🚩 On the watch list, its certificate can't be verified in its own name.
Dnlabresearch states its peptides are 'third-party tested' / 'lab tested' to ≥99% but never names the lab and publishes no verifiable certificate. A purity claim with no lab, no document and no verification link is just a number on a product page, the buyer is asked to take quality entirely on trust.
What doesn't add up on its site
Quoted straight from dnlabresearch.com, and why it falls apart.
“…your needs. When purchasing online, exercise extreme caution. At DN Lab Research, we have over 10 years of experience sourcing and working with peptides. General Questions Answered Can you provide lab work for yo…”
Claims to be trusted since 2016, but its own domain wasn't registered until November 2021, years later. A business cannot have a reputation older than its website. The track record is invented.
Pricing vs the market, benchmarked on BPC-157
The Peptide Watch benchmarks every vendor on the same compound, BPC-157, the most common research peptide, as £ per milligram, so prices are directly comparable across all providers. No public BPC-157 price feed was available for this vendor at audit.
Reviews
Has a Trustpilot page, but too few reviews for a score.
Read it critically. A Trustpilot score measures whether parcels turn up and support replies, not whether the vial contains what the label says. A vendor can have hundreds of happy delivery reviews and still show you a borrowed or fake certificate; the two are unrelated. Also watch for a burst of near-identical 5-star reviews in a short window, the signature of bought reviews.
The bottom line. Dnlabresearch sits on the watch list because it does not publish a certificate that can be verified in its own name. Everything above is observable on its own website and the public record. See the vendors whose certificates are actually their own →
⚠️ Is anything on this page wrong or out of date? Submit a correction request and we'll look into it, vendors welcome too.