How to Verify Peptide Purity UK: 5 Essential CoA Checks Researchers Must Make
Updated May 2026 · 9 min read · For research use only

- Quick Takeaways
- Why Peptide Purity Verification Matters
- 5 Essential CoA Checks Before You Order
- HPLC Explained: What the Chromatogram Tells You
- Mass Spectrometry: Confirming Sequence Identity
- Red Flags: What Bad CoA Documentation Looks Like
- UK Supplier Testing Standards Comparison
- How Arma Peptides Verifies Every Batch
- Researcher’s Pre-Order Verification Checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Self-certified purity data from peptide suppliers is not independently verifiable — it is meaningless for research reproducibility
- A valid CoA must reference the specific batch lot number of your order — generic CoAs are worthless
- HPLC purity ≥98% is the accepted research minimum — below this, impurities can confound experimental results
- Mass spectrometry (MS) is required to confirm correct peptide sequence — HPLC alone cannot confirm identity
- UK-Peptides acknowledged on their own blog that they do not conduct independent third-party testing — a significant research risk
- Arma Peptides is the only UK supplier to provide independent third-party CoA on every batch, covering HPLC, MS, and water content
Why Peptide Purity Verification Matters for UK Researchers
Research reproducibility depends on knowing exactly what is in your vial. A peptide labelled “98% pure” by an unverified supplier could contain structural analogues, truncated sequences, oxidised residues, or synthesis byproducts — none of which would be detected without independent analytical testing.
The consequences of unverified purity are significant. Impure material introduces uncontrolled variables. Results cannot be replicated. Mechanism studies become unreliable. And in any peer-review context, material provenance is a fundamental validity criterion.
The UK research peptide market has grown substantially since 2020. With that growth has come an increase in suppliers making purity claims they cannot independently support. Knowing how to verify peptide purity UK before purchasing is now a core research competency — not an optional extra.
5 Essential CoA Checks Before You Order Any Peptide UK
The CoA must reference the exact lot/batch number of the material being supplied. A generic CoA that applies to “all batches” or has no lot number is not batch-specific verification — it is marketing documentation. Ask the supplier to provide the CoA that matches your specific order’s lot number before payment.
The CoA must be issued by a laboratory that is independent of the supplier. In-house testing — where the supplier tests their own material — cannot be independently verified. Look for the testing laboratory’s name, accreditation number (e.g. ISO 17025), and contact details on the CoA document. If the issuing laboratory cannot be independently identified, the CoA is self-certified.
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) separates the peptide from impurities by retention time. The purity figure represents the percentage of the total UV-absorbance area accounted for by the target peptide peak. For research use, ≥98% HPLC purity is the accepted minimum. A supplier claiming “research grade” at 95% or below should be questioned.
HPLC confirms purity but NOT identity. A peptide can show high HPLC purity and still have the wrong sequence — for example, if a single amino acid was substituted during synthesis. Mass spectrometry confirms the molecular weight of the compound, allowing comparison against the theoretical MW of the target peptide. Both HPLC and MS are required for complete verification.
Lyophilised peptides contain residual moisture. Water content affects the true mass of active peptide per vial — a vial with 10% water content delivers 10% less active compound than labelled. A complete CoA includes Karl Fischer water content analysis so researchers can calculate accurate reconstitution volumes for their protocols.
HPLC Explained: How to Read a Peptide Chromatogram
HPLC (High-Performance Liquid Chromatography) is the primary analytical method for peptide purity assessment. Understanding what a valid chromatogram shows allows researchers to evaluate CoA quality independently.
What the Chromatogram Shows
An HPLC chromatogram plots UV absorbance (y-axis) against retention time in minutes (x-axis). Each peak represents a compound that absorbed UV light as it eluted from the column. The largest peak is the target peptide. Smaller peaks are impurities — truncated sequences, oxidised residues, synthesis byproducts, or solvent artefacts.
How Purity is Calculated
Purity is calculated as the area of the target peak divided by the total area of all peaks, expressed as a percentage. A 98% pure peptide shows one dominant peak accounting for 98% of total peak area, with minor peaks totalling 2%. This is the peak area percentage method — the standard for peptide CoA reporting.
What Makes a CoA HPLC Section Valid
- The actual chromatogram image must be present — not just a number
- Retention time of the target peak must be stated
- Integration table showing individual peak areas and percentages
- Column specification and mobile phase conditions
- Analyst name and date of analysis
A supplier that provides a purity figure without the accompanying chromatogram is not providing verifiable CoA data. For an authoritative reference on HPLC peptide analysis standards, see USP Peptide Analysis Guidelines.
Mass Spectrometry: Confirming Peptide Identity
Mass spectrometry (MS) measures the mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) of ionised molecules. For peptides, electrospray ionisation (ESI-MS) or MALDI-TOF are the standard methods.
The observed molecular weight from MS is compared against the theoretical MW calculated from the peptide’s amino acid sequence. A match within ±1 Da confirms the correct compound is present. A mismatch indicates either wrong sequence, missing/extra residues, or unexpected modifications.
