Plus de 65 000 laboratoires dans le monde, et ça continue
Selling Online

How to Use Your Test Results in Marketing (Without Getting an FDA Letter)

7 min read Updated June 9, 2026

You just dropped $2,000 on a full-suite lab panel. Heavy metals pass. Potency on point. Micro clean. No pesticides. Your product is objectively solid.

Now what?

Most brands shove the COA in a Google Drive folder and never look at it again. That's like buying a Ferrari and keeping it in the garage. Your test results are marketing gold — if you know how to use them without crossing the line into FDA warning letter territory.

Let me walk you through what's legal, what's sketchy, and what'll get you a certified letter from Silver Spring.

"Third-Party Tested" — The Phrase That Actually Means Something

You can say your product is "third-party tested." You can say "independently tested by [lab name]." You can say "every batch tested for purity and potency."

What you CANNOT say: "third-party certified." Certification implies an ongoing audit relationship with a specific certifying body (like NSF, USP, or BSCG). Unless you're actually NSF Certified for Sport or USP Verified, don't use the word "certified." FDA and the FTC have gone after brands for this.

Also cannot say: "FDA approved" or "FDA certified." FDA doesn't approve or certify dietary supplements. There is no such thing. Ever. Using that language is a one-way ticket to a warning letter.

Stick with "tested." It's accurate. It's defensible. It's what you actually did.

The Forbidden Words (Memorize These)

FDA has a list of words that, when applied to a supplement, transform it from a dietary supplement into an unapproved drug in the agency's eyes. Here are the big ones:

  • Proven — "Proven to support immunity." Nope. "Clinically studied ingredient that supports immune function" — better, if the study is legit.
  • Guaranteed — "Guaranteed results." That's a drug claim. You can guarantee satisfaction (refund policy), but not physiological results.
  • Cures / Treats / Prevents / Heals — These are drug claims. Full stop. You don't cure anything with a supplement. You "support," "promote," or "maintain" normal body functions.
  • Diagnoses / Mitigates — Also drug claims. Also forbidden.

The structure-function claim line is thin. "Supports healthy immune response" is a structure-function claim. "Boosts your immune system to prevent colds" crosses into disease prevention. See the difference? One describes what it might help the body do. The other promises it'll stop you from getting sick.

Takeaway: if your marketing copy sounds like something you'd hear in a pharma commercial, rewrite it.

💡 Tip

The golden rule: Before you publish any claim, ask yourself: "Would a reasonable person interpret this as saying the product treats, cures, or prevents a disease?" If the answer is even "maybe," rephrase it. FDA's standard is what a consumer would understand — not what you intended.

Showing Your COA — Yes, You Should

Making your Certificate of Analysis public is the single highest-trust move you can make. Nobody does it, and that's exactly why you should.

Here's the strategy: create a "Test Results" page on your site. List each product, each batch/lot number currently in circulation, and a link to the full PDF COA. Update it when new batches ship. Include an explainer that tells customers what they're looking at and why it matters.

This is not common. Most brands hide their COAs because they're afraid customers will misinterpret results or because, well, the COA isn't flattering. You're different. Your product passed. Show it off.

What to black out on a public COA: your supplier names (confidential business info), your exact internal cost data if it appears, and your lab's internal reference numbers if they'd be useful to a competitor. Everything else — potency results, heavy metals, micro — should be visible.

QR Codes on Labels — The Smartest $0.03 You'll Spend

Put a QR code on your label that links directly to the test results page, not your homepage. When someone scans it at the store or after opening their Amazon package, they land on transparency — actual lab data for the exact batch they're holding.

This costs you essentially nothing to implement. A QR code is free to generate. Adding it to your label artwork during the design phase adds maybe $0.03 per unit in printing. The trust it builds? Priceless.

I've talked to supplement buyers who say they specifically scan QR codes on new products to see if the brand is hiding anything. No QR code = suspicion. Broken QR code that links to a generic homepage = eye roll. QR code that goes straight to a dated, lot-specific COA = immediate purchase.

