When more than one lab tests the same batch, we line up their results side by side. When they match, it is the strongest signal you can get. When they do not, that is information too. Here is what these labs found — you decide.
3 independent labs tested this batch of Semaglutide from Simple Peptide. Their purity results ranged from 99.8% to 100%.
The labs agree
Independent labs landed within 2 points of each other on purity. That is the strongest signal you can get on a batch.
On the actual amount per vial, the labs were far apart (4.0 to 10.6 mg).
Scores land close·Poor · 5.5
The two badges above are our blended RV-score view: whether the scores agree, and the overall quality tier. The plain read at the top leads with the labs actual purity numbers, and the full per-lab table is below.
Semaglutide from Simple Peptide batch P24110202 · cross-tested by 3 independent labs
The blended RV scores land within 0.5 to 1.5 points of each other. The RV score mixes purity with other factors and can read as agreement even when raw purity does not — so weigh the raw purity range shown above.
✓ Batch identity basis: Same physical sample (Finnrick multi-lab program)
All records carry Finnrick (FNR-*) task IDs, meaning one physical vial was routed by Finnrick to multiple labs and each lab tested it independently. This is the strongest basis for 'same batch' — there's no batch heterogeneity between labs because there's no batch difference: it's the same vial.
Purity agrees, content diverges. Labs converge on purity (spread 0.20pp) but disagree on the actual amount (range 4.0–10.6 mg, CV 42.7%). The compound is what it claims to be — but how much is in the vial varies measurably between labs.
Reporting-basis mismatch or different denominator — investigate. One lab's measurement is more than 1.8× another's. Counterion plus residual water tops out around 1.3–1.5× even in bad cases, so a spread this large usually means the two labs aren't measuring the same thing — different denominator (per-mL vs per-vial), a dilution-factor mismatch, a decimal slip, or a sample-prep difference. The compound itself may be fine; the disagreement is about how it was quantified. Resolves once method/basis is surfaced per lab.
Same method, results still diverge — investigate. All labs reported HPLC but results diverge — batch heterogeneity, calibration drift, or sample handling worth investigating. When labs share the analytical approach but the numbers don't line up, the divergence is doing real work and deserves a closer look.
Labs
3
Tests
4
RV Score Mean
5.46
RV Score Spread
0.60
Content Mean
6.7 mg
⇄ Basis mismatch
Content Range
4.0–10.6 mg
CV 42.7%
Per-Lab Breakdown
All rows (Purity & Content vary, everything else constant):Testing 3.1 · Custody 4.3 · CI 10.0 · Method HPLC
Why this matters: A single COA is one lab's answer from one method on one sample. Multiple labs reveal the pattern. When labs converge on the same answer, that's strong cross-validation. When they diverge — especially on content while agreeing on purity — the difference is often method-driven (different quantitation basis) but sometimes signals real product variation. ResearchVerify is the only platform that surfaces both cases automatically across thousands of cross-tests.