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Test Methods

Pesticide Testing for Supplements — Multi-Residue Screen Guide

8 min read Updated June 11, 2026

Botanical supplements come from crops, and crops are treated with pesticides. Even organic-certified ingredients can carry pesticide residues from drift, soil carryover, or fraudulent labeling. Multi-residue pesticide screening is the standard approach — instead of testing for one pesticide at a time, labs screen for 200-500 pesticides simultaneously using LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS. This guide covers which methods to request, what limits apply, and what it costs.

Quick answer

A multi-residue pesticide screen uses liquid and gas chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS) to screen for 200-500 pesticides in a single sample. Cost is $150-400 per sample. Turnaround is 5-10 business days. USP <561> sets limits for 70+ pesticides in botanical articles. The EU and California maintain stricter limits. Amazon expects pesticide testing for botanical ingredients, especially those flagged for ethylene oxide or chlorpyrifos residues.

Why pesticide testing matters for supplements

Pesticide residues in supplements have triggered some of the largest FDA recalls and Amazon enforcement actions in the industry. Notable examples include:

  • Ethylene oxide. Multiple recalls of botanical supplements (especially from India and Southeast Asia) for ethylene oxide residues. Ethylene oxide is a fumigant and a known carcinogen. It is banned in the EU for food use and has no established tolerance in US supplements. FDA treats any detectable level as adulteration.

  • Chlorpyrifos. An organophosphate insecticide linked to neurodevelopmental harm. EPA revoked all food tolerances in 2021. FDA has issued import alerts for botanical products with chlorpyrifos residues.

  • DDT and legacy organochlorines. Banned for decades but persistent in soil, especially in regions with a history of cotton farming. Root crops (ginseng, ashwagandha) can accumulate legacy pesticides from contaminated soil.

  • Glyphosate. The most widely used herbicide globally. While glyphosate tolerances exist for food commodities, many consumers and retailers demand glyphosate-free supplements. Testing for glyphosate requires a separate, specialized method (usually LC-MS/MS with derivatization), as it is not included in standard multi-residue screens.

How multi-residue pesticide screening works

A standard multi-residue screen runs two complementary analyses:

LC-MS/MS (Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry)

Used for polar, non-volatile, and thermally labile pesticides. The sample is extracted with acetonitrile (QuEChERS method), cleaned up, and injected into an LC-MS/MS system. The mass spectrometer monitors specific precursor-to-product ion transitions for each pesticide. A typical LC-MS/MS pesticide panel covers 200-400 pesticides.

GC-MS/MS (Gas Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry)

Used for volatile and semi-volatile pesticides that are not amenable to LC-MS/MS. The sample is extracted similarly, injected into a GC-MS/MS, and analyzed using electron ionization with multiple reaction monitoring (MRM). A typical GC-MS/MS panel covers 100-200 pesticides.

The combined LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS panel typically covers 300-500 pesticides, including organophosphates, organochlorines, carbamates, pyrethroids, triazoles, neonicotinoids, and other classes.

Reporting limits

Most labs report pesticide results with a limit of quantitation (LOQ) of 0.01 mg/kg (10 ppb). This aligns with the EU default maximum residue limit (MRL) of 0.01 mg/kg for pesticides not specifically listed. Some labs offer lower LOQs (0.005 mg/kg) for specific high-risk pesticides.

⚠️ Note

Standard multi-residue screens do NOT include glyphosate, paraquat, or diquat. These herbicides require separate, specialized methods. If your botanical is a conventional (non-organic) crop where glyphosate is commonly used (soy, corn, wheat, oats, legumes), request a separate glyphosate test.

USP <561> limits and other regulatory standards

USP <561> (Articles of Botanical Origin) sets pesticide limits for 70+ compounds. Key limits include:

PesticideUSP <561> limit (mg/kg)
Alachlor0.02
Aldrin and Dieldrin (sum)0.05
Chlordane (sum of isomers)0.05
Chlorpyrifos0.2
DDT (sum of isomers)1.0
Endosulfan (sum of isomers)3.0
Endrin0.05
Heptachlor (sum)0.05
Hexachlorobenzene0.1
Lindane (gamma-HCH)0.6
Parathion-methyl0.2
Permethrin1.0

The USP limits apply to botanical dietary ingredients in the US. If a pesticide is not listed in USP <561>, the default expectation is no detectable residue above the analytical LOQ. FDA generally follows USP <561> in enforcement actions for botanical supplements.

The EU Pharmacopoeia and EU MRL regulations (EC 396/2005) are generally stricter, with a default MRL of 0.01 mg/kg. California Prop 65 includes several pesticides on its list of carcinogens and reproductive toxicants (chlorpyrifos, DDT, lindane, ethylene oxide), requiring warning labels above safe harbor levels.

