Omega-3 & Fish Oil Supplement Testing — EPA, DHA, TOTOX
Fish oil is the most popular dietary supplement in the United States, and also one of the most chemically complex to test. Your COA must verify EPA and DHA content, prove the oil is not rancid, and confirm the absence of environmental contaminants that concentrate in marine food chains. This guide covers the full testing panel for fish oil, krill oil, algal oil, and omega-3 softgels.
Quick answer
Omega-3 supplement testing requires three categories: potency (EPA and DHA content by GC-FID, $150-300), oxidation markers (peroxide value, anisidine value, TOTOX calculation, $100-200), and environmental contaminants (heavy metals by ICP-MS, PCBs and dioxins by GC-HRMS, $200-400). A full testing panel costs $300-700 per sample. Key standards include GOED Voluntary Monograph, USP monographs, and CRN Omega-3 Monograph. Turnaround is 7-14 business days for the full panel.
EPA and DHA content testing by GC-FID
The standard method for omega-3 fatty acid determination is gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (GC-FID), following AOCS Ce 1b-89 or GOED method. The oil is first derivatized to fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) using boron trifluoride-methanol or methanolic HCl, then injected onto a polar capillary GC column (e.g., SP-2560, 100 m x 0.25 mm). Fatty acid methyl esters separate by chain length, degree of unsaturation, and double bond geometry.
The GC-FID run produces a chromatogram with peaks for each fatty acid:
- EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid, C20:5 n-3)
- DHA (docosahexaenoic acid, C22:6 n-3)
- ALA (alpha-linolenic acid, C18:3 n-3)
- Other omega-3s: DPA (C22:5 n-3), ETA (C20:4 n-3), SDA (C18:4 n-3)
- The full fatty acid profile includes saturates, monounsaturates, omega-6, and omega-7
Results are reported as mg/g of oil (or mg per serving for finished product dosage forms) and as a percentage of total fatty acids. A typical 1,000 mg fish oil softgel labeled "300 mg EPA / 200 mg DHA" should contain roughly 300 mg/g EPA and 200 mg/g DHA in the oil, given a 1,000 mg fill weight.
Important: Not all GC-FID methods separate EPA and DHA from co-eluting fatty acids that share similar retention times. The GOED Voluntary Monograph requires use of a 100-meter SP-2560 column or equivalent with demonstrated resolution of key omega-3 peaks. A shorter column or a less polar stationary phase may produce inaccurate results. Ask your lab: "Do you use a 100-meter polar column with GOED-validated separation of EPA and DHA?"
TOTOX: measuring rancidity
TOTOX (Total Oxidation) is the industry-standard measure of fish oil freshness. It combines two measurements:
Peroxide Value (PV) measures primary oxidation products — hydroperoxides formed when unsaturated fatty acids react with oxygen. PV is measured by iodometric titration (AOCS Cd 8b-90). The oil is dissolved in acetic acid-chloroform, potassium iodide is added, and liberated iodine is titrated with sodium thiosulfate. Results are reported as meq O2/kg oil.
Anisidine Value (AnV) measures secondary oxidation products — aldehydes and ketones formed when hydroperoxides break down. AnV is measured spectrophotometrically (AOCS Cd 18-90). The oil is reacted with p-anisidine reagent in acetic acid, and absorbance is measured at 350 nm.
TOTOX = (2 x PV) + AnV
The TOTOX calculation weights primary oxidation (PV x 2) plus secondary oxidation (AnV) into a single freshness number.
| Parameter | GOED limit | CRN Monograph limit | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peroxide Value (PV) | 5 meq/kg max | 5 meq/kg max | Primary oxidation |
| Anisidine Value (AnV) | 20 max | 20 max | Secondary oxidation |
| TOTOX | 26 max | 26 max | Overall oxidation |
⚠️ Note
A fish oil with low PV (e.g., 1 meq/kg) but high AnV (e.g., 15) can pass the individual PV and AnV limits but fail the TOTOX limit ([2 x 1] + 15 = 17, passing). The reverse is also possible. TOTOX catches oxidation that individual tests miss. Always request the full TOTOX panel, not just PV.
