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ForumsVendor ReviewsHow do you vet a new vendor? My quality checklist Page 2

How do you vet a new vendor? My quality checklist

SarahChen_PharmD Thu, Mar 12, 2026 at 2:11 PM 9 replies 201 viewsPage 2 of 2
dave_SLC
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Aug 2024
Salt Lake City, UT
Mar 12, 2026 at 5:01 PM#6

— totally understand. Here's the budget-friendly minimum approach:

  1. First order ever: Test it. Period. Spend the $80. Consider it the cost of knowing what you're putting in your body. Use Janoshik or Finnrick — both are legitimate.
  2. Second order (same vendor, same product): Skip the test IF your first order tested well (97%+). Monitor subjectively — are you getting the same appetite suppression and side effects?
  3. Every 3rd-4th order: Test again to catch batch variation or quality decline.
  4. If you switch vendors: Test the first order from the new vendor. Always.
  5. If a vendor changes their packaging, labeling, or price significantly: Test. They may have changed suppliers.

At this cadence, you're testing maybe 3-4 times a year. That's $240-400 in testing for a product that costs you $2,500-3,000/year. Think of it as a 10-15% quality assurance surcharge. Worth it.

Last edited: Mar 12, 2026 at 9:01 PM
32 24mike_mealprep, NicoleRaleigh, james_edin and 29 others
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fiona_glasgow
Member
312
1,345
Aug 2024
Glasgow, UK
Mar 12, 2026 at 5:18 PM#7

One more thing I want to emphasize: community verification matters. This forum, the peptide subreddits, and a couple of Discord servers maintain informal databases of test results.

Before ordering from any vendor, search for their name in:

  • This forum's vendor review section
  • r/Peptides vendor threads
  • The CompoundTalk Discord #vendor-reviews channel

If a vendor has 10+ independent test results posted by different users, all showing 97%+ purity, that's a strong signal. It's not a guarantee — quality can change — but it's much better than going in blind.

Conversely, if you can't find ANY independent test results for a vendor, that's a red flag. Either they're too new or their customers aren't testing (which suggests a less quality-conscious customer base).

44 20TirzTom, TrialTracker_MD, JennaRN and 41 others
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BrianDallas92
Member
312
1,456
Oct 2024
Dallas, TX
Mar 12, 2026 at 5:35 PM#8

Perfect additions from everyone. Let me compile the final checklist v2.0 incorporating all feedback:

I'll format this as a downloadable PDF and pin it in the vendor reviews section (mods willing). The goal is to make vetting accessible — even for newcomers — while maintaining rigorous standards.

Remember: you are your own quality control department. No one else is checking what goes into these vials before they go into your body. Take that responsibility seriously.

Last edited: Mar 12, 2026 at 6:35 PM
46 18andrew_nyc, Dr.EndoEP, GraceAZ_72 and 43 others
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