For a valid MS confirmation on a CoA, researchers should expect to see: the observed [M+H]⁺ ion, the theoretical MW, and the delta (difference). A delta of 0.0–0.5 Da is standard for high-quality synthesis.
Red Flags: What Poor CoA Documentation Looks Like
- No lot/batch number on the CoA
- CoA issued by the supplier themselves (not an independent lab)
- Purity figure stated without a chromatogram image
- No mass spectrometry data
- Generic CoA applicable to “all batches” of a product
- CoA with no analyst name, date, or issuing lab contact details
- Supplier refuses to provide CoA before purchase
- Purity stated as “>95%” without an exact figure
- Specific lot number matching your order
- Third-party laboratory name, address, and ISO accreditation number
- HPLC chromatogram image with integration table
- MS data with observed vs theoretical MW comparison
- Karl Fischer water content result
- Analyst signature and analysis date
- Available for download on product page before purchase
UK Peptide Supplier Testing Standards: Who Provides What
| Supplier | Independent Lab | Batch-Specific CoA | HPLC Chromatogram | MS Confirmation | Water Content |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arma Peptides | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| UK-Peptides | ✗ No* | ✗ | ✗ | Partial | ✗ |
| PeptidesLabUK | Partial | Some | Some | Some | ✗ |
| TideLabs | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | Partial |
*UK-Peptides acknowledged on their own blog that they do not conduct independent third-party testing. All other data based on publicly available supplier information as of May 2026.
How Arma Peptides Verifies Every Batch
Arma Peptides is the only UK research peptide supplier to provide fully independent third-party CoA documentation on every single batch. Every vial dispatched is backed by:
- Independent HPLC analysis — minimum ≥98% purity, chromatogram included
- ESI-MS confirmation — observed vs theoretical MW comparison for every compound
- Karl Fischer water content — accurate mass-per-vial calculation
- Batch-specific lot number — traceable from your order to the specific analytical run
- CoA available pre-purchase — accessible from every product page before you commit
Our CoAs are issued by accredited independent laboratories — not our own team. If you receive a batch without a matching independent CoA, contact us and we will resolve it before dispatch.
View CoA Documentation for Any Product
Every Arma Peptides product ships with independent third-party batch verification.
View CoA Page →Researcher’s Pre-Order Peptide Verification Checklist
- Request batch-specific CoA with lot number before paying
- Confirm CoA is issued by an independent third-party laboratory (not the supplier)
- Check HPLC purity ≥98% with actual chromatogram image included
- Verify MS data shows observed MW within 1 Da of theoretical
- Check Karl Fischer water content is documented
- Confirm analyst name, analysis date, and lab contact details are present
- Cross-reference the lot number on CoA against the lot number on your vial label
- If supplier cannot provide CoA before purchase — do not order
Frequently Asked Questions — Peptide Purity Verification UK
What is a Certificate of Analysis (CoA) for peptides?
A Certificate of Analysis (CoA) is a document from a testing laboratory that records the analytical results for a specific batch of peptide material. It typically includes HPLC purity data, mass spectrometry identity confirmation, water content, and physical appearance. A valid research CoA must be batch-specific and issued by an independent third-party laboratory.
Why does independent third-party testing matter?
Self-certified testing — where a supplier tests their own material — cannot be independently verified. The testing laboratory has no financial incentive to report accurate results. Independent third-party testing means a separate accredited laboratory, with no commercial relationship with the supplier, analyses the material and issues the CoA. This is the only form of purity verification that is scientifically defensible.
Which UK peptide suppliers provide independent third-party CoA?
As of May 2026, Arma Peptides provides independent third-party CoA on every batch. UK-Peptides acknowledged on their own blog that they do not conduct independent third-party testing. TideLabs provides third-party CoA but is EU-based, raising cold-chain and customs concerns. Always verify current supplier practices before ordering.
What HPLC purity should research peptides have?
For reproducible preclinical research, ≥98% HPLC purity is the accepted minimum standard. Some specialist applications (e.g. structural biology, crystallography) require ≥99%. “Research grade” claims at 95% or below introduce sufficient impurity levels to confound mechanism studies and should be avoided.
Can HPLC alone confirm a peptide is what the supplier claims?
No. HPLC confirms purity (proportion of target compound) but not identity (which compound it is). A highly pure sample of the wrong peptide would show high HPLC purity. Mass spectrometry is required to confirm molecular weight and therefore sequence identity. Both HPLC and MS are required for complete analytical verification.
Where can I find peptide CoA documentation for Arma Peptides products?
CoA documentation for all Arma Peptides products is available directly on each product page and via the Certificate of Analysis page. Every CoA is batch-specific, issued by an independent third-party laboratory, and includes HPLC chromatogram, MS data, and water content analysis.
All products supplied by Arma Peptides are for laboratory research purposes only. Not for human or veterinary use. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. For use by qualified researchers only.


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