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

7 min read Updated June 9, 2026

Subtitle: Spoiler — those friendly bacteria are fragile little divas, and most of them die before they ever reach a gut.


Let's be real: the probiotic aisle is a circus. Every bottle screams "50 BILLION CFU!" or "100 BILLION!!" like it's a bidding war. But here's what the labels don't tell you — that number was true maybe on the day it left the factory. After sitting in a hot warehouse for three months? You might be swallowing a very expensive bottle of dead bacteria dust.

Probiotics are the single hardest category of supplements to test and manufacture correctly. They're alive (kind of), they're sensitive to basically everything, and the testing methods are wildly inconsistent. If you're launching a probiotic, you need to understand this stuff. If you're already selling one and you've never independently tested it — honestly, I'm a little nervous for you.


CFU Counting: It's Not as Simple as "Add Bacteria, Count"

CFU stands for Colony Forming Units. In theory, you plate a diluted sample on agar, incubate it, and count the colonies that grow. Each colony came from one viable cell. Easy, right?

Nope. Here's where it gets messy:

Different labs use different media. Some probiotic strains grow great on MRS agar. Others barely show up. If the lab uses the wrong growth medium for your specific strains, you'll get artificially low counts — and think your product is under-dosed when it might not be.

Incubation conditions vary. Temperature, oxygen levels, time — all of it affects what grows. Some probiotics are anaerobic (they hate oxygen). If the lab plates them in open air like they'd plate a generic aerobic count, you're going to get a false-negative result. Your bugs didn't die — they just got murdered by the testing method.

Blends are a nightmare. If your product has 12 strains, the lab has to identify and count each one separately. That means using selective media, different incubation conditions, and a LOT of plates. Most cheap labs will just give you a total CFU count and call it a day. That's not testing — that's guessing.

⚠️ The Overfill Game

Here's a dirty industry secret: manufacturers know their probiotics will die during shelf life. So they "overfill" — putting in 80 billion CFU at manufacture for a 50 billion label claim, knowing that 30 billion will die within 12 months. Is it legal? Technically yes, if the product meets label claim through the expiry date. Is it honest? Different question. The problem is when the overfill isn't enough, or the product degrades faster than expected, and suddenly your 50 billion label is delivering 8 billion. Independent stability testing catches this before your customers do.


Strain Identification: Are You Even Getting What You Paid For?

CFU counts tell you how many are alive. Strain ID tells you who they are. And in probiotics, identity matters more than quantity.

A 2022 study tested 26 commercial probiotics and found that only 4 of them matched the label exactly. One product claimed Lactobacillus acidophilus and actually contained Lactobacillus sakei — which sounds similar but has completely different effects. Another had strains not even listed on the label, like a random environmental contaminant that hitched a ride.

The gold standard for strain ID is DNA sequencing — usually 16S rRNA gene sequencing for genus/species identification, or whole genome sequencing if you need strain-level resolution. PCR is faster and cheaper but can miss things. MALDI-TOF is another option that's gaining traction.

Bottom line: If your probiotic COA only shows CFU counts and the strain ID section says "Conforms" with no explanation of method, you don't actually know what's in your bottle. Demand DNA-level verification.


Stability Testing: The Ugly Truth About Shelf Life

Probiotics don't just need to arrive alive — they need to stay alive. This is where most products fail silently.

Stability testing puts your finished product in controlled conditions (usually 25°C/60% RH for "room temperature" or 30°C/65% RH for accelerated conditions) and tests CFU counts at intervals: 0, 3, 6, 12, maybe 24 months.

What happens in reality is brutal. Some strains are troopers — Bacillus species form spores and survive like tiny armored tanks. Other strains, particularly Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, drop off a cliff after 6 months without refrigeration.

If you're selling a shelf-stable probiotic that claims 50 billion CFU at expiry, you need real-time stability data proving it. Accelerated stability studies can give you predictions, but the FDA and FTC want to see actual real-time data for your full shelf life claim. "We estimate it should be fine" is not a defense.

Key stability factors that wreck probiotics:

  • Moisture. If your capsules aren't properly desiccated, water activity above 0.2 can start killing bugs within weeks.
  • Temperature excursions. That one week your shipment sat in a container in Miami in August? That's a massacre.
  • Oxygen exposure. Even micro-perforations in blister packs let oxygen in. Anaerobic strains hate that.
  • Acid interaction. If your probiotic is blended with ascorbic acid (vitamin C) for a "gut health + immunity" combo, the low pH might be nuking your bacteria during storage before a customer even opens the bottle.

What Testing You Actually Need

If you're manufacturing or private-labeling a probiotic, here's your minimum testing stack:

  1. CFU enumeration per strain (not just total). Use validated methods specific to each strain.
  2. Strain identity confirmation via 16S rRNA or whole genome sequencing. Every batch, or at minimum every new raw material lot.
  3. Stability study — real-time, not just accelerated. Start it before you launch.
  4. Pathogen screenE. coli, Salmonella, Staph aureus are standard. For probiotics specifically, also check for unwanted Enterococcus species and Bacillus cereus (some Bacillus species used as probiotics overlap with pathogenic relatives).
  5. Water activity — this cheap test predicts stability better than almost anything else. If your Aw is above 0.25, your shelf life claims are on thin ice.

FAQ

Q: Are CFU claims regulated? The FDA doesn't pre-approve CFU claims, but they do enforce against false or misleading labeling. If your product says 50 billion at time of manufacture but only has 12 billion at the time of sale, the FTC can nail you for deceptive advertising. Amazon also requires third-party COAs for probiotics now.

Q: Should probiotics be refrigerated? It depends on the strains and formulation. If your stability data shows they're fine at room temp for 24 months, great. If you don't have that data, don't make shelf-stable claims. Refrigeration is the safest bet unless you've proven otherwise.

Q: How often should I test my probiotic product? Every batch, minimum. Probiotic viability varies significantly between production runs. Every batch. No exceptions.

Q: Can a lab tell the difference between live and dead cells in a CFU count? Only if they're doing flow cytometry or PCR viability methods (PMA-PCR). Standard plate counts only detect cells capable of dividing and forming colonies. Dead or "viable but non-culturable" (VBNC) cells won't show up. This is both a feature and a bug of the method.

Q: What's the deal with spore-forming vs non-spore-forming probiotics? Spore formers (like Bacillus coagulans, Bacillus subtilis) are basically wrapped in a protective shell that survives heat, acid, and time. They're way more stable. Non-spore formers (like Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium) are alive but naked — much harder to keep viable. If you're launching a shelf-stable probiotic, spore formers give you a much bigger margin for error.


The Bottom Line

Probiotics are incredible products with real science behind them — but they're also the easiest category to screw up. CFU counts drop. Strains get misidentified. Labels overpromise. And unlike a vitamin C tablet where "under-dosed" just means less potent, a dead probiotic is literally a placebo in a capsule.

If you're selling probiotics, independent testing isn't optional. It's the only thing standing between you and a class-action lawsuit when someone with a microscope decides to check if your 50 billion claim is real.

At LabQuotes, we work with labs that specialize in probiotic testing — proper CFU enumeration, DNA-level strain ID, real-time stability studies, the whole nine yards. Don't guess about what's in your bottle. Get it tested.

Find a probiotic testing lab →

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