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

19 min read Updated June 9, 2026

A no-BS guide for founders who just want their bottles to survive the warehouse, the store shelf, and the customer's bathroom cabinet.


You just dropped real money on an amazing formula. The ingredients are clean, the label looks sick, and you're ready to ship. Then someone hits you with: "So what's the expiration date?"

And you freeze.

Because honestly? You have no idea if those capsules will hold up for 6 months or 6 years. That's exactly where stability testing comes in — and I'm going to walk you through everything you need to know without putting you to sleep.


What Stability Testing Actually Is (Like You're Five)

Picture this: you bake chocolate chip cookies. You leave one on the counter, one in the fridge, and one in a hot car. You check them every few days to see which one goes stale first.

That's stability testing. Except instead of cookies, it's your supplement. And instead of "stale," you're measuring whether the ingredients are still potent, whether mold started growing, and whether the capsules are disintegrating into a sad little pile.

There are three main flavors:

  • Real-time (long-term) stability: Store your product under normal conditions (25°C / 60% relative humidity) and test it every few months for 2+ years. This is the gold standard. It mirrors what actually happens on a shelf.
  • Accelerated stability: Crank the heat and humidity to 40°C / 75% RH for 6 months. The idea is that ingredients degrade faster under stress, so you can estimate shelf life without waiting 2 years. It's not perfect, but it gets you in the ballpark fast.
  • Stress testing: Push your product to the absolute limit — like 50°C or freeze-thaw cycles — to see what breaks first. Think of it as the "wrecking ball" version. Useful for understanding failure modes, not for setting expiration dates.

Why You NEED This (Before Someone Asks for Proof)

Let's be real: stability testing costs money and takes time. So why can't you just skip it?

Because the FDA expects it. Under 21 CFR Part 111 (cGMPs for dietary supplements), you're required to determine your product's shelf life using scientifically valid stability data. You don't get to guess. You don't get to copy your competitor's date. You need actual data on your product, in your packaging.

And it's not just the FDA:

  • Amazon wants expiration dates listed on your detail page, and they'll flag products that don't have them. If a customer gets a product that's degraded, you're eating the return plus a bad review.
  • Retail buyers — Whole Foods, Sprouts, CVS — will straight-up reject your line sheet if you can't provide stability data. It's part of their vendor qualification checklist.
  • Your insurance company will absolutely ask whether you tested stability before covering any claim related to a bad batch.
  • Your own sanity. Nothing is worse than getting an email from a customer six months in saying your gummies melted into one giant blob. Stability testing catches that before it catches you.

The ICH Guidelines, But Make It Plain English

The supplement industry follows the ICH (International Council for Harmonisation) guidelines, specifically ICH Q1A through Q1E. Don't panic — you don't need to read 200 pages of regulatory text. Here's what actually matters for you:

ICH GuidelineWhat It CoversWhat You Actually Need to Know
Q1A(R2)General stability testingThis is the master document. It defines the temperature/humidity zones and time points.
Q1BPhotostability testingDoes your product break down in light? If your bottle is clear, you need to test this.
Q1CNew dosage formsNot super relevant for supplements unless you're doing something wildly novel.
Q1DBracketing and matrixingCan you test fewer samples by grouping similar strengths or sizes? Yes, if done right.
Q1EData evaluation and extrapolationHow to take your data and actually set that expiration date. This is the money guideline.

The key takeaway: ICH says you need at least 3 batches tested, with pulls at 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months for real-time, and 0, 3, and 6 months for accelerated. Three batches proves your results aren't a fluke, and the time points give you enough data to spot a trend before it becomes a problem.


Real-Time Stability: The Slow-and-Steady Gold Standard

Real-time testing means you put your finished product (in its final packaging — yes, the actual bottle or pouch you'll sell it in) into a stability chamber set to 25°C ± 2°C and 60% ± 5% relative humidity.

