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ForumsBuyer Beware⚠ Instagram peptide sellers — zero COAs, zero testing, 100% risk

⚠ Instagram peptide sellers — zero COAs, zero testing, 100% risk

PurityPaulOR Tue, Mar 10, 2026 at 11:26 AM 9 replies 260 viewsPage 1 of 2
PurityPaulOR
Senior Member
1,890
7,890
Mar 2024
Oregon
Mar 10, 2026 at 12:51 PM#1
I'm an analytical chemist with 8 years of experience in pharmaceutical QC. I've been reviewing vendor COAs (Certificates of Analysis) posted on this forum for the past year, and I need to show you all how easy it is to fake these documents and how to spot the fakes. I've identified at least 7 vendors currently using fabricated COAs. Here's how they do it and how to catch them. METHOD 1: The Photoshop Template The most common method. They take a real COA from a legitimate lab, photoshop the vendor name, batch number, and results. Telltale signs: - Font inconsistencies (different fonts in header vs. results) - Resolution differences between the template and added text - Lab logo is blurry or pixelated (screenshot of a screenshot) - Metadata on the PDF shows it was created in Photoshop or Canva, not analytical software METHOD 2: The Fake Lab Vendor creates a completely fictional laboratory. They make up a lab name, create a professional-looking template, and generate whatever numbers they want. Signs: - Lab name doesn't appear in any accreditation databases - Lab address doesn't exist or is a residential address - Lab phone number is disconnected or goes to a generic voicemail - No presence on Google Scholar or in any published literature METHOD 3: The Selective Report Vendor actually sends product to a real lab, but only publishes the ONE good result and hides the failures. This is technically real data but deeply misleading. Signs: - Only one COA for dozens of batches - COA is months old but being used for recent batches - Batch number on COA doesn't match your vial METHOD 4: The Altered Real Report Vendor gets a real test done, results come back bad, so they alter the numbers. Signs: - Contact the lab directly with the report number — they can verify - Numbers seem "too perfect" (exactly 99.5% purity, exactly 10.00mg content) - HPLC chromatogram doesn't match the stated purity (if chromatogram is included) I'll go into detail on each in the replies with specific examples I've found.
5 16Dr.LeslieOBGYN, MikeNYC_runner and 2 others
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COA_Karl
Senior Member
2,123
8,901
Jan 2024
Pennsylvania
Mar 10, 2026 at 1:08 PM#2
EXAMPLE 1 — PurityFirst Peptides (Blacklisted) Their COA claimed to be from "Advanced Analytical Laboratories" in San Diego. I investigated: - No such lab exists in San Diego - The address on the COA is a UPS Store - The "lab director" name doesn't appear in any LinkedIn, publication, or professional database - The HPLC chromatogram on the COA was literally copied from a textbook (I found the original image) The COA claimed: - Semaglutide purity: 99.2% - Content: 10.04mg per vial - Endotoxin: <0.1 EU/mg - Sterility: Pass When the product was actually tested by Janoshik: - Purity: 86.3% - Content: 6.1mg (61% of label) - The peptide showed significant degradation peaks Everything on their COA was fabricated. The lab, the director, the results — all of it.
6 19jim_asheville, matt_MKE, Dr.ReproEndo and 3 others
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jim_asheville
Member
289
1,234
Aug 2024
Asheville, NC
Mar 10, 2026 at 1:25 PM#3
EXAMPLE 2 — How to Verify a Janoshik Report Since Janoshik is the most commonly cited lab, vendors sometimes fake Janoshik reports too. Here's how to verify: 1. Every Janoshik report has a unique report number (format: JAN-YYYY-XXXXX) 2. You can email Janoshik directly at their published email and ask them to confirm a report number 3. Real Janoshik reports have consistent formatting, fonts, and layout 4. The HPLC chromatogram on a real report will show specific peaks with retention times — these are difficult to convincingly fake I found one vendor ("ResearchGradePeptides") posting a Janoshik report that had been altered. The report number was real, but the purity had been changed from 91.2% to 98.7%. I confirmed this by contacting Janoshik directly. ALWAYS verify COAs directly with the lab. A 30-second email can save you from buying garbage.
34 3NurseAsh_DET, BenResearch_OR, MikeKY_noInsulin and 31 others
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sean_dublin
Member
212
890
Nov 2024
Dublin, IE
Mar 10, 2026 at 1:42 PM#4
this is incredible work. Question: what percentage of vendor COAs that you've reviewed do you estimate are fraudulent or misleading? Also — if a vendor provides a Janoshik report and I verify it's real, does that guarantee my specific vial is good? Or could they have tested one batch and be selling different (worse) batches under the same COA?
34 21NurseLeah_Nash, gary_naperville, sean_dublin and 31 others
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DeniseRN_TPA
Member
345
1,567
Aug 2024
Tampa, FL
Mar 10, 2026 at 1:59 PM#5
Great questions. Estimate of fraudulent/misleading COAs: Out of about 40 vendor COAs I've reviewed in the past year, I'd say: - ~30% were clearly fabricated (fake lab or photoshopped) - ~25% were "selective" (real but cherry-picked, old, or mismatched batch) - ~20% were real and matched the product (verified with lab) - ~25% I couldn't conclusively determine And yes, your second concern is valid. A real COA for Batch A doesn't guarantee Batch B is the same quality. This is the "selective reporting" problem. Ideally, every batch would be tested, but most vendors don't do that. The gold standard is: the BUYER sends their specific vial to a lab. That's the only way to know for sure what YOU received is what it should be.
35 6Dr.BariatricHTX, LindaRN_retired, tommy_boulder and 32 others
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