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Where can I find lab tests or third-party verification for Moringa by Rosabella?

Checked on November 22, 2025
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Executive summary

Rosabella’s product pages and several reseller/third‑party writeups state the brand claims “lab tested” or “third‑party tested,” and some product listings say Certificates of Analysis (COAs) or batch testing are available (see Rosabella product pages and third‑party listings) [1] [2] [3] [4]. Independent reviews and blogs report that Rosabella “provides Certificates of Analysis for every batch” or display a “3rd PARTY TESTED” badge, but I found no direct link to public lab reports or a named testing lab in the indexed pages you provided — current reporting does not show a downloadable, verifiable COA on Rosabella’s site [5] [6] [7].

1. What Rosabella publicly claims about testing — read the label

Rosabella’s own product pages and sales listings repeatedly advertise “100% real, lab tested,” “third‑party tested,” and similar claims on capsules and powder product pages [1] [2] [3]. Retail copies on third‑party sellers also assert the product is “third‑party tested for purity” and “made in the USA” [4]. Those are the brand’s overt claims in the pages indexed here [1] [3] [4].

2. Where reviewers say lab reports exist — but citeability is limited

Some reviewers and blogs (Athletic Insight, PrefOrganic) state Rosabella provides Certificates of Analysis or displays a “3rd PARTY TESTED” badge and praise that transparency, implying batch testing for heavy metals, microbes or purity [5] [6]. Those writeups assert such COAs exist, but they do not link to an independent lab or a public file in the extracts available here [5] [6].

3. What I could not find in the provided reporting — missing public COAs and lab names

None of the indexed Rosabella product pages or the third‑party product listings in these search results include a linked, downloadable lab report or the name of an independent testing laboratory; the sources here do not show a direct COA file or lab certificate available for viewing [1] [2] [3] [4]. Therefore, available sources do not mention a public COA URL or named third‑party lab on Rosabella’s official pages [1] [3] [4].

4. Conflicting signals — marketing badges vs. skeptical coverage

Marketing language and reviewer praise form one narrative: product is third‑party tested and COAs exist [4] [5] [6]. But investigative/skeptical coverage warns that marketing claims like “made in an FDA‑registered facility” or “GMP” are not equivalent to FDA approval; malwaretips flags aggressive marketing and urges skepticism, noting the product itself is not FDA evaluated [7]. That article questions how substantive the brand’s testing transparency really is, highlighting a potential mismatch between claims and verifiable evidence [7].

5. Practical steps to find verifiable lab tests or COAs (based on how other brands present theirs)

  • Check Rosabella’s official site product pages and support/contact email (help@tryrosabella.com) for a direct request: several listings tell customers to contact help@tryrosabella.com for support — ask for the batch COA, heavy metal screen, microbial test, and pesticide residues [3] [8].
  • Ask for specifics: batch number, date tested, testing laboratory name and accreditation (e.g., ISO 17025), and a downloadable PDF. Reviewers said Rosabella “provides Certificates of Analysis for every batch,” so request the COA for your bottle’s lot number [5].
  • If Rosabella refuses or won’t provide named lab info, treat the “third‑party tested” badge as unverified marketing per skeptical coverage [7].

6. Red flags and consumer context

Customer service and billing complaints appear repeatedly in discussion threads and help forums; users report subscription/billing confusion and refund disputes, which is relevant if you plan to purchase and then seek a COA or refund [9] [10] [8]. Also, at least one user review reports an adverse reaction — individual experiences vary and product safety claims are not FDA‑evaluated [11] [7].

7. Bottom line — how to proceed if you want verified lab data

Request the COA by emailing Rosabella support (help@tryrosabella.com) and include your bottle’s lot number; insist on the laboratory’s name and accreditation and on tests for heavy metals, microbes, and potency [3] [5]. If Rosabella cannot or will not provide a verifiable COA, consider third‑party retailers or brands that publish COAs publicly and name accredited labs, or have independent testing documented in product pages — current reporting does not show such public COAs for Rosabella in the provided results [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7].

If you want, I can draft a short email template you can send to Rosabella requesting the batch COA and accreditation details.

Want to dive deeper?
Does Rosabella provide third-party Certificates of Analysis (COAs) for their Moringa products on their website?
Which independent labs commonly test dietary supplements like Moringa and how can I access their reports?
How can I verify purity, heavy metals, pesticides, and microbial testing for Moringa supplements?
Are there reputable third-party verification programs (USP, NSF, ConsumerLab) that have evaluated Rosabella Moringa?
What should I look for on a Moringa supplement COA to confirm potency and safety (active compounds, contaminants, batch number)?