COA Guide · Tesamorelin

Tesamorelin Certificate of Analysis (COA): How to Read It

A Certificate of Analysis (COA) is the lab document that proves what is actually in a Tesamorelin vial. This guide shows what a real Tesamorelin COA must contain, the purity to expect, the labs worth trusting, and the red flags that make a COA worthless.

For laboratory research use only. Last reviewed May 29, 2026.

What a COA is — and why it matters for Tesamorelin

A Certificate of Analysis is a per-batch lab report a supplier (or an independent lab) issues for a specific lot of Tesamorelin. It documents identity and purity from instrumental testing — typically HPLC for purity and mass spectrometry for molecular identity. Without a batch-specific COA you are trusting a label, not data.

COA freshness matters more for Tesamorelin than for shelf-stable compounds. Refrigerate after reconstitution; used within 30 days in most research protocols. Because this compound is in the growth hormone category and degrades on the timeline above, a COA tells you about the batch on the day it was tested — not necessarily the vial in your hand months later. That makes a recent test date and proper cold-chain handling part of how you read the document, not an afterthought.

What purity to expect on a Tesamorelin COA

A legitimate Tesamorelin COA should show at least 98% HPLC purity — the benchmark the research community treats as the floor for research-grade material. Anything materially below 98% on Tesamorelin warrants a second batch or a different supplier.

Purity is read off the HPLC chromatogram as the Tesamorelin peak area relative to total peak area. A COA that states a percentage but does not attach the chromatogram is giving you a claim, not evidence — see the red flags below. For the underlying method, our explainer on HPLC and visual guide to reading a chromatogram walk through what a clean Tesamorelin peak should look like.

What a real Tesamorelin COA must show

Run any Tesamorelin COA against this six-point checklist. A document that misses any line is incomplete for verification purposes:

  • Compound identity — the document names Tesamorelin (GHRH analog; confirmed by mass spec, not just printed on the page).
  • Batch / lot number — a unique identifier tying the COA to the exact lot the vial came from.
  • Test date within 6 months — especially important for Tesamorelin, which is refrigerate after reconstitution; used within 30 days in most research protocols.
  • HPLC purity % — a number at or above the 98% benchmark, with the chromatogram attached.
  • Testing lab name — a named third-party lab (see the three labs below).
  • Mass spec confirmation — molecular-weight verification proving the vial holds Tesamorelin and not a cheaper or mislabeled substitute.

The 3 labs the community trusts

Not every “lab tested” claim carries the same weight. For research peptides, three independent labs have earned community trust for Tesamorelin and similar compounds:

  • Janoshik Analytical — the most widely cited third-party peptide lab.
  • MZ Biolabs — frequently used for independent HPLC and mass-spec work.
  • Colmaric Analyticals — a recognized name for batch verification.

A Tesamorelin COA from an unnamed or in-house lab is a red flag: there is no independent party to hold accountable, and the result cannot be cross-checked. A named third-party lab is the difference between a COA you can verify and a COA you can only hope is honest. Our deep dive on Janoshik vs MZ Biolabs compares two of them directly.

Red flags on a Tesamorelin COA

Reject — or at minimum re-verify — a Tesamorelin COA that shows any of these:

  • Generic, not batch-specific — one COA reused across every order, with no lot number tying it to your vial of Tesamorelin.
  • Missing test date — no date at all, so you cannot tell how old the result is.
  • Test date older than 6 months — stale data, which matters more for Tesamorelin given its storage profile above.
  • No lab name — “tested” with no named third-party lab behind the number.
  • Purity claimed, no chromatogram — a percentage with no HPLC trace attached to back it up.

This is reference guidance for evaluating laboratory documentation, not medical or dosing advice. Tesamorelin and all compounds referenced are for laboratory research use only — not for human consumption.

Keep reading

The canonical reference for this whole topic is our guide on how to read a peptide COA — it covers the eight required elements, the independent-verification steps, and which 2026 suppliers ship batch-specific COAs, then links out to the deeper chromatogram, HPLC, and red-flag explainers as you need them.

Working with a Tesamorelin vial directly? Use our Tesamorelin reconstitution calculator to compute concentration per insulin-syringe unit.

Other compound COA guides

CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin COA guide · Ipamorelin COA guide

2026 Evaluation
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ROEHN Research scored highest in our 2026 blinded HPLC evaluation — 9.6/10 — and publishes a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis with a full HPLC chromatogram for every Tesamorelin lot, run by a named third-party lab. Readers save 15% with code FREE15.

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