Additional oxidation tests sometimes requested:
- Acid Value (AV): Measures free fatty acids from hydrolysis. High AV indicates improper refining or storage. GOED limit: 3 mg KOH/g for refined oils.
- Oligomer/polymer content: Measures polymerized (heat-damaged) triglycerides by high-performance size-exclusion chromatography (HPSEC). Relevant for oils that may have been heated during processing.
- Induction time (OSI): Measures the oil's resistance to oxidation under accelerated conditions at elevated temperature (typically 80-110 degrees C). Longer induction time = more stable oil. Measured by Rancimat or OSI instrument.
Environmental contaminants
Marine oils concentrate environmental pollutants from the ocean food chain. Testing for these is essential:
| Contaminant | Method | Typical LOQ | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heavy metals (As, Cd, Pb, Hg) | ICP-MS | 0.01-0.1 ppm | $150-250 |
| PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) | GC-ECD or GC-MS/MS | 0.01-0.1 mg/kg | $150-300 |
| Dioxins and furans (PCDD/Fs) | GC-HRMS | 0.1-1 pg/g (ppt) | $300-600 |
| Dioxin-like PCBs | GC-HRMS | 0.1-1 pg/g | $300-600 (usually combined with dioxin panel) |
| Pesticides | LC-MS/MS + GC-MS/MS | 0.01 mg/kg | $200-350 |
GOED and CRN monographs set limits for these contaminants. The EU sets stricter limits than the US for dioxins and PCBs (EU Regulation 1881/2006). California Prop 65 sets exposure-based limits for PCBs and lead that are more stringent than USP levels.
💡 Note
Not every fish oil lot needs a full dioxin/PCB panel. Dioxin testing by GC-HRMS costs $300-600 per sample and is typically reserved for new supplier qualification, annual monitoring, or when the oil source changes (different fishery, different species). Routine lots can use a less expensive PCB screen by GC-ECD ($150-300). Document your risk assessment in your testing SOP.
Additional tests by oil type
Different omega-3 sources require different supplementary testing:
Fish oil (anchovy, sardine, mackerel, menhaden):
- Cholesterol content (if making a cholesterol claim)
- Full fatty acid profile including saturates and monounsaturates
- Vitamin A and D (naturally present; may need adjustment if adding as fortification)
Krill oil:
- Phospholipid content (krill oil omega-3s are primarily phospholipid-bound, not triglyceride-bound)
- Astaxanthin content (naturally present antioxidant; contributes to red color)
- Fluoride (krill exoskeletons concentrate fluoride; must be controlled)
Algal oil (vegan DHA/EPA):
- DHA and EPA (algal oil is primarily DHA; EPA content varies)
- Solvent residues from extraction process (hexane, ethanol)
- Microbial limits (algae are grown in aqueous fermentation; more water exposure than fish oil processing)
Cod liver oil:
- Vitamin A and D content (naturally high; label claims must be verified)
- The vitamin A content (retinol) must be tested by HPLC. Over-fortification or excessive natural levels can exceed tolerable upper intake levels.
Typical full testing panel cost
| Test category | Tests included | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Potency | EPA, DHA, full fatty acid profile by GC-FID | $150-300 |
| Oxidation | PV, AnV, TOTOX, Acid Value | $100-200 |
| Heavy metals | As, Cd, Pb, Hg by ICP-MS | $150-250 |
| Environmental (basic) | PCBs by GC-ECD | $150-300 |
| Environmental (advanced) | Dioxins/furans + dioxin-like PCBs by GC-HRMS | $300-600 |
| Microbiology | TPC, yeast/mold, E. coli, Salmonella, Staph aureus | $100-200 |
| Full panel (all above) | Potency + oxidation + metals + basic env + micro | $450-900 |
Related guides
- Heavy metal testing for supplements
- Finished product testing requirements
- Supplement testing cost guide
- Shelf life and stability testing
- How to find a supplement testing lab
FAQ
Q: What is the GOED Voluntary Monograph and does it matter?
