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Safety & Standards · 7 min read

Peptide Purity Explained: What "99%" Actually Means

Almost every listing quotes a purity figure, usually 98% or 99%, and almost nobody explains what the number measures. It is a useful metric, but it answers a narrower question than most people assume — and on its own it cannot tell you whether the vial contains the compound on the label.

What the percentage measures

Purity is normally determined by HPLC — high-performance liquid chromatography — which separates the contents of a sample into peaks. The purity figure is essentially the size of the main peak as a proportion of all peaks detected.

So "99% pure" means the dominant component accounts for about 99% of what the method detected. It is a statement about proportion, not about identity.

Purity does not prove identity

This is the crucial gap. A sample can be 99% pure and still be 99% of the wrong compound. HPLC tells you how much of the sample is one dominant substance; it does not by itself confirm which substance that is.

Identity is established by mass spectrometry, which measures molecular weight and confirms the molecule matches the expected structure. A COA carrying both an HPLC purity figure and a mass spec identity confirmation is materially stronger evidence than purity alone.

What the remaining percent typically is

The balance is usually related peptide impurities from synthesis — truncated sequences, incomplete couplings, closely related fragments — plus residual solvents or counter-ions. These are ordinary byproducts of solid-phase synthesis rather than signs of anything unusual.

Net peptide content — the number people miss

Purity and net peptide content are different measures. A vial can be 99% pure while a meaningful fraction of its mass is water and counter-ions rather than peptide, which means the actual peptide mass can be lower than the label figure.

Where a supplier reports net peptide content alongside purity, that is a more complete picture. Most do not.

Why the batch number matters more than the number

A purity figure only describes the specific batch tested at the time it was tested. A COA from a different batch, or a single generic sample document reused across a whole catalogue, tells you nothing about the vial in your hand. Match the batch number on the certificate to the batch number on your vial — that check matters more than whether the figure reads 98% or 99%.

Reading the difference in practice

Independent third-party testing outranks in-house numbers, a chromatogram outranks a bare percentage, and HPLC plus mass spec together outrank either alone. Our COA reading guide walks through an actual certificate, and the COA checklist scores one.

Key takeaways

  • Purity is the main HPLC peak as a proportion — a statement about proportion, not identity.
  • A sample can be 99% pure and still be the wrong compound; mass spec confirms identity.
  • Net peptide content differs from purity — actual peptide mass can be lower than the label.
  • A COA only describes the batch it references; always match the batch number.
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For laboratory research use only. This guide is educational information about measurement and handling. Compounds referenced are sold strictly as research chemicals and are not for human or veterinary use. Nothing here is medical advice. Some supplier links are affiliate links and may earn us a commission. This never affects tier placement or review conclusions.
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