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

10 min read Updated June 11, 2026

Your lab can only test what you send them. Send the wrong quantity in the wrong packaging with no documentation, and you'll get a rejected sample notice — not a COA. Most first-time testing delays aren't the lab's fault. They're sample preparation errors by the brand.

Here's exactly how to prepare, package, and ship supplement samples so your lab gets everything they need the first time, no back-and-forth, no delays.

Quick answer

For a standard finished product release panel (identity, potency, heavy metals, microbial), send 15-20 retail units per batch in sealed packaging with a completed chain of custody form. Raw materials require 50-100g of powder in double-bagged ziplock bags. Always include a COA request form listing every test requested. Ship via tracked courier. Budget $30-80 for domestic overnight shipping. Microbial samples should ship overnight with a cold pack if ambient temperature exceeds 25C. Standard turnaround: 10-14 business days from lab receipt of proper samples. Full panel release testing costs $600-1,500 per batch.

How Many Samples Do I Actually Need to Send?

The number matters. Too few and the lab can't run all tests with proper replicates. Too many and you're wasting product. Here's the breakdown:

Product TypeMinimum Units to SendWhy
Tablets or capsules15-20 finished unitsLab composites 5-10 units per test; 3-4 tests need separate composites
Powders100-150gEnough for multiple weighings, retain sample, and re-test if needed
Liquids3-5 unopened bottlesEach test draws from a separate bottle to avoid contamination
Gummies20-25 piecesHigher variability requires more units for compositing
Softgels15-20 unitsSame as capsules — need enough for composite + retain
Raw material powder50-100gIdentity, potency, metals, microbial each need material from separate containers

If you're doing stability testing, double these quantities — the lab needs samples for time-zero plus every pull point (3-month, 6-month, 12-month, 24-month). A full 24-month stability study on a single product can require 80-100 units total across all time points.

How to Package Samples So They Arrive Intact

Labs receive samples that are crushed, leaking, or contaminated from poor packaging more often than you'd think. A broken capsule or leaked liquid can't be tested. Here's the correct packaging per form:

Tablets and capsules: Leave in original retail packaging when possible. If sending loose, place in a rigid plastic container (not a bag — tablets crush each other in bags). Wrap the container in bubble wrap. The lab needs intact dosage units for weight variation, disintegration, and compositing.

Powders: Double-bag in ziplock bags. Squeeze the air out before sealing (reduces oxidation during transit). Place the double-bagged powder in a rigid box with packing material. Powders that arrive split open contaminate everything else in the box.

Liquids: Ship in original sealed retail bottles. Tape the cap shut with clear packing tape. Place each bottle in its own sealed ziplock bag (if one leaks, it doesn't ruin the others). Wrap each bagged bottle in bubble wrap. Ship upright if possible — mark the box "THIS SIDE UP" with arrows.

Gummies: Gummies stick together in heat. Place in a rigid container with wax paper between layers. Ship with a cold pack if ambient temperature is above 25C (77F). Melted-together gummies can't be accurately composited.

Micro samples for microbial testing: Sterile packaging is critical. Use sterile collection containers (available from the lab on request). Do not touch the inside of the container or the sample with bare hands. Ship overnight. Include a cold pack if temperature exceeds 25C.

⚠️ Note

Never ship loose capsules in an envelope. I've seen brands mail 10 capsules in a paper envelope through regular mail. They arrived as powder. The lab can't test capsule powder that may have been cross-contaminated by whatever else was in the mail sorting machine. Rigid packaging. Always.

Every sample submission needs a completed chain of custody (COC) form. This is a legal document that tracks who handled the sample and what tests are requested. Without it, the lab can't legally start testing.

A proper COC form includes:

FieldWhat to Write
Company name and addressYour brand's legal entity name and shipping address
Product nameExactly as it appears on your label
Batch or lot numberThe unique identifier for this production batch
Date of manufactureWhen the batch was produced
Sample descriptionDosage form, serving size, unit count
Tests requestedEach test with method preference if applicable (e.g., "Heavy metals — ICP-MS, USP <2232>")
Turnaround requestedStandard (10-14 days) or Rush (5-7 days, additional fee)
Report deliveryEmail address for PDF COA delivery
Special instructionsAny handling, storage, or method notes
Submitter signature and dateYour signature verifying the above is accurate
Carrier and tracking numberFedEx/UPS tracking for proof of shipment

Keep a copy of every COC form. If there's ever a dispute about what was tested, or if an FDA investigator asks for your testing documentation, the COC form is part of your chain of evidence.

Shipping — Which Carrier, How Fast, and What It Costs

The lab needs to receive your samples in testable condition, which means fast shipping and appropriate temperature control.

Shipment TypeCarrierSpeedCost (Domestic US)
Routine (dry tablets/capsules/powders)FedEx/UPS Ground2-5 days$15-35
Routine (any dosage form)FedEx/UPS 2-Day2 days$25-50
Microbial samplesFedEx/UPS OvernightNext day$40-80
InternationalFedEx International Priority2-4 days$80-200
Cold chain requiredFedEx/UPS with cold packOvernight$50-100

Microbial samples always go overnight. The microbial profile of a supplement sitting in a hot truck for 5 days is not the microbial profile that left your warehouse. Labs will reject microbial samples that arrive outside the acceptable temperature window or beyond the hold-time limit.

