Buyer Education · Quality

Purity vs Content: What B2B Peptide Buyers Must Verify

Two numbers decide whether a peptide order is honest — and most of the market only shows you one. Here is how purity and content are actually measured, why “99% pure” can still mean a short-filled vial, and exactly what to ask for before you buy.

The core confusion

Purity and content are two different things

Purity

How clean the material is

The percentage of the main compound in the sample, read from an HPLC chromatogram as the main peak's share of total peak area. “98.5% pure” means 98.5% of what was detected is the target compound.

Content

How much active peptide you actually get

The real amount of target peptide in the vial, measured against a reference standard. A labelled 10 mg vial that is “99% pure” can still contain only a few mg of active peptide — the rest is filler.

In short: purity tells you how clean it is; content tells you how much you actually received. A dishonest seller quotes the first and stays quiet about the second.

How it is measured

What HPLC and mass spectrometry actually tell you

HPLC → purity

The sample is separated on a column by polarity; each compound leaves at a characteristic retention time. With a reference standard, that retention time is fixed, so you can confirm identity. The main peak's area as a percentage of total area is the purity. Smaller peaks are impurities.

Only API / pharma-grade reports go further and characterise what each impurity above ~0.1% actually is.

Mass spectrometry (MS) → identity

MS measures molecular weight. The theoretical mass (from the molecular formula) must match the measured mass. This confirms the molecule is what it claims to be — a different salt form or a wrong sequence shows up as a different mass.

How real content is proven

The calibration curve — the number most sellers skip

To measure actual content, a reference standard is run at several known concentrations (for example 1, 5, 10, 20, 50 mg/mL) to build a straight line of peak area vs concentration. The sample's peak area is then mapped back onto that line to read its true concentration.

This is how you discover that a vial labelled 5 mg actually contains 4.91 mg — or, in low-quality supply, far less.

The market trap

Why “99% pure, 10 mg, very cheap” should make you cautious

A common online listing reads: “99.9% purity, 10 mg, low price.” That is a purity claim, not a content claim. The 10 mg vial may contain only a fraction of the labelled peptide — the rest is excipient — which can mean a real content of perhaps 15–30% of what the buyer assumed.

For anyone reformulating or reselling, this is the difference between a product that performs and one that does not. The fix is simple: ask for the real content, not just the purity.

Your verification checklist

What to request before you order

  • Batch-specific COA — matched to the lot you are actually quoted.
  • HPLC chromatogram — confirm the main-peak purity and look at impurity peaks.
  • MS data — confirm molecular weight matches the target molecule.
  • Real content — ask for the actual mg delivered, not only the purity %.
  • Analytical method — instrument, column, mobile-phase ratio, column temperature, so you (or a third-party lab) can reproduce the result on the goods you receive.
  • Batch traceability — batch number, document date, packaging and storage notes.

How WUMO is different

Real content, documented and verifiable

WUMO ships the labelled amount: when content is stated, that is the amount delivered — and we say so to buyers up front, because honest content matters for safe, correct use. Every batch of raw material is checked (MS, with HPLC where applicable) before it is used, and the supporting documents are available for review.

For the research peptide line, the standard is >99.3–99.4% purity with every batch MS-checked before release. The point is not a marketing number — it is that the number on the document matches the material in the vial, and you can verify it yourself.

FAQ

Common buyer questions

Is peptide purity the same as content?

No. Purity is the percentage of the main peak in an HPLC chromatogram — how clean the material is. Content is the actual amount of the target peptide delivered, measured against a reference standard. A vial can be 99% pure yet contain far less active peptide than the label states, because the rest of the mass is filler or excipient.

How is peptide purity measured?

By HPLC. The sample is separated on a column by polarity; each compound elutes at a characteristic retention time. The area of the main peak as a percentage of total peak area is the purity (e.g. 98.5%). Impurities show as smaller peaks; only API/pharma-grade reports characterise what those impurities are.

How is real content measured?

With a calibration curve. A reference standard is run at several known concentrations to build a peak-area-vs-concentration line; the sample peak area is then mapped back to an actual concentration. This tells you whether a labelled 10 mg vial truly contains 10 mg of the target peptide.

What documents should I request before ordering?

A batch-specific COA, the HPLC chromatogram, mass-spectrometry (MS) data confirming molecular weight, and — for serious verification — the analytical method (instrument, column, mobile phase, column temperature) so you or a third-party lab can reproduce the result on the material you actually receive.

Should a third-party report be required?

Overseas buyers often trust an independent lab more than a supplier self-test. A reasonable model: the supplier provides the real COA plus the analytical method; the buyer tests the received goods (or sends them to a third party) and confirms the numbers match. The cost is typically borne by the buyer, and one report per batch is reused within its validity period.