Amazon Listing Claims — Tighter Rules Apply

Amazon's supplement compliance team is separate from FDA, and in some ways they're stricter. You need to navigate both.

On Amazon: no disease claims, no before/after photos, no customer testimonials referencing specific health outcomes, no claims about "guaranteed results," and no mention of specific medical conditions even in the context of "supports healthy [x] for people with [condition]."

What you CAN say on Amazon: the same structure-function claims you'd put on your label, plus your testing differentiators. "Every batch tested for heavy metals." "Third-party lab verified potency." "Scan QR code for full lab results."

The Supplement Facts panel and ingredient list are your best friends on Amazon. Let the data do the talking. Customers who care about testing will check your COA. Customers who don't care about testing will buy anyway based on reviews and price. You win either way.

The Disclaimer You Actually Need

Every supplement marketing page — label, website, Amazon listing — needs the FDA disclaimer:

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Put it somewhere visible. It's not just legal hygiene; it's your explicit acknowledgment that you understand the boundary between supplements and drugs. FDA looks for this.

FAQ

Q: Can I say "lab tested" if I only tested one batch two years ago?

Legally, if you're not claiming "every batch," it's not false. Ethically? Come on. Test your current inventory. Saying "lab tested" when the test is stale erodes the whole point of being transparent. Update your testing or don't market it.

Q: Can I publish a COA that shows a borderline result (e.g., heavy metals just under the limit)?

Yes, and you should. Publishing only perfect COAs is a red flag. Real products have real variation. A COA that shows lead at 0.3 ppm with a 0.5 ppm USP limit is honest. Honesty builds trust. Nobody expects zero heavy metals — they expect levels they don't have to worry about.

Q: What if my competitor makes claims I know are illegal?

You can report them to FDA and the FTC. You can also use their dishonesty as a contrast point in your own marketing without naming them. "Unlike many brands, we actually test every batch" is powerful. Just don't make it personal.

Q: Can I use test results in Instagram/Facebook ads?

Same rules as everywhere else. Structure-function claims only. No disease claims. The disclaimer. Platform ad policies (Meta, Google) add their own layer — both restrict supplement advertising heavily. Expect ad rejections and plan for an appeals process. Have your COA and clinical references ready.

Q: Do I need a regulatory review of my marketing copy?

If you're selling serious volume, yes. A few hours of a regulatory attorney's time costs $1,000-2,000 and can save you from a six-figure FDA enforcement action. If you're a smaller brand, there are supplement compliance consultants who do copy review for $300-500. Worth it.


Turn Your Test Results Into Trust

You paid for the testing. Now use it. Create your test results page, print those QR codes, and write your marketing copy around the data — not around the word "proven."

Find a lab for your next round of testing on LabQuotes and get quotes from pre-vetted ISO labs in under 24 hours.

Ready to get your products tested?

Build a basket of the tests you need and compare quotes from ISO 17025–accredited labs in one place. Free to start.

Get lab quotes

More guides

Cost & Pricing

How Much Does Supplement Testing Actually Cost?

Amazon & Marketplace

Amazon Supplement Compliance: Don't Get Delisted

FDA & GMP

The "Oh Crap, The FDA Is Calling" Guide to 21 CFR 111 Testing Requirements

Getting Started

How to Find a Supplement Testing Lab — The Complete Guide

Test Methods

Heavy Metal Testing for Supplements: Methods, Costs, and What You're Actually Testing For

Test Methods

Shelf-Life and Stability Testing: How Long Does Your Supplement Actually Last?

