Vitamin C Testing: Ascorbic Acid HPLC Potency, Degradation, Stability
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is one of the most widely consumed dietary supplements, but it is also one of the most analytically challenging due to its well-known instability. Lab testing for vitamin C supplements must address rapid degradation in solution, oxidation to dehydroascorbic acid, and the need to distinguish between ascorbic acid and its mineral salts (sodium ascorbate, calcium ascorbate). HPLC analysis with UV detection is the standard method for vitamin C potency testing, but the sample preparation and extraction steps are critical because ascorbic acid begins degrading as soon as it is dissolved.
Vitamin C degradation is accelerated by light, heat, oxygen, and alkaline pH. A supplement that contained the labeled amount at manufacture may fall below specification well before its expiration date if the formulation and packaging do not adequately protect the ingredient. This article covers HPLC testing methods, stability considerations, common pitfalls, and what to ask your lab when submitting vitamin C samples for analysis.
Ascorbic Acid Potency by HPLC
HPLC with UV detection at 245-265 nm is the most common method for quantifying ascorbic acid in dietary supplements. The method separates ascorbic acid from other UV-absorbing compounds and provides specific quantification. USP monograph methods for ascorbic acid, sodium ascorbate, and calcium ascorbate are available and should be used when possible.
Sample preparation is the most error-prone step. Ascorbic acid oxidizes rapidly in aqueous solution, especially at neutral to alkaline pH. The extraction solvent should be acidic (typically metaphosphoric acid, oxalic acid, or dilute perchloric acid at pH 2-3) to stabilize ascorbic acid during preparation. The extraction should be performed quickly, protected from light, and the prepared sample should be analyzed promptly -- ideally within 1-2 hours. Labs experienced with vitamin C testing know these requirements, but it is worth confirming their sample handling procedures.
HPLC results should distinguish between ascorbic acid and total vitamin C (ascorbic acid plus dehydroascorbic acid). Dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) is the oxidized form and retains some vitamin C activity in vivo, but DHA is less stable and can degrade further to inactive compounds. Some labs report total vitamin C by reducing DHA back to ascorbic acid before analysis, which gives a more complete picture but requires additional preparation steps.
Degradation and Shelf-Life Stability
Vitamin C degradation follows first-order kinetics in many supplement matrices, meaning a constant fraction of the remaining ascorbic acid degrades per unit time. Temperature is the most important accelerator -- degradation rate roughly doubles for every 10 degrees Celsius increase. This is why accelerated stability testing at elevated temperatures (typically 40 degrees C / 75% relative humidity) can predict room-temperature shelf life in a matter of weeks to months.
A shelf-life stability study for a vitamin C product should include testing at multiple time points: initial (time zero), 3 months, 6 months, 12 months, 18 months, and 24 months under controlled conditions. A 25% overage at time zero may be needed to maintain label claim at 24 months, but the exact overage depends on the formulation, packaging, and packaging quality.
Packaging is critical for vitamin C stability. Oxygen-barrier packaging (foil blister packs, opaque HDPE bottles with oxygen absorbers, or nitrogen-flushed packaging) significantly reduces degradation compared to clear bottles with no oxygen protection. If your stability data shows rapid degradation, investigate your packaging configuration before increasing overage.
β οΈ Note
Vitamin C degrades quickly once dissolved in extraction solvent. Labs must use acidic extraction solutions, work quickly, and analyze prepared samples promptly. A lab that is not experienced with vitamin C testing may produce low results due to degradation during sample preparation rather than a truly sub-potent product. Ask your lab about their specific vitamin C sample handling procedures.
Mineral Ascorbate Testing
Mineral ascorbates -- sodium ascorbate, calcium ascorbate, magnesium ascorbate, and potassium ascorbate -- are buffered forms of vitamin C that are less acidic and sometimes described as gentler on the stomach. Testing these forms requires attention to both the ascorbate content and the mineral counter-ion.
The ascorbate portion is measured by HPLC using the same method as for ascorbic acid, with a pH adjustment to the extraction to ensure complete dissolution and release of ascorbate ions. The mineral content (sodium, calcium, magnesium, potassium) is measured by ICP-MS and should match the stoichiometric ratio for the claimed mineral ascorbate form.
For example, sodium ascorbate (C6H7NaO6, MW 198.1) contains approximately 88.9% ascorbic acid equivalent by weight. A product labeled as "Vitamin C 500 mg (as sodium ascorbate)" should contain approximately 562 mg of sodium ascorbate delivering 500 mg of ascorbic acid. The sodium content (approximately 58 mg per 500 mg ascorbic acid) should also be verified by ICP-MS as a cross-check.