For domestic shipments in the US, FedEx and UPS are the standard choices. USPS is not recommended — tracking is less reliable and delivery times are unpredictable for time-sensitive samples. For international shipments, FedEx International Priority provides the fastest customs clearance for non-hazardous supplement samples.

💡 Note

Schedule lab shipments early in the week. Shipping on a Thursday means your samples sit in a warehouse over the weekend. Ship Monday or Tuesday. The lab receives them fresh, processes them mid-week, and your turnaround clock starts immediately rather than after a weekend of sample degradation.

What Happens When Your Samples Arrive at the Lab

The lab logs your samples into their Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) and assigns a unique lab ID number. They check the sample condition against your COC form. If anything doesn't match — wrong quantity, damaged packaging, missing COC form, tests requested don't match the sample type — they'll contact you before proceeding.

The lab then:

  1. Photographs the samples as received (for their records)
  2. Assigns sub-samples to each analytical department (chemistry, microbiology)
  3. Logs the samples into temperature-controlled storage until testing begins
  4. Reserves retain samples (if you requested them) in a separate storage location

Your turnaround clock starts when the lab accepts the samples as properly received and verified — not when you shipped them, not when tracking says delivered. If there's a delay between delivery and lab processing (common on Fridays), that's added to your timeline.

Documentation — What to Keep For Your Records

Every sample shipment generates documentation you need for GMP compliance:

  • Copy of the completed COC form
  • Shipping label and tracking number
  • Carrier receipt with ship date and declared value
  • Delivery confirmation
  • Lab acknowledgment of receipt (email or portal notification)
  • Final COA matched to the COC form
  • Retain sample log entry (if applicable)

File all of this with your batch record. 21 CFR 111.260 requires complete batch production records that include testing documentation. The shipment paperwork is part of your testing documentation. FDA investigators check this chain.

FAQ

Q: Can I ship samples from multiple batches in one box?

Yes, but separate them clearly. Each batch needs its own sealed container, its own label, and its own COC form. Never mix different batches in the same sample container. If batch A and batch B capsules end up in the same ziplock bag, neither batch can be tested.

Q: What if my sample arrives damaged?

The lab will document the damage with photos, note it on your COC form, and contact you. You'll need to ship fresh samples. This is why sending extra units matters — if you send exactly the minimum and one breaks, you're reshipping. Sending 20 units when 15 are needed gives you a 5-unit buffer.

Q: How long after manufacturing should I send samples?

As soon as possible. Your product degrades from the moment it's manufactured. The lab results should represent the product at release — not the product after sitting in your warehouse for 3 months. For shelf-life studies, the time-zero pull must be tested within 30 days of manufacture to establish the baseline.

Q: Do I need to notify the lab before shipping?

Yes. Most labs require advance notification so they can expect your shipment and allocate instrument time. Send an email with your tracking number, expected delivery date, and a scanned copy of your COC form. Labs that receive unexpected samples may not process them immediately.

Q: Can I hand-deliver samples instead of shipping?

Most labs accept hand delivery or courier delivery. Call ahead to confirm. Some labs have specific receiving hours or require you to check in at a specific entrance. Hand delivery can save 1-2 days of shipping time on your turnaround.


Quick Reference

Lab Category

You need an ISO 17025 food/supplement testing lab. For microbial testing, the lab must be accredited for the specific USP <2021>/<2022> methods. Verify accreditation at the ANAB directory or your country's equivalent.

Sample Requirements Summary

ProductQuantityPackagingShipping
Tablets/Capsules15-20 unitsRigid container, bubble wrapGround or 2-Day
Powders100-150gDouble ziplock, rigid boxGround or 2-Day
Liquids3-5 bottlesTape caps, individual bagsGround or 2-Day
Gummies20-25 piecesRigid container, wax paper layersCold pack if >25C
Microbial samplesPer COC formSterile containersOvernight + cold pack

Turnaround from Shipment

StageTime
Shipping (domestic)1-3 days
Lab receipt and logging1 business day
Testing (standard full panel)10-14 business days
COA report generation1 business day
Total from ship date12-19 days

Accreditation Notes

Lab must hold current ISO 17025 accreditation. The shipping and receiving documentation becomes part of your GMP records under 21 CFR 111.260. The lab's handling procedures should be documented in your lab qualification records.

Shipping Cost Reference (Domestic US)

MethodCostWhen to Use
Ground$15-35Routine non-micro samples
2-Day$25-50Standard choice for most shipments
Overnight$40-80Microbial samples, rush testing
Cold chain overnight$50-100Heat-sensitive products

Country/Region Notes

  • US domestic: FedEx/UPS standard. No customs documentation needed.
  • Canada to US: Commercial invoice required. Describe as "dietary supplement samples for analytical testing — no commercial value." HS code 2106.90. No duty on testing samples under $800 declared value.
  • International: Check the destination country's import requirements. Some countries require import permits for supplement testing samples. Your lab can usually advise on documentation.

For detailed guidance on what testing to request, see our finished product testing guide and GMP compliance checklist.

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