🚩 On the watch list, its certificate can't be verified in its own name.
Wholesalepeptides 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.
The certificate, and what's wrong with it
What this certificate actually is: A certificate displayed by the seller, read it against the teardown above; it is not a verifiable independent test in the seller's own name.
Pricing vs the market, benchmarked on BPC-157
BPC-157
£11/mg (≈ £110 for a 10 mg vial)
Versus market median (£3.0/mg)
3.7×, very expensive
Far above the market average. 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.
Reviews
4.5★★★★☆ · 105 reviews on Trustpilot
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. Wholesalepeptides 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⚠️ Is anything on this page wrong or out of date?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.