Heavy Metals and Purity
Vitamin C raw material (ascorbic acid) is industrially produced through fermentation and chemical synthesis, and heavy metal contamination from production catalysts or raw materials is possible. ICP-MS testing for lead, arsenic, cadmium, and mercury is recommended, particularly for products with high daily doses (500-2,000 mg/day is common for vitamin C).
Raw ascorbic acid should also be tested for related substances including oxalic acid and other organic acid impurities that may be present from the manufacturing process. USP monograph specifications for ascorbic acid include limits on related substances.
Quick Reference
Lab Category Matching
| Testing Need | Lab Requirement |
|---|---|
| Ascorbic acid potency | HPLC-UV at 245-265 nm, acidic extraction |
| Total vitamin C (ascorbic acid + DHA) | HPLC after DHA reduction |
| Mineral ascorbate counter-ion | ICP-MS |
| Related substances | HPLC-UV (USP method) |
| Heavy metals | ICP-MS |
| Shelf-life stability | Time-point testing at controlled conditions |
Real Methods Explained
| Method | What It Tests | Detection Limit | Cost per Sample |
|---|---|---|---|
| HPLC-UV (Ascorbic Acid) | Ascorbic acid content | ~0.1 mg/g | $100-$200 |
| HPLC (Total Vitamin C) | Ascorbic acid + dehydroascorbic acid | ~0.1 mg/g | $150-$300 |
| ICP-MS | Mineral counter-ions, heavy metals | <0.01 ppm | $100-$200 |
| Loss on Drying | Moisture content | 0.1% | $25-$50 |
What Sample to Send
For capsules or tablets: 20-30 units. For powders: 15-25 grams in a sealed, opaque container. Vitamin C is sensitive to light, air, and moisture -- ship samples in packaging that provides these protections. For stability study samples, send sufficient material for all planned time points plus extras. If the product contains multiple forms of vitamin C (e.g., ascorbic acid plus mineral ascorbates), inform the lab so they can report the contribution from each form.
Expected Turnaround Time
| Testing | Typical TAT |
|---|---|
| Ascorbic acid HPLC | 5-7 business days |
| Total vitamin C (with DHA) | 7-10 business days |
| Mineral analysis (ICP-MS) | 5-7 business days |
| Combined package | 7-10 business days |
Price Ranges
| Testing | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|
| Ascorbic acid potency (HPLC) | $100-$200 |
| Total vitamin C (with DHA) | $150-$300 |
| Heavy metals panel | $100-$200 |
| Complete vitamin C package | $300-$600 |
| 24-month stability study (6 time points) | $1,200-$2,500 |
Country/Region Targeting
Vitamin C is produced globally, with major manufacturing in China, the United States, and Europe. The USP, EP, JP, and CP all include monographs for ascorbic acid with similar but not identical purity specifications. US manufacturers must meet 21 CFR 111 requirements for ingredient verification. EU supplement regulations specify permitted vitamin C forms and may set maximum levels. When sourcing vitamin C internationally, verify that the supplier's COA indicates compliance with the pharmacopeial standard applicable to your target market.
FAQ
Q: Why might two labs give different vitamin C potency results for the same sample?
The most common reason is differences in sample preparation. If one lab uses a non-acidic extraction solvent or delays analysis after extraction, ascorbic acid degradation during preparation can produce falsely low results. Other factors include differences in calibration standards, whether dehydroascorbic acid is included in the total, and whether the method accounts for the specific salt form (ascorbic acid vs. sodium ascorbate). Use labs with demonstrated vitamin C testing experience and share your formulation details so they can use appropriate extraction conditions.
Q: How much vitamin C overage do I need for a 2-year shelf life?
Typical vitamin C overages range from 15% to 30%, depending on the product form, packaging, and storage conditions. Tablets with oxygen-barrier packaging and desiccants may need 15-20% overage. Powders in tubs that are opened repeatedly may need 25-30% or more. Chewable or gummy formats, which have higher water activity and more reactive matrices, often require 25-40% overage. The only reliable way to determine your specific overage is through a real-time or accelerated shelf-life stability study on your actual product in its final packaging.
Q: What is the difference between ascorbic acid and total vitamin C on a lab report?
Ascorbic acid is the reduced, active form. Total vitamin C includes ascorbic acid plus dehydroascorbic acid (DHA), the oxidized form that retains some biological vitamin C activity. Many labs report only ascorbic acid because it represents the directly active form. If your product uses a mineral ascorbate form, confirm with the lab that they are reporting as ascorbic acid equivalent so that results can be compared directly against the labeled amount.
Q: Does vitamin C testing require a different lab than other potency tests?
Not necessarily, but vitamin C testing does require specific sample handling expertise. A general dietary supplement testing lab may not use the acidic extraction and rapid analysis protocols needed for accurate vitamin C results. When requesting quotes, ask specifically about the lab's vitamin C method, extraction pH, and maximum time between extraction and analysis. Labs that perform vitamin C testing routinely will have these procedures in place.