Manufacturing

Contract Manufacturer Testing: Why 'They Handle It' Is the Most Dangerous Phrase in Supplements

Specialized

Sports Nutrition Banned Substance Testing: NSF, Informed Sport, and BSCG Explained

Getting Started

Supplement Testing for New Brands: What to Do First (Before You Waste Money)

Getting Started

How to Read a Certificate of Analysis: What the Numbers Actually Mean

Test Methods

Probiotic Testing: CFU Counts, Strain Verification, and Shelf-Life Stability

Specialized

CBD Testing: Potency, THC Limits, and the Tests That Keep Your Product Legal

Compliance

Importing Supplements: The Testing and Customs Documentation You Need to Clear the FDA

Manufacturing

Private Label Supplement Testing: Why Your Manufacturer's COA Isn't Enough

Compliance

Prop 65 Supplement Testing: Don't Wait for the Lawsuit Letter

Manufacturing

How to Source Ingredients That Actually Pass Prop 65 Testing

Compliance

California vs. Federal Supplement Testing: Why FDA Compliance Isn't Enough

Specialized

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

Getting Started

Your Supplement Failed Testing. Now What?

Selling Online

Amazon Supplement Reinstatement: How to Get Your Listing Back After a Compliance Removal

Specialized

Gummy Vitamin Testing: The Sticky Truth Nobody Tells You

Test Methods

Is Your Magnesium Glycinate Actually Magnesium Oxide? How to Test What's Really in the Bottle

Getting Started

How to Test Your Supplement Before Selling (First Batch Checklist)

FDA & GMP

Supplement Finished Product Testing: The GMP Release Checklist

Getting Started

Are Your Supplier's COAs Real? How to Verify Raw Material Testing

Compliance

5 FDA Supplement Regulations You're Probably Violating Right Now

Manufacturing

How to Switch Supplement Testing Labs Without Screwing Up Your Compliance

Getting Started

Do I Actually Need to Test My Supplements? The Honest Answer

Free Resources

21 CFR 111 GMP Compliance Checklist — Free PDF Download

Free Resources

State of Supplement Testing 2026 — Real Data From Thousands of Quotes

Free Resources

Free Supplement Specification & COA Templates

Selling Online

Amazon Supplement Approved Lab List — What Labs Amazon Actually Accepts

Selling Online

How to Upload a COA to Amazon Seller Central — Step by Step

Getting Started

Supplement Lab Comparison — Eurofins vs SGS vs Intertek vs ALS vs Independent Labs

Test Methods

Allergen & Gluten-Free Testing for Supplements — ELISA Methods

Ingredient Testing

Ashwagandha Testing: Withanolides, Root Auth, Heavy Metals

Ingredient Testing

B-Complex Supplement Testing: Simultaneous B-Vitamin Potency HPLC Panel

Ingredient Testing

Beetroot Nitrate Testing: Quantifying Active, Label Claims, Metals

Ingredient Testing

Berberine Supplement Testing: HPLC Purity, Adulteration, Identity

Test Methods

Botanical Identity Testing — HPTLC, Microscopy, DNA Barcoding

Specialized

Collagen Supplement Testing — Amino Acid Profile Verification

Ingredient Testing

Creatine Supplement Testing: Purity, Impurities by HPLC, and Creapure Verification

Test Methods

Disintegration & Dissolution Testing for Supplements — USP <2040>

Test Methods

DNA Barcoding Supplement Identity: Species Authentication by qPCR

FDA & GMP

DSHEA Explained for Supplement Brands

Ingredient Testing

Elderberry Supplement Testing: Anthocyanin Content, Identity, and Microbial Safety

Specialized

Electrolyte Powder Testing — Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium Verification

Test Methods

Ethylene Oxide Testing Supplements: EtO and 2-Chloroethanol by GC-MS

FDA & GMP

FDA Warning Letters for Supplements -- Testing Violations

FDA & GMP

Form 483 Response Guide for Supplement Companies

Ingredient Testing

Ginseng Testing: Ginsenoside Profile by HPLC, Species Authentication, and Pesticide Risks

Ingredient Testing

Glucosamine Chondroitin Testing: Potency and Adulteration Detection

Test Methods

Glyphosate Testing Supplements: LC-MS/MS Residue Detection, Claims

Amazon & Marketplace

GMP Certificate for Amazon -- Do You Need One?