These are the ICH "Zone II" conditions, and they represent what your product experiences in most of North America and Europe. If you're selling primarily in Southeast Asia or the Middle East (Zone IV), you'd use 30°C/75% RH instead — because Dubai is not Chicago.

Here's the cadence you're following:

  • Month 0: Baseline. Everything passes. This is your reference point for all future comparisons.
  • Month 3: First real check-in. If something's already drifting, you'll know.
  • Month 6: Halfway through accelerated timeline. Patterns start emerging.
  • Month 9: Midpoint. Good time to assess whether your formula has legs.
  • Month 12: One year in. Major milestone — many brands set their initial expiration here.
  • Month 18: Year and a half. If your data still looks clean, you're in great shape.
  • Month 24: Two-year mark. You've proven a 24-month shelf life. Congrats.

At each pull point, the lab pulls a set of samples from the chamber and runs your full test panel. You can't skip a pull point and go back later — once that month-9 window closes, you can't recreate month-9 conditions. This is a rolling train; you either stay on it or you jump off.


Accelerated Stability: The 6-Month Shortcut

Accelerated testing runs at 40°C ± 2°C and 75% ± 5% RH for 6 months. You're basically stress-aging your product to simulate what happens over a longer period.

Here's the catch: accelerated says your product degrades at least this fast. It doesn't say exactly how fast. Some ingredients degrade linearly with temperature, some exponentially, and some are weirdly stable until they suddenly aren't. That's why you can't fully replace real-time data with accelerated — but you can use it to get a conditional expiration date while your real-time study catches up.

Typical accelerated pull points: 0, 3, and 6 months. Some brands add month 1 or month 2 if they're nervous.

When accelerated works well: Simple capsules, tablets with well-characterized ingredients, products with known degradation profiles.

When accelerated lies to you: Probiotics, enzymes, oil-based softgels, anything with live cultures. Heat kills these things, so accelerated data makes them look way worse than they actually are on a normal shelf. Don't set a probiotic's shelf life based on 40°C data — you'll end up with a 3-month expiration on a product that realistically lasts 18 months.


What You're Actually Testing at Every Time Point

When the lab pulls those samples, they're not just sniffing them and saying "seems fine." Here's the full checklist:

Potency / Assay (The Non-Negotiable)

This is the big one. Each active ingredient has a specification — usually ±10% of the label claim. As your product ages, ingredients degrade. The moment an ingredient drops below 90% of its label claim, you've hit the end of its viable life. Some ingredients (like Vitamin C) are notorious for degrading fast. Others (like minerals) barely budge.

Microbial Limits

You're testing for total aerobic plate count, yeast and mold, E. coli, Salmonella, and Staph aureus. If your product fails micro at any point, that batch is dead. Game over. Doesn't matter how potent it is — nobody wants to sell a moldy capsule.

Physical Appearance

Does the tablet still look like a tablet? Is the powder clumping? Are the softgels leaking? Did the gummies fuse together into a single mega-gummy? You'd be shocked how many products fail on appearance alone, especially in humid conditions.

Disintegration / Dissolution

For tablets and capsules, this measures how fast the product breaks down after you swallow it. If a tablet turns into a rock after 6 months at 40°C, it'll sail right through your digestive system without releasing anything. That's a fail.

Moisture Content

Especially critical for powders and hygroscopic ingredients. Too much moisture uptake means clumping, microbial growth, and faster chemical degradation. Your silica gel desiccant packet is doing real work here.


How to Set Your Expiration Date from Stability Data

You've got data. Now what?

The ICH Q1E approach uses statistical regression. You plot each key parameter over time and calculate the point where the 95% confidence interval crosses the specification limit. That intersection is your shelf life.

Let's make that human. Say your Vitamin B12 starts at 110% of label claim (you overage slightly because you know it degrades). At month 12 it's at 95%. At month 24 it hits 87% — below your 90% spec. The regression line with confidence intervals might show that the earliest point you'd expect 10% of batches to fail is at month 22. So you set your expiration at 18 months to give yourself a safety buffer.

