Quick answer: A COA, or certificate of analysis, is a lab report. It can help customers compare the product label with testing results.
COAs are often treated like paperwork. They should be treated like trust tools.
Customers do not need to become scientists, but they should know the basics.
| COA Item | What To Check |
|---|---|
| Product or batch name | Does it match the product? |
| CBD amount | Does it support the label? |
| THC result | Does it support 0% THC language? |
| Date | Is the test current enough to matter? |
Why This Matters
Published research has found label accuracy problems in CBD products. COAs help customers ask better questions.
No Drug-Test Guarantees
Even with 0% THC positioning, brands should not promise drug-test outcomes.
Red Flags
- No batch match.
- No clear CBD result.
- No THC result.
- Medical claims attached to a retail product.
Claim-Safe Takeaway
This article is for education only. Cannabolix can teach ingredient science, product format, and routine design without promising to treat pain, injury, inflammation, arthritis, disease, or guaranteed results.
References
- Cannabinoid Content and Label Accuracy of Hemp-Derived Topical Products Available Online and at National Retail Stores. PubMed PMID: 35857320. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35857320/
- Labeling Accuracy of Cannabidiol Extracts Sold Online. PubMed PMID: 29114823. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29114823/
- Product labeling accuracy and contamination analysis of commercially available cannabidiol product samples. PubMed PMID: 38562466. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38562466/
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