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Test Methods

Allergen & Gluten-Free Testing for Supplements — ELISA Methods

8 min read Updated June 11, 2026

A gluten-free label claim on a supplement carries legal weight under FDA's 2020 gluten-free final rule — and getting it wrong can mean a recall or a consumer lawsuit. ELISA testing is the standard method for verifying gluten-free claims and detecting major food allergens (milk, soy, egg, peanut, tree nuts, fish, shellfish). This guide covers which ELISA kits to request, what the 20 ppm gluten threshold means in practice, and how to verify allergen cross-contact in your supply chain.

Quick answer

ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) is the standard method for allergen and gluten testing in supplements. Gluten testing uses the R5 sandwich ELISA (Ridascreen Gliadin) or the G12 antibody ELISA, with a reporting limit of 5-10 ppm. FDA's gluten-free rule requires less than 20 ppm gluten. Testing costs $50-150 per allergen per sample. A full allergen panel (gluten plus Big 8 allergens) costs $200-500. Turnaround is 3-7 business days.

FDA's gluten-free rule for supplements

FDA's 2020 final rule on gluten-free labeling (21 CFR 101.91) applies to dietary supplements as well as conventional foods. The rule states:

  • A product labeled "gluten-free" must contain less than 20 ppm of gluten.
  • A product labeled "no gluten," "free of gluten," or "without gluten" is held to the same standard.
  • Any detectable gluten from wheat, rye, barley, or crossbred hybrids counts — not just added gluten.
  • The 20 ppm threshold is based on analytical method capability and clinical data showing that most individuals with celiac disease can tolerate trace levels below 20 ppm.
  • There is no requirement to test every lot, but manufacturers must have a documented basis for the gluten-free claim. Testing is the most defensible basis.

The rule does not mandate a specific test method. ELISA is the most widely used and FDA-accepted method for gluten determination. The R5 sandwich ELISA is the AOAC-approved and Codex Alimentarius type I method for gluten.

How ELISA works for allergen testing

ELISA uses antibodies to detect and quantify specific proteins:

  1. Coating: The microplate well is coated with a capture antibody specific to the target allergen protein.
  2. Sample addition: The sample extract is added. Target proteins bind to the capture antibody.
  3. Detection antibody: A second antibody, also specific to the target protein and linked to an enzyme (typically horseradish peroxidase), is added. This forms a "sandwich" (antibody-protein-antibody).
  4. Substrate: A colorimetric substrate is added. The enzyme converts the substrate to a colored product.
  5. Measurement: The color intensity (absorbance) is measured on a plate reader. Intensity is proportional to allergen concentration.
  6. Quantitation: A standard curve (0, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 ppm standards) converts absorbance to concentration.

The gluten ELISA challenge

Gluten testing presents unique challenges that other allergen ELISAs do not face:

  • Gluten is not one protein. It is a mixture of prolamins (gliadin in wheat, secalin in rye, hordein in barley) and glutelins. The antibody must recognize all of them proportionally.
  • Hydrolyzed or fermented gluten may not be detected. If the ingredient is hydrolyzed (e.g., hydrolyzed wheat protein) or fermented (e.g., soy sauce from wheat), the R5 sandwich ELISA may underreport gluten because the antibody requires intact or partially intact protein epitopes. The competitive R5 ELISA is more appropriate for hydrolyzed samples.
  • Matrix effects. High polyphenol content (botanicals, cocoa, tea extracts), high protein content, and certain excipients can interfere with ELISA results. Labs should perform a spike-and-recovery experiment to verify the method works in your specific matrix.

Allergen testing panels and costs

TestMethodLOQPrice per sample
Gluten (gliadin)R5 sandwich ELISA5 ppm$75-150
Gluten (hydrolyzed)Competitive R5 ELISA10 ppm$100-175
Milk (casein, beta-lactoglobulin)Sandwich ELISA1-5 ppm$50-100
Soy (soy trypsin inhibitor)Sandwich ELISA1-5 ppm$50-100
Egg (ovalbumin, ovomucoid)Sandwich ELISA1-5 ppm$50-100
Peanut (Ara h 1, Ara h 3)Sandwich ELISA1-5 ppm$50-100
AlmondSandwich ELISA1-5 ppm$50-100
Total Big 8 panel (gluten + milk + soy + egg + peanut + tree nuts + fish + shellfish)Multiple ELISAVaries by allergen$200-500

💡 Note

Not all labs run all allergen ELISAs. Call ahead and ask: "Do you run the R5 sandwich ELISA for gluten and can you provide a limit of quantitation at or below 5 ppm? Do you offer spike-and-recovery verification for my specific supplement matrix?"

