COA’s
Advanced Testing Protocol
Verified Testing Standards & Transparent Documentation
Quality testing only matters if it is independent, documented, and verifiable.
At Upgrade Bio Labs we utilize multiple independent third-party testing laboratories — all based in the United States — to confirm the accuracy and integrity of every peptide batch we distribute.
We intentionally use more than one laboratory to ensure consistency, accuracy, and unbiased verification of results.

What Our Certificates of Analysis Include
Every batch-specific Certificate of Analysis (COA) contains:
- Lot / Batch Number
- Expiration Date
- Testing analysis technique (HPLC/UPLC-Mass Spectrometry)
- Picture of peptide vial to affirm it’s the same batch as you receive
- Verified Purity (≥ 99%)
- Quantity Confirmation
- Peptide Identification
- Testing Methodology
Our COAs are not generic documents — they are batch-specific and traceable.
Fully Verifiable & Searchable
Transparency is critical.
All our COAs are:
- Directly verifiable through the testing laboratory
- Searchable on the lab’s website
- Issued by independent U.S.-based facilities
This means results cannot be altered, edited, or recreated internally. What you see is exactly what the laboratory issued.


Visual Batch Confirmation
In addition to laboratory data, our COAs include photographic documentation of the exact vial tested.
This ensures:
- The vial in your hand matches the batch that was tested
- Lot numbers correspond precisely
- There is zero ambiguity between documentation and product
This added layer of accountability, eliminates uncertainty, and reinforces traceability.
Testing Done Properly
Testing is not a checkbox — it is a responsibility.
When your research results are involved, documentation and independent verification are essential. Taking shortcuts is not an option.
Choose a supplier that provides:
- Multiple independent U.S. testing labs
- Searchable, verifiable COAs
- Batch-specific documentation
- Photographic confirmation
- Complete traceability

Do not take chances.
Go with the most documented, independently verified, and accountable testing standards — always.