Important: Your shelf life is only as long as your shortest-lived critical parameter. If your Vitamin D is rock solid for 36 months but your probiotic count crashes at month 8, your expiration date is 8 months (or you reformulate).

Also: you can only claim a shelf life as long as you've tested. No real-time data past month 12? You can't claim 24 months. Full stop.


How Much Stability Testing Actually Costs

Let's talk money. Here's a realistic breakdown for a single-SKU supplement:

Testing ApproachWhat You GetCost RangeTimeline
Budget (small batch)1 batch, real-time only, minimum pull points (0, 3, 6, 12), basic assay + micro$3,000 – $6,00012 months to initial data
Standard (recommended)3 batches, real-time (24 months) + 1 batch accelerated, full test panel including dissolution$15,000 – $25,0006 months for accelerated data, 24 months for full real-time
Full ICH compliance3 batches, real-time (36 months) + 3 batches accelerated, photostability, full panel every pull point$30,000 – $50,000+36 months complete

What drives the cost up: Number of active ingredients tested, complexity of assays (probiotics are expensive to enumerate), number of batches, and whether you need photostability or special storage conditions.

What's often overlooked: Chamber rental fees. Most labs charge a monthly per-chamber fee (~$200-500/month) in addition to testing costs. And you typically need two chambers — one for real-time, one for accelerated. That's $5,000-12,000 in chamber fees over a 24-month study.


Using Accelerated Data for an Initial Expiration Date

Here's a practical playbook I've seen work:

You're launching a new product. You can't wait 24 months for real-time data before you put an expiration date on the bottle. So you:

  1. Start your real-time AND accelerated studies simultaneously (day 1).
  2. After 6 months, you have a full accelerated data set.
  3. If your accelerated data shows no significant degradation (<5% potency loss, passes all micro), you can assign a 12-month provisional shelf life based on ICH Q1E extrapolation rules.
  4. Label your bottles with "EXP: [12 months from manufacture]" and keep the real-time study running.
  5. At month 12, when real-time data confirms stability, extend to 18 or 24 months and update your labels on the next print run.

This is standard practice and most contract manufacturers are used to doing it. Just make sure your QC team documents the rationale — the FDA inspector will want to see the paper trail.


Common Stability Testing Mistakes (I've Seen Them All)

Wrong Packaging for the Stability Study

The most expensive mistake you can make. If you test your product in a heat-sealed foil pouch but sell it in a PET bottle with a basic screw cap, your data is garbage. The stability chamber needs to contain exactly what the customer receives. Same bottle, same cap, same desiccant, same cotton ball, same induction seal. If you later change your bottle supplier, you need a bridging study to prove equivalence.

Not Enough Time Points

Some founders try to save money by only testing at 0 and 24 months. This is useless. If your product fails at month 24 but you have no intermediate data, you don't know when it failed. Did it happen at month 6 or month 23? Without that data, you can't set an evidence-based expiration — and you definitely can't tell the FDA you did your due diligence.

Skipping Photostability

I get it. Photostability testing means an extra chamber with UV/visible light exposure and another $2,000-4,000. But if your bottle isn't opaque, light is hitting your product every single day. Sunlight streaming through a warehouse window, fluorescent lights at a retail shelf, the LED in a customer's kitchen. Light-sensitive ingredients like CoQ10, riboflavin, and certain botanicals degrade noticeably under light exposure. If you're using an amber bottle, you probably still need to test — amber blocks UV but not all visible light.

Testing Only One Batch

One batch is an anecdote, not data. Manufacturers have variability. Raw material lots have variability. If you test one batch and it passes, all you've proven is that one specific batch was stable. The FDA wants three batches because they want to see consistency across your manufacturing process.