Q: How do I test a product with multiple forms of vitamin C?
Products containing both ascorbic acid and mineral ascorbates (e.g., a buffered vitamin C blend) require HPLC for total ascorbate content plus ICP-MS for the mineral counter-ions (sodium, calcium, magnesium). The lab should be informed of all vitamin C forms present so they can report results that align with your label. Some mineral ascorbates require pH adjustment of the extraction solvent for complete dissolution, so full disclosure of the formulation helps the lab choose appropriate preparation methods.
Ready to get your products tested?
Build a basket of the tests you need and compare quotes from ISO 17025βaccredited labs in one place. Free to start.
More guides
How Much Does Supplement Testing Actually Cost?
Amazon & MarketplaceAmazon Supplement Compliance: Don't Get Delisted
FDA & GMPThe "Oh Crap, The FDA Is Calling" Guide to 21 CFR 111 Testing Requirements
Getting StartedHow to Find a Supplement Testing Lab β The Complete Guide
Test MethodsHeavy Metal Testing for Supplements: Methods, Costs, and What You're Actually Testing For
Test MethodsShelf-Life and Stability Testing: How Long Does Your Supplement Actually Last?
ManufacturingContract Manufacturer Testing: Why 'They Handle It' Is the Most Dangerous Phrase in Supplements
SpecializedSports Nutrition Banned Substance Testing: NSF, Informed Sport, and BSCG Explained
Getting StartedSupplement Testing for New Brands: What to Do First (Before You Waste Money)
Getting StartedHow to Read a Certificate of Analysis: What the Numbers Actually Mean
Test MethodsProbiotic Testing: CFU Counts, Strain Verification, and Shelf-Life Stability
SpecializedCBD Testing: Potency, THC Limits, and the Tests That Keep Your Product Legal
ComplianceImporting Supplements: The Testing and Customs Documentation You Need to Clear the FDA
ManufacturingPrivate Label Supplement Testing: Why Your Manufacturer's COA Isn't Enough
ComplianceProp 65 Supplement Testing: Don't Wait for the Lawsuit Letter
ManufacturingHow to Source Ingredients That Actually Pass Prop 65 Testing
ComplianceCalifornia vs. Federal Supplement Testing: Why FDA Compliance Isn't Enough
SpecializedMushroom Supplement Testing: Is It Actually Mushrooms or Just Grain Powder?
Getting StartedYour Supplement Failed Testing. Now What?
Selling OnlineHow to Use Your Test Results in Marketing (Without Getting an FDA Letter)
Selling OnlineAmazon Supplement Reinstatement: How to Get Your Listing Back After a Compliance Removal
SpecializedGummy Vitamin Testing: The Sticky Truth Nobody Tells You
Test MethodsIs Your Magnesium Glycinate Actually Magnesium Oxide? How to Test What's Really in the Bottle
Getting StartedHow to Test Your Supplement Before Selling (First Batch Checklist)
FDA & GMPSupplement Finished Product Testing: The GMP Release Checklist
Getting StartedAre Your Supplier's COAs Real? How to Verify Raw Material Testing
Compliance5 FDA Supplement Regulations You're Probably Violating Right Now
ManufacturingHow to Switch Supplement Testing Labs Without Screwing Up Your Compliance
Getting StartedDo I Actually Need to Test My Supplements? The Honest Answer
Free Resources21 CFR 111 GMP Compliance Checklist β Free PDF Download
Free ResourcesState of Supplement Testing 2026 β Real Data From Thousands of Quotes
Free ResourcesFree Supplement Specification & COA Templates
Selling OnlineAmazon Supplement Approved Lab List β What Labs Amazon Actually Accepts
Selling OnlineHow to Upload a COA to Amazon Seller Central β Step by Step
Getting StartedSupplement Lab Comparison β Eurofins vs SGS vs Intertek vs ALS vs Independent Labs
Test MethodsAllergen & Gluten-Free Testing for Supplements β ELISA Methods
Ingredient TestingAshwagandha Testing: Withanolides, Root Auth, Heavy Metals
Ingredient TestingB-Complex Supplement Testing: Simultaneous B-Vitamin Potency HPLC Panel
Ingredient TestingBeetroot Nitrate Testing: Quantifying Active, Label Claims, Metals
Ingredient TestingBerberine Supplement Testing: HPLC Purity, Adulteration, Identity
Test MethodsBotanical Identity Testing β HPTLC, Microscopy, DNA Barcoding
SpecializedCollagen Supplement Testing β Amino Acid Profile Verification
Ingredient TestingCreatine Supplement Testing: Purity, Impurities by HPLC, and Creapure Verification
Test MethodsDisintegration & Dissolution Testing for Supplements β USP <2040>
Test MethodsDNA Barcoding Supplement Identity: Species Authentication by qPCR
FDA & GMPDSHEA Explained for Supplement Brands
Ingredient TestingElderberry Supplement Testing: Anthocyanin Content, Identity, and Microbial Safety
SpecializedElectrolyte Powder Testing β Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium Verification
Test MethodsEthylene Oxide Testing Supplements: EtO and 2-Chloroethanol by GC-MS
FDA & GMPFDA Warning Letters for Supplements -- Testing Violations
FDA & GMPForm 483 Response Guide for Supplement Companies
Ingredient TestingGinseng Testing: Ginsenoside Profile by HPLC, Species Authentication, and Pesticide Risks
Ingredient TestingGlucosamine Chondroitin Testing: Potency and Adulteration Detection
Test MethodsGlyphosate Testing Supplements: LC-MS/MS Residue Detection, Claims
Amazon & MarketplaceGMP Certificate for Amazon -- Do You Need One?
