COA guidance

A cleaner way to understand lot records before you buy.

The COA page should help researchers confirm the essentials quickly: what lot was tested, what methods were used, what values were reported, and how those results line up with the product label and format in the storefront.

Identity

Check that the reported compound matches the listing.

Product name, lot code, and format should align cleanly between the product page, label, and report.

Purity

Review the chromatographic release result.

Purity is often the first value buyers look for, so it should be visible, legible, and easy to compare.

Method

Understand which analytical tools support the lot.

Surface the methods used so researchers can interpret the result in context rather than reading isolated numbers.

Traceability

Make the lot relationship obvious.

Lot-linked documentation is strongest when the site, packaging, and report all point back to the same identifier.

What to compare

Before using a report, make sure the record lines up with the product in hand.

A strong COA flow should feel simple: confirm the lot, review the method, check the release values, and note the storage or handling guidance tied to that material.

  • Lot code on the label matches the lot code on the report
  • Product name and format align with the storefront listing
  • Analytical methods are shown clearly and dated
  • Purity or potency values are readable and easy to compare
  • Handling and storage notes are visible when relevant
  • Support contact path is obvious if anything does not line up

COA position

Documentation should feel like part of the brand, not an appendix.

Aminogenix should treat its COA experience as a core trust surface. The cleaner this page is, the stronger the entire storefront feels.