Ignoring the "In-Use" Period

Your label says "take 2 capsules daily" and the bottle has 60 capsules. That's a 30-day supply. The customer opens the bottle repeatedly for a month — exposing it to ambient humidity, bathroom steam, and kitchen heat. If you only tested sealed bottles in a chamber, you don't know what happens after opening. Some brands run a separate "open-container" or "in-use" study where they simulate daily opening/closing at room conditions. Not always required, but it earns you serious credibility points.


What Happens When Your Product Fails a Pull Point

First: don't panic. A stability failure doesn't mean your business is over.

Here's the triage process:

  1. Confirm it's real. Was it a lab error? Check the COA from that pull point carefully. Retest the retain sample. Labs make mistakes — cross-contamination, calculation errors, misplaced decimal points. Rule that out first.

  2. Investigate the root cause. Did potency drop on one active or all of them? If it's one ingredient, that's a formulation problem. If it's everything, you might have a packaging or storage issue. Check whether the chamber stayed within spec during that pull period — a 3-day temperature excursion can cook a batch.

  3. Assess the timeline. If you failed at month 18 but your data at months 0, 3, 6, 9, and 12 was clean, you can still justify a 12-month shelf life. That's not a loss — it's just a shorter window than you hoped. Update your labels and move on.

  4. Reformulate or repackage. Maybe that ingredient needs a more stable form (methylcobalamin instead of cyanocobalamin, or enteric coating on a probiotic). Maybe your bottle needs a better moisture barrier. Run a new study with the fix.

  5. Document everything. If the FDA ever audits you, they'll want to see that you caught the failure, investigated it, and took corrective action. A failure with good documentation looks better than a lack of testing entirely.


How to Write a Stability Protocol (Your Operating Manual)

Before your first sample ever goes into a chamber, you need a written stability protocol. This is your study's constitution — it defines everything so there's zero ambiguity about what you're doing and why.

Your protocol should cover:

  • Product description: Full formula, dosage form, packaging spec, batch numbers.
  • Chamber conditions: Exact temperature and humidity set points, plus acceptable drift ranges. Include which ICH zone you're targeting.
  • Pull schedule: Every time point with exact dates or intervals. "Approximately 3 months" doesn't fly — you need "90 days ± 5 days" or similar.
  • Test panel: Which parameters are tested at which time points. You might do full micro only at 0, 12, and 24 months while testing potency at every pull. Be specific.
  • Specifications: The pass/fail criteria for each test parameter. Numbers, not feelings. "Potency: 90-120% of label claim" is a spec. "Product should look okay" is not.
  • Sample quantity: How many units are pulled at each time point. Typically 10-20 units per pull depending on the testing volume.
  • Retain sample plan: How many extra units you're holding back in case of retests or disputes.
  • Data evaluation plan: Statistical method for trend analysis and expiration date setting. Reference ICH Q1E.
  • Deviations procedure: What happens if the chamber goes out of spec? How do you document and assess impact?
  • Signatures: QA manager, lab director, and ideally the formulator. Everybody signs off before the study starts.

Gummies and Liquids: The Troublemakers

Most of the advice above assumes you're making capsules or tablets. But if you're in the gummy or liquid game, stability gets trickier. Here's what's different:

Gummy Stability

Gummies are basically candy with supplements inside. They contain sugar (or sugar alternatives), gelatin or pectin, water, and active ingredients — all mixed into a matrix that really, really wants to change over time.

  • Texture changes: Pectin-based gummies can harden. Gelatin-based gummies can melt or weep. You need to test texture (using a texture analyzer) at every pull point, not just look at them.
  • Water activity (aw): This is the metric that matters for microbial stability, not total moisture. Keep aw below 0.65 and most microbes can't grow. If your aw creeps up over time, you've got a packaging problem.
  • Sticking/clumping: Nothing screams "unprofessional" like a bottle of gummies fused into a single block. Including a drying agent and using a bottle that's appropriately sized (not too much headspace) helps.
  • Overage considerations: Because gummies are processed with heat, some actives degrade during manufacturing. You might start at 120-150% of label claim at month 0 to account for processing loss plus shelf-life loss. Document your overages carefully.