A: GOED (Global Organization for EPA and DHA Omega-3s) publishes a Voluntary Monograph that sets quality standards for omega-3 oils including EPA/DHA content, oxidation limits (TOTOX less than 26), heavy metals, PCBs, and dioxins. The monograph is not a regulation, but it is the de facto industry standard. Most reputable fish oil brands test to GOED or CRN monograph specifications. Amazon expects fish oil COAs to reference GOED or equivalent standards.
Q: What is the difference between natural triglyceride and ethyl ester fish oil?
A: Natural triglyceride fish oil contains omega-3s in the same form found in fish (triglyceride-bound). Ethyl ester fish oil is produced by reacting triglycerides with ethanol to create fatty acid ethyl esters, then molecularly distilling to concentrate EPA and DHA. Ethyl esters are less expensive but have lower bioavailability in some studies. GC-FID can distinguish these forms by whether fatty acids are present as triglycerides (longer retention time) or ethyl esters (shorter retention time).
Q: What causes fish oil to fail TOTOX testing?
A: Most TOTOX failures trace to three causes. Exposure to oxygen during processing or encapsulation (air not properly purged with nitrogen). Storage at elevated temperature (warehouse over 25 degrees C). Aging — even well-protected fish oil oxidizes slowly over time. Fish oil approaching its expiration date commonly shows elevated AnV even if PV remains low because primary oxidation products have converted to secondary oxidation products.
Q: How much fish oil do I need to send for testing?
A: For the full panel including potency, oxidation, heavy metals, PCBs, and microbiology, most labs require 50-100 mL of oil (roughly 50-100 softgels) or 100-200 g of finished product. If you are also testing for dioxins by GC-HRMS, the lab may require additional sample volume. Check with your specific lab.
Q: Does molecular distillation remove heavy metals and PCBs from fish oil?
A: Yes, effectively. Molecular distillation (short-path vacuum distillation) removes most heavy metals, PCBs, dioxins, and pesticide residues from fish oil. However, distillation effectiveness depends on operating parameters (temperature, vacuum, residence time). Over-distillation can increase oxidation. It is also possible for recontamination to occur after distillation during storage, transport, or encapsulation. Testing the finished oil or softgel is still essential even if the oil was molecularly distilled.
Quick Reference
Lab Category: Omega-3 / Fish Oil / Marine Oil Testing
Key methods:
| Test | Method |
|---|---|
| EPA/DHA content | GC-FID (AOCS Ce 1b-89, GOED method) |
| Peroxide Value | Iodometric titration (AOCS Cd 8b-90) |
| Anisidine Value | Spectrophotometric (AOCS Cd 18-90) |
| TOTOX | Calculated: (2 x PV) + AnV |
| Heavy metals | ICP-MS (USP <2232>) |
| PCBs | GC-ECD or GC-MS/MS |
| Dioxins/furans | GC-HRMS |
Sample requirements: 50-100 mL oil or 50-100 softgels for full panel.
Turnaround: 7-14 business days for full panel. Dioxin testing may add 5-10 business days.
Accreditation: ISO 17025 with fatty acid analysis (GC-FID) and environmental contaminant methods on the scope.
Pricing:
| Panel | Price |
|---|---|
| Potency only (EPA, DHA, fatty acid profile) | $150-300 |
| Oxidation panel (PV, AnV, TOTOX, AV) | $100-200 |
| Heavy metals by ICP-MS | $150-250 |
| PCBs by GC-ECD | $150-300 |
| Dioxins/furans + DL-PCBs | $300-600 |
| Full quality panel | $450-900 |
Key standards: GOED Voluntary Monograph, CRN Omega-3 Monograph, USP Fish Oil monographs, EU Regulation 1881/2006, California Prop 65.
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