SpecializedGreens Powder Testing β Heavy Metals, Pesticides, Nutritional Panel
Getting StartedHow to Prepare Supplement Samples for Lab Testing β Shipping, Packaging, Chain of Custody
Test MethodsHPLC Potency Testing for Supplements β How It Works
Test MethodsICP-MS vs AAS for Supplement Heavy Metal Testing β Which Method?
Ingredient TestingIron Supplement Testing: ICP-MS Potency, Form Verification, Disint
Getting StartedISO 17025 for Supplement Testing, Explained
Getting StartedISO 17025 vs Non-Accredited Labs: Why It Matters for Supplement Testing
Ingredient TestingL-Theanine Supplement Testing: HPLC Purity, L vs D Enantiomer Verification, and Identity
ComplianceSupplement Label Claim Substantiation β Testing Every Word on Your Bottle
Ingredient TestingMaca Root Testing: Identity, Macamide Markers, and Heavy Metal Screening
Test MethodsMelamine Testing Supplements: Detecting Nitrogen Spiking by LC-MS/MS
SpecializedMelatonin Supplement Testing β HPLC Content Verification
Test MethodsMicrobial Limits Testing for Supplements
Test MethodsMicrocystin Testing Algae Supplements: Cyanotoxin ELISA and LC-MS/MS
Ingredient TestingMultivitamin Testing: Multi-Analyte Potency, Label Overage
Test MethodsMycotoxin Testing Supplements: Aflatoxins, Ochratoxin A, Fumonisins
Test MethodsNitrosamine Testing Supplements: NDMA/NDEA Detection by LC-MS/MS
Ingredient TestingNMN Supplement Testing: Purity by HPLC, NMN vs NR Verification, and Regulatory Status
Test MethodsNon-GMO PCR Testing for Supplements β How It Works
SpecializedNSF Certified for Sport vs Informed Sport β Which Testing Program?
SpecializedOmega-3 & Fish Oil Supplement Testing β EPA, DHA, TOTOX
ComplianceOrganic Supplement Certification β Testing Requirements
Getting Started7 Supplement Tests You're Probably Overpaying For (And How to Fix It)
Test MethodsPAH Testing Supplements: Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by GC-MS
Test MethodsPesticide Testing for Supplements β Multi-Residue Screen Guide
Ingredient TestingPre-Workout Supplement Testing: Banned Stimulants and Label Accuracy
Ingredient TestingPrenatal Vitamin Testing: Folate Form, Heavy Metal Safety, Potency
Ingredient TestingProtein Powder Testing: Heavy Metals, Amino Spiking, and Real Protein Content
Ingredient TestingPsyllium Fiber Testing: Identity, Microbial Screening for Salmonella, and Water Activity
Test MethodsResidual Solvent Testing for Supplements β USP <467>
Ingredient TestingSaw Palmetto Testing: Fatty Acid Profile, Adulteration, Identity
Ingredient TestingSea Moss Testing: Iodine Content, Heavy Metals, Species Auth
ComplianceSkip Lot Testing for Supplements β When You Can Reduce Testing
Ingredient TestingSpirulina Chlorella Testing: Microcystin, Heavy Metals, Micro
ComplianceStructure/Function Claims Testing Requirements
ComplianceSupplement Facts Panel Testing Requirements
Getting StartedThird-Party Supplement Testing: Why It's Non-Negotiable
Ingredient TestingTurmeric Curcumin Testing: Potency, Lead Chromate, Identity
Test MethodsUSP 2232 Heavy Metals Testing Explained
SpecializedVitamin D Potency Testing β HPLC vs LC-MS/MS Methods
Test MethodsWater Activity Testing for Supplements β Why It Matters