Liquid Stability

Liquid supplements have their own headaches:

  • pH drift: Liquids can become more acidic or alkaline over time, which affects ingredient stability and taste. Track pH at every pull.
  • Precipitation: That perfectly clear liquid at month 0 can develop a cloudy sediment by month 6. Sometimes it's harmless (just the ingredient falling out of solution), sometimes it's degradation. You need to test the sediment separately to know which.
  • Preservative efficacy: Liquids without preservatives are just bacterial buffets. If you're going preservative-free, your micro testing needs to be especially rigorous. Antimicrobial effectiveness testing (AET) is recommended.
  • Container interaction: Some liquid formulas leach compounds from plastic bottles or react with metal caps. Test your product in the exact container you'll sell it in — glass versus PET can make a significant difference in stability.

The Stability Testing Timeline: From Day Zero to Shelf-Ready

Here's what your first year actually looks like:

TimeReal-Time MilestoneAccelerated MilestoneAction
Day 0Baseline testedBaseline testedProtocol signed, samples loaded into chambers
Month 3Pull + testPull + testFirst check-in. Early drift detectable.
Month 6Pull + testFinal accelerated pull + testIf accelerated data is clean → set 12-month provisional shelf life
Month 9Pull + testComplete (optional continued)Midpoint assessment
Month 12Pull + testCompleteReal-time confirmation → extend to 18-24 months; print new labels
Months 18-24Pull + test at eachCompleteFinalize expiration dating
Month 36Optional extensionCompleteExtended shelf life claim if data supports it

FAQ: The Questions I Actually Get Asked

Q: Can I use a competitor's stability data for my product? Nope. Even if your formula looks identical, differences in raw material sources, manufacturing processes, and packaging mean their data doesn't apply to your product. The FDA won't accept it.

Q: Do I need stability testing for private-label products? The company providing the private-label formula should have stability data on the base formula, but you still need to verify it in your specific packaging. Plus, you're the brand owner — the legal responsibility sits with you.

Q: What if I change my capsule color but nothing else? You're probably fine without a new full study, but you need a documented justification (often called a "comparability assessment"). If the dye changes the moisture barrier properties of the capsule shell, you might have an issue. When in doubt, ask your contract manufacturer's QA team.

Q: How long does a stability study actually take start to finish? A 24-month real-time study takes... 24 months. Plus 2-4 weeks for protocol writing, chamber setup, and baseline testing on the front end, and another 2-4 weeks for final data analysis and reporting on the back end. Budget 25-26 months total for the full journey.

Q: Can I sell my product while the stability study is running? Yes — that's the point of the accelerated-to-provisional approach I described earlier. You set a 12-month expiration from accelerated data and adjust once real-time data comes in.

Q: Do I really need 3 batches or can I get away with 1? For full FDA compliance: 3 batches. For getting a provisional expiration date and launching on Amazon: 1 batch often works as a starting point. Just know that during an FDA inspection, the inspector will note it as a gap, and you'll want to have the additional batches underway or a commitment to do them.


The Bottom Line

Stability testing isn't a box to check — it's the thing that proves your product isn't a dud 8 months from now. It protects your customers, your brand, and your liability exposure.

Start early. Work with a lab that knows supplements (not just pharma — supplement matrixes have their own quirks). Document everything. And for the love of all that is holy, test your product in the exact bottle you're going to sell it in.


Need stability testing for your supplement? LabQuotes connects you with ISO-accredited labs that specialize in dietary supplement stability programs — real-time, accelerated, and photostability. Get competing quotes from multiple labs in 24 hours so you don't overpay.

Get Your Stability Testing Quote →


Last updated: June 2026
Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes. Always consult with your regulatory counsel and quality assurance team for decisions specific to your product and compliance obligations.

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