CategoriesKratom Education

How to Read Third Party Lab Tests Before Buying Kratom

Lab Tested Kratom

If you’ve ever bought coffee from a roaster you trust, you’ve probably seen the little details that build confidence. Information like the origin, roast date, and lot numbers let you verify that the product comes from a trusted, high-quality source. Kratom can work in a similar way when a vendor treats it like a real agricultural product, instead of a mystery powder. That’s why in today’s blog, we’re talking about lab tested kratom.

When a vendor backs their batches with third-party lab testing and a Certificate of Analysis (COA), you get something simple and powerful. You have proof that the product was tested, what it was tested for, and what the results were. The American Kratom Association’s GMP program, for example, is built around documented manufacturing and testing expectations for participating vendors.

What “Third-Party Lab Tested” Really Means

Third-party lab testing means the vendor sends a sample from a specific batch to an independent lab for analysis. The lab runs tests and issues a COA that lists results, methods, and basic identifiers for the sample and batch.

Two details matter here:

  1. Third-party means the lab is independent from the seller.
  2. The COA should be tied to a batch or lot number, so you can match it to the product you’re buying.

In quality programs like the American Kratom Association (AKA) GMP Standards Program, independent testing and documentation are part of the broader expectation for responsible manufacturing and labeling practices. 

Why Lab Tested Kratom is Worth Caring About

Kratom is a botanical ingredient. Like any plant material, it can pick up contaminants from soil, water, handling, drying, and storage. That’s not a kratom-only problem. It’s a reality across herbs, spices, teas, and natural health products.

Lab testing is how a vendor checks for common risk categories, including heavy metals and microbiological contamination, then documents the results. The AKA’s consumer guidance also encourages buyers to look for independent lab testing for things like salmonella, E. coli, and heavy metals.

So when you choose lab tested kratom, you’re mainly choosing transparency.

What is a COA? 

A Certificate of Analysis (COA) is a report from the testing lab. It’s usually a 1–3 page document that answers:

  • What was tested (powder, capsules, extract, etc.)
  • Which batch was tested (lot or batch number)
  • Which lab ran the tests (name, address, contact)
  • What tests were performed (heavy metals panel, microbiology, identity)
  • What the results were (numbers, pass/fail, or ND)

If a vendor says they do lab testing but won’t share a COA on request, that’s a sign to move on.

The Top Sections to Check on a Kratom COA

Here’s the quick walk-through for reading a COA without feeling like you need a lab degree.

1. Product and Batch Identification

Look for:

  • Product name or sample description
  • Lot number or batch number
  • Date received and date reported

Match the lot number on the COA to the lot number on the package. If there’s no lot number on the product, the COA has limited value.

2. Lab Credentials

A strong COA tells you who ran the tests and how the lab operates. One credibility marker is ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation, a global standard used to show a lab operates competently and produces valid results. 

3. Identity Testing

Identity testing confirms the material matches what it claims to be. For kratom, that means confirming it is Mitragyna speciosa, the plant commonly called kratom. 

On a COA, identity may show up as:

  • Botanical identification
  • Microscopy
  • Chromatography “fingerprint”
  • A pass/fail statement for identity

4. Heavy Metals Panel

This is one of the most common sections people search for, and it’s where units matter.

A typical heavy metals panel lists arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury. You might see results in ppm (parts per million) or mcg/g (micrograms per gram). Those units are equivalent: 1 ppm = 1 mcg/g.

COAs may reference methods used for metals testing. What to look for:

  • Each metal has its own result
  • The COA notes a reporting limit (LOD/LOQ) or “ND”

Also, remember that “acceptable” limits depend on product type and intended use, and different frameworks exist.

5. Microbiology Results

Microbial panels often include:

  • Total aerobic count
  • Yeast and mold
  • E. coli
  • Salmonella

COAs may list “Absent” for pathogens or show counts for general indicators. AKA’s consumer guidance specifically calls out independent testing for microbial contamination. 

6. Alkaloid Content

Some labs report alkaloids such as mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine. This section helps compare batches, but it should never be treated like a promise about the effects of kratom. Kratom products can vary in alkaloid content, and labels aren’t standardized.

For a buyer, this section is best used as a consistency check across batches from the same vendor.

Understanding COA Terms Like ND, LOD, and LOQ

COAs love abbreviations. Here’s the quick translation:

  • ND means “not detected” at the lab’s reporting threshold.
  • LOD is the lowest level the lab can reliably detect.
  • LOQ is the lowest level the lab can reliably measure with accuracy.

Different labs and methods can have different LOD and LOQ values, so comparing COAs across labs is not always apples-to-apples. A simple explainer from a testing lab breaks down the difference between LOD and LOQ in straightforward terms. 

Red Flags that Make a COA Less Useful

If you want lab tested kratom, watch for these issues:

  • No batch or lot number
  • COA date is very old with no recent testing
  • The COA is for a different product format than what you’re buying
  • Only one test is shown (for example, alkaloids only) with no heavy metals or microbiology
  • The lab name is missing, or the report looks like a homemade spreadsheet

How to Ask a Vendor for a COA

Keep it simple:

  • Ask for the COA for the exact product and lot number you’re purchasing.
  • Ask what panels they run as standard (heavy metals, microbiology, identity).
  • Ask if their lab is ISO/IEC 17025 accredited.

A vendor with a quality-first mindset will treat that as a normal request.

Closing Thoughts on Lab Tested Kratom

The kratom world has plenty of noise. A COA cuts through it with receipts. When you learn how to read a COA, you’re no longer buying on vibes. You’re buying with documentation.

If you’re shopping for lab tested kratom, stick with vendors who can provide all of the necessary documentation to back up their claims and speak plainly about what their testing covers. That’s how you build confidence in the kratom products you bring into your routine. Want to know more about what to look for or about our standards at Joe’s Botanicals? Reach out to our friendly team.