Assayed bridges the gap between peptide vendors and buyers with an immutable, third-party verification layer for every batch. Scan a vial, see the lab report, decide with evidence.
The trust gap
Self-published certificates of analysis can be photoshopped, reused, or fabricated. Assayed removes the vendor from the signing path.
Vendor-published COA
Assayed verified record
The protocol
The same workflow runs whether the COA is uploaded by the vendor (Self-Verified) or pulled directly from our partner lab API (Lab-Verified Gold).
Vendor registers a production batch. Assayed issues a unique batch ID and reserves a public verification URL.
HPLC, mass spec, TFA and moisture results are attached. Gold tier auto-syncs from our partner lab; Self uploads & we hash the original PDF.
Each label carries a tamper-evident QR. Buyers scan and see the same record regulators would — no vendor in the middle.
Public record example
Real-time public data fetching for every registered batch. No login required.
Verified Analysis
Batch ID: SGX-9921-X2
Status
Authentication ConfirmedPurity
99.4%
Tested
Oct 12, 2024
Vendor
Pepkits.shop
Lab Ref
COL-882
TFA Content
1.2%
Moisture
0.4%
Mass Spec
Conforms
Program tiers
Flat monthly per brand. Unlimited batches. Cancel anytime — records you've already published stay live forever.
Self-Verified
For vendors with their own lab relationships.
$149/mo
Lab-Verified Gold
High TrustDirect lab API sync. The strongest signal a vendor can ship.
$499/mo
Every verification page is indexable, shareable, and visible without an account. Trust shouldn't require a login.
Once a record is published, the vendor loses write access. Corrections require a new batch + a public correction note.
Even if a vendor leaves the program, their historical batches stay live. Buyers can verify a 2-year-old vial today.
Live directory
Pepkits.shop
Gold · since 2021
N-Labs
Self · since 2022
Bio-Core
Self · since 2023
Synthe-7
Self · since 2023
Apex Research
Gold · since 2022
Oxy-Gen
Self · since 2023
Common questions
Join the vendors who decided that “trust me” was no longer a viable answer to a buyer asking for proof.