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Mushroom Supplement Testing: Is It Actually Mushrooms or Just Grain Powder?

6 min read Updated June 9, 2026

Let me tell you the dirtiest secret in the supplement industry.

Most of those mushroom capsules you see on Amazon? They're not mushrooms. They're grain.

Not metaphorically. Literally. The "mushroom" powder in those bottles is often 60-70% undigested oat or rice substrate that the mycelium grew on, plus a little bit of actual fungal tissue. And brands are selling it as "full spectrum mushroom extract" like they just harvested it from some enchanted forest.

The economics are simple: growing mushroom fruiting bodies takes weeks and costs real money. Growing mycelium on grain in a bag takes about 5 days and costs pennies. You can probably guess which one ends up in most bottles.

I've seen COAs from brands that swear their product is pure Lion's Mane fruiting body extract, and the beta-glucan content comes back at 3%. That's grain. That's not extract. True fruiting body extracts clock in at 25-40% beta-glucans. The gap between 3% and 30% is the difference between a mushroom product and a bag of filler someone slapped a label on.

So how do you actually test this stuff? Here's the suite.

The Beta-Glucan Problem (and Why It's the Only Number That Matters)

Beta-glucans are the active compounds in medicinal mushrooms. They're the polysaccharides that your immune system recognizes and responds to. Every legit mushroom product should be reporting beta-glucan content on its label.

But here's the catch: most labels report "polysaccharides" instead. That's because polysaccharides are cheap to test for and easy to inflate. Grain starch is a polysaccharide. Dextrose is a polysaccharide. Maltodextrin is a polysaccharide. If you test a bag of straight-up rice flour for polysaccharides, it'll come back at like 45%.

So brands slap ">30% polysaccharides" on their label, and the consumer thinks they're buying a potent mushroom extract. They're not. They're buying grain.

What you want is the enzymatic beta-glucan assay (Megazyme K-YBGL method). This test uses specific enzymes to break down everything except 1,3:1,6-beta-glucans, then measures what's left. It's specific. It can't be fooled by starch or maltodextrin. If your product has 25%+ beta-glucans by this method, you've got real mushroom material. If it's under 5%, someone sold you grain.

Every brand should be testing beta-glucans on every batch. No exceptions.

Fruiting Body vs Mycelium — HPTLC Tells All

Even if your beta-glucan numbers look decent, you still need to know whether you're dealing with actual fruiting body (the mushroom cap and stem) or mycelium grown on grain.

Here's why: fruiting bodies and mycelium have completely different chemical profiles. Different beta-glucan structures, different secondary metabolites, different bioactive compounds. They're not interchangeable. But the industry treats them like they are.

HPTLC (High-Performance Thin Layer Chromatography) is the gold standard for species verification and part-of-plant identification. You run the sample against authenticated reference standards, and the resulting fingerprint tells you exactly what you're looking at. Fruiting body of Hericium erinaceus (Lion's Mane) has a distinct HPTLC band pattern. Mycelium-on-grain of the same species looks totally different — you'll see grain marker compounds bleed through that don't belong in a mushroom product.

I've had clients send in "Lion's Mane fruiting body extract" that HPTLC identified as mycelium-on-oats. Not even close. The brand had been sold raw material from a supplier who lied. HPTLC caught it.

💡 Tip

Pro tip: Request both HPTLC species ID AND beta-glucan quantification on every mushroom lot. HPTLC confirms identity; beta-glucan confirms potency. Without both, you're guessing. I've seen products pass one test and fail the other — you need the full picture.

The Starch Test: Five Bucks and One Drop of Iodine

This one is so simple it hurts.

Get a bottle of iodine tincture from any drugstore. Take a tiny pinch of your mushroom powder, put it on a white plate, add one drop of iodine. If it turns blue-black? That's starch. There's grain in your product.

True mushroom fruiting body extract contains negligible starch. Mycelium grown on grain is loaded with it — all that undigested oat or rice substrate comes through. The iodine test won't tell you how much grain, but it'll tell you instantly if it's there at all.

For quantitative results, you can run an enzymatic starch assay at the lab. But honestly, the iodine spot test is so cheap and fast that every brand should be doing it as a raw material QC check before they even send samples to the lab.

I keep a bottle of iodine in my kit. It's the quickest way to flag a bad supplier before you've spent real money on full panel testing.

Heavy Metals: Mushrooms Are Nature's Sponges

Here's the thing about fungi: they bioaccumulate. Hard.

Mushrooms pull whatever's in their growing medium right into their tissue. If the substrate is grown on soil contaminated with lead, cadmium, arsenic, or mercury, the mushroom concentrates those metals. This is especially true for wild-harvested mushrooms sourced from China, where soil contamination is a known issue.

You need ICP-MS heavy metals testing on every mushroom product you sell. Minimum panel: lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury. I'd also strongly recommend watching chromium and nickel if you're sourcing from any region with industrial proximity.

The FDA doesn't have specific heavy metal limits for dietary supplements (yet — California's Prop 65 is your real enforcement mechanism here), but USP <2232> limits are the industry standard. If your mushroom powder exceeds 0.5 ppm lead, 0.3 ppm cadmium, 1.5 ppm arsenic, or 0.1 ppm mercury, you've got a problem.

I've seen mushroom products with lead levels 10x above USP limits. The brand had no idea because they'd never tested. Don't be that brand.

FAQ

Q: My supplier says the product is "100% fruiting body." Should I still test it?

Yes. Every time. Supplier claims mean exactly nothing until you've verified them independently. I've seen too many "100% fruiting body" products come back as mycelium-on-grain with beta-glucans under 5%. Test or you don't know.

Q: What's a good beta-glucan number for a fruiting body extract?

Hot water extracted fruiting body powder should hit 25-40% beta-glucans. Dual-extracted (water + alcohol) may go higher. Anything under 10% is suspect. Under 5% is almost certainly grain filler.

Q: Does the FDA regulate mushroom supplement claims?

FDA regulates all dietary supplement labeling under 21 CFR Part 111. You can't claim to treat, cure, or prevent disease. You CAN describe the product accurately (species, part used, extraction method, beta-glucan content). Accuracy is your shield.

Q: How much does mushroom supplement testing cost?

A full workup — HPTLC species ID, enzymatic beta-glucan, heavy metals panel, and starch/moisture — typically runs $400-700 depending on the lab and turnaround. Compare that to a potential recall or lawsuit. It's cheap insurance.

Q: Can I just test once and use that COA forever?

No. Mushrooms are agricultural products with natural variation. New batches, new harvests, new suppliers — all need fresh testing. Every lot. That's the standard.


Get Your Mushroom Products Tested Right

Don't be the brand selling grain powder with a mushroom label. Get the full fungal supplement workup — HPTLC species verification, enzymatic beta-glucan quantification, heavy metals, and starch analysis — from an ISO-accredited lab that actually understands mushroom chemistry.

Browse mushroom testing labs on LabQuotes and get quotes in 24 hours. Your customers — and your liability insurance — will thank you.

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