Specialized

Greens Powder Testing — Heavy Metals, Pesticides, Nutritional Panel

Getting Started

How to Prepare Supplement Samples for Lab Testing — Shipping, Packaging, Chain of Custody

Test Methods

HPLC Potency Testing for Supplements — How It Works

Test Methods

ICP-MS vs AAS for Supplement Heavy Metal Testing — Which Method?

Ingredient Testing

Iron Supplement Testing: ICP-MS Potency, Form Verification, Disint

Getting Started

ISO 17025 for Supplement Testing, Explained

Getting Started

ISO 17025 vs Non-Accredited Labs: Why It Matters for Supplement Testing

Ingredient Testing

L-Theanine Supplement Testing: HPLC Purity, L vs D Enantiomer Verification, and Identity

Compliance

Supplement Label Claim Substantiation — Testing Every Word on Your Bottle

Ingredient Testing

Maca Root Testing: Identity, Macamide Markers, and Heavy Metal Screening

Test Methods

Melamine Testing Supplements: Detecting Nitrogen Spiking by LC-MS/MS

Specialized

Melatonin Supplement Testing — HPLC Content Verification

Test Methods

Microbial Limits Testing for Supplements

Test Methods

Microcystin Testing Algae Supplements: Cyanotoxin ELISA and LC-MS/MS

Ingredient Testing

Multivitamin Testing: Multi-Analyte Potency, Label Overage

Test Methods

Mycotoxin Testing Supplements: Aflatoxins, Ochratoxin A, Fumonisins

Test Methods

Nitrosamine Testing Supplements: NDMA/NDEA Detection by LC-MS/MS

Ingredient Testing

NMN Supplement Testing: Purity by HPLC, NMN vs NR Verification, and Regulatory Status

Test Methods

Non-GMO PCR Testing for Supplements — How It Works

Specialized

NSF Certified for Sport vs Informed Sport — Which Testing Program?

Specialized

Omega-3 & Fish Oil Supplement Testing — EPA, DHA, TOTOX

Compliance

Organic Supplement Certification — Testing Requirements

Getting Started

7 Supplement Tests You're Probably Overpaying For (And How to Fix It)

Test Methods

PAH Testing Supplements: Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by GC-MS

Test Methods

Pesticide Testing for Supplements — Multi-Residue Screen Guide

Ingredient Testing

Pre-Workout Supplement Testing: Banned Stimulants and Label Accuracy

Ingredient Testing

Prenatal Vitamin Testing: Folate Form, Heavy Metal Safety, Potency

Ingredient Testing

Protein Powder Testing: Heavy Metals, Amino Spiking, and Real Protein Content

Ingredient Testing

Psyllium Fiber Testing: Identity, Microbial Screening for Salmonella, and Water Activity

Test Methods

Residual Solvent Testing for Supplements — USP <467>

Ingredient Testing

Saw Palmetto Testing: Fatty Acid Profile, Adulteration, Identity

Ingredient Testing

Sea Moss Testing: Iodine Content, Heavy Metals, Species Auth

Compliance

Skip Lot Testing for Supplements — When You Can Reduce Testing

Ingredient Testing

Spirulina Chlorella Testing: Microcystin, Heavy Metals, Micro

Compliance

Structure/Function Claims Testing Requirements

Compliance

Supplement Facts Panel Testing Requirements

Getting Started

Third-Party Supplement Testing: Why It's Non-Negotiable

Ingredient Testing

Turmeric Curcumin Testing: Potency, Lead Chromate, Identity

Test Methods

USP 2232 Heavy Metals Testing Explained

Ingredient Testing

Vitamin C Testing: Ascorbic Acid HPLC Potency, Degradation, Stability

Specialized

Vitamin D Potency Testing — HPLC vs LC-MS/MS Methods

Test Methods

Water Activity Testing for Supplements — Why It Matters