Typical cost by panel type

| Panel type | Pesticides screened | Typical price | Turnaround | |---|---:|---:| | Basic multi-residue (LC-MS/MS only) | 200-300 | $150-250 | 5-7 business days | | Standard multi-residue (LC-MS/MS + GC-MS/MS) | 300-500 | $200-350 | 5-10 business days | | Extended panel with glyphosate | 300-500 + glyphosate | $300-450 | 7-10 business days | | Full pesticide screen plus ethylene oxide | 300-500 + EtO | $300-450 | 7-10 business days | | Single pesticide by specialized method | 1 | $100-250 | 5-7 business days |

How to choose the right panel

Your panel selection depends on the ingredient, its origin, and your market:

Ingredient typeRecommended panelReason
Botanicals from IndiaFull panel + ethylene oxideEtO fumigation risk is highest from India
Botanicals from ChinaFull panel + chlorpyrifos emphasisHistorical chlorpyrifos issues
Botanicals from South AmericaFull panelBroad pesticide use in tropical agriculture
US-grown conventional botanicalsFull panel + glyphosateGlyphosate is the most common US pesticide
EU-sourced botanicalsStandard panelEU has strict pre-existing MRL enforcement
Organic-certified ingredientsFull panelVerify organic claims; check for prohibited substances
Non-plant ingredients (minerals, synthetics)Limited panel or nonePesticide risk is low for non-plant materials

💡 Note

When requesting a pesticide panel, always specify "USP <561> pesticide screen with reporting at 0.01 mg/kg LOQ." This tells the lab you need pharma-grade sensitivity, not a food-grade screen that may have higher reporting limits.

FAQ

Q: Does organic certification mean I can skip pesticide testing?

A: No. Organic certification reduces pesticide risk but does not eliminate it. Pesticide residues can enter organic supply chains through drift, soil carryover from prior conventional use, post-harvest handling, or fraudulent mislabeling. Many organic brands test every incoming lot for pesticides as part of their quality program. USDA organic regulations require organic handlers to implement preventive practices but do not mandate pesticide testing of every lot.

Q: What is QuEChERS and why do labs mention it?

A: QuEChERS (Quick, Easy, Cheap, Effective, Rugged, Safe) is a sample preparation method for pesticide residue analysis. It extracts pesticides from the sample matrix using acetonitrile, followed by a cleanup step with dispersive solid-phase extraction (dSPE). It is the standard sample prep method for multi-residue pesticide screens and is recognized by AOAC (method 2007.01) and CEN (EN 15662).

Q: Can I test for glyphosate in the same screen?

A: No. Glyphosate is a highly polar, small-molecule herbicide that does not extract or chromatograph well under standard multi-residue methods. It requires a separate, specialized LC-MS/MS method with derivatization (typically FMOC-Cl). Request a separate glyphosate test. Cost is typically $100-200 per sample for glyphosate alone.

Q: How do Amazon's pesticide requirements differ from FDA's?

A: Amazon enforces its own Supplement Compliance Requirements, which require testing documentation from ISO 17025-accredited labs. Amazon has specifically flagged ethylene oxide and chlorpyrifos as high-concern pesticides and may require test data for these compounds even if your product is not botanical. Amazon's enforcement is often more aggressive than FDA's routine surveillance.

Q: What happens if a pesticide is detected below the LOQ?

A: Results reported as "less than LOQ" but above the LOD (limit of detection) indicate the pesticide was detected but at a level too low to quantify accurately. For pesticides with no established tolerance (like ethylene oxide), even a trace detection can be concerning. Discuss any detectable result with your lab and with a regulatory consultant, especially if you sell on Amazon or export to the EU.

Quick Reference

Lab Category: Pesticide Residue Analysis

Methods:

MethodDescriptionPesticides covered
LC-MS/MS multi-residueLiquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry200-400 (polar, non-volatile)
GC-MS/MS multi-residueGas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry100-200 (volatile, semi-volatile)
LC-MS/MS glyphosateSpecialized method for glyphosate and AMPAGlyphosate, AMPA metabolite
GC-MS ethylene oxideSpecialized method for ethylene oxideEthylene oxide, 2-chloroethanol

Sample requirements: 25-100 g of raw botanical or finished product.

Turnaround: 5-10 business days standard; 2-4 business days rush.

Accreditation: ISO 17025 with pesticide residue analysis in the scope. Verify the specific matrices (botanical powders, finished supplements) are included.

Pricing:

PanelPrice
Basic multi-residue (LC-only)$150-250
Standard multi-residue (LC+GC)$200-350
Extended with glyphosate$300-450
Extended with ethylene oxide$300-450
Glyphosate only$100-200

Regulatory standards: USP <561> (US), EC 396/2005 (EU), California Prop 65, Amazon Supplement Compliance Requirements.

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