch numbers or mismatched batch numbers between label and COA.
- Illegible or hand-written labels.
- Prices significantly lower than market—often indicates low purity, contamination, or fake product.
- Suppliers with no verifiable business address, phone number, or customer support.
- Vague or missing COAs; COAs with incomplete information (no HPLC % purity, no lab name).
- Lab names on COAs that cannot be verified independently.
- Delivery in plain packaging with no indication of contents.
- Suppliers who refuse to provide detailed COAs or batch information.
- Lyophilised peptides with visible discoloration, liquid, or crystallisation.
If You Suspect Counterfeit Peptides
- Contact the supplier immediately with documentation (photos, batch number, COA). Request investigation or replacement.
- Verify the COA independently: Call the lab listed on the COA and confirm the batch details match the lab's records.
- Request re-analysis: Ask the supplier to re-test the peptide with an independent lab. Legitimate suppliers accommodate this request.
- Consider testing yourself: If the research is critical, send a sample to an independent HPLC or LCMS lab for purity verification (~$200–500).
- Report to regulatory bodies (FDA, state pharmaceutical boards) if you believe fraud is occurring.