When allergen testing is needed

ScenarioTesting recommendation
You make a "gluten-free" label claimTest every finished product batch for gluten at least initially. Reduced frequency after 10+ passing lots.
You make an "allergen-free" claim (e.g., dairy-free, soy-free)Test for the specific allergen you are claiming absence of.
Your product shares equipment with allergen-containing productsTest the first production run after an allergen-containing product for cross-contact.
Your supplier provides a COA stating "no allergens detected"Verify with independent testing at least for initial qualification.
You source ingredients from facilities that also process common allergensTest incoming lots for the specific allergens of concern.
Your product is a "free-from" brand targeting the allergen-sensitive consumerTest every lot for all claimed "free from" allergens.

Cross-contact verification in shared facilities

Cross-contact (also called cross-contamination) occurs when an allergen protein from one product transfers to another through shared equipment, air handling, personnel movement, or inadequate cleaning. Even certified gluten-free oats can contain gluten from wheat grown in adjacent fields or processed in shared elevators.

Testing for cross-contact:

  1. Environmental swabbing: Swab shared equipment surfaces after cleaning and before your run. Test swabs by ELISA or lateral flow device. This verifies cleaning effectiveness.
  2. First-product-off-the-line testing: After a line changeover from an allergen-containing product to yours, test the first units off the line for the allergen of concern.
  3. Periodic finished product testing: Even with validated cleaning, test finished product at a defined frequency. FDA expects documented verification that your allergen control program works.

⚠️ Note

ELISA tests for protein, not allergen source. A milk ELISA measures casein or beta-lactoglobulin protein. If your product contains whey protein isolate but you label it "dairy-free," the ELISA will detect the whey protein and correctly flag the product as containing milk allergen. Do not label a product "free from" an allergen if it contains ingredients derived from that allergen source.

FAQ

Q: What is the difference between the R5 sandwich ELISA and the competitive R5 ELISA?

A: The sandwich ELISA requires intact or partially intact gluten protein with at least two antibody binding sites. It works well for unprocessed ingredients like wheat flour but may under-report gluten in hydrolyzed, fermented, or extensively heat-processed products. The competitive ELISA requires only one antibody binding site and is more appropriate for hydrolyzed gluten (e.g., hydrolyzed wheat protein, soy sauce, beer, sourdough). If your supplement contains hydrolyzed wheat protein or fermented ingredients, request the competitive ELISA.

Q: Can I just use a supplier COA that says gluten-free?

A: For initial qualification, confirm your supplier's COA with independent testing. For ongoing production, 21 CFR 111.75(d) allows you to rely on a qualified supplier's COA, but FDA and plaintiff attorneys will expect you to have verified that COA through your own testing at some point. A gluten-free claim without any testing documentation is a liability.

Q: What causes a false positive ELISA result?

A: Matrix interference is the main cause. High polyphenol content (green tea extract, grape seed extract, cocoa), high tannins, certain preservatives, and high protein concentrations can cross-react with ELISA antibodies or interfere with the enzymatic reaction. Labs should run a spike-and-recovery experiment on your specific matrix to verify the method is valid. A positive result should be confirmed by a second, orthogonal method if possible.

Q: How much sample do I need for allergen ELISA testing?

A: Typically 10-50 g per sample. The lab will homogenize the sample, extract proteins into a buffer, and test the extract. For composite testing of multiple units (e.g., 10 capsules ground together), 10-25 g is usually sufficient. Ask the lab for specific submission requirements.

Q: Is PCR better than ELISA for allergen testing?

A: They measure different things. ELISA measures allergen protein — the thing that actually triggers an allergic reaction. PCR measures DNA from the allergen source. A food may contain celery DNA (from celery powder used as a flavoring) but have no allergenic celery protein because the protein was denatured. Conversely, a food may contain milk protein (casein) but no detectable milk DNA. For regulatory compliance and consumer safety, protein-based ELISA is the standard. PCR is complementary, not a replacement.

Quick Reference

Lab Category: Allergen Testing / ELISA

Methods: R5 sandwich ELISA (Codex type I), R5 competitive ELISA, G12 ELISA, allergen-specific sandwich ELISAs, lateral flow devices (screening only).

Sample requirements: 10-50 g of finished product or ingredient per sample.

Turnaround: 3-7 business days standard; 1-3 business days rush.

Accreditation: ISO 17025 with allergen ELISA methods on the scope. Verify the lab participates in proficiency testing programs (FAPAS, LGC).

Pricing:

TestPrice per allergen
Gluten ELISA$75-150
Single allergen (milk, soy, egg, etc.)$50-100
Full Big 8 panel$200-500

Regulatory standards: FDA gluten-free rule (21 CFR 101.91, less than 20 ppm gluten), FALCPA (Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act), EU Regulation 1169/2011 (allergen labeling), Codex Alimentarius.

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