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Where can I find verified ingredient labels or third-party lab reports for Rosabella Moringa products?

Checked on November 23, 2025
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Executive summary

Rosabella’s product pages and marketing repeatedly state each capsule contains 800 mg of “100% pure Moringa leaf powder” and claim third‑party testing and batch Certificates of Analysis (CoAs); the company’s site and product listings repeat the single‑ingredient claim [1] [2]. Independent reviews and one comparison article say Rosabella uses Eurofins for batch CoAs but that reports are not posted publicly — customers must email to request them [3] [4].

1. Where Rosabella publishes ingredient labels and product claims

Rosabella’s own storefront and product pages list the ingredient as 100% moringa leaf powder and state serving size (two capsules = 800 mg) and nutrient claims; multiple product pages and the brand site repeat the single‑ingredient, pure moringa message [1] [2] [5]. Those pages also promote customer guarantees and usage guidance — but they do not, in the cited pages, display downloadable CoAs or full lab reports [1] [5].

2. Third‑party testing: what reporting shows and what it doesn’t

A comparison/review piece reports Rosabella provides Certificates of Analysis for every batch and names Eurofins Scientific as the testing lab, but notes those CoAs are not posted on the website and must be obtained by emailing the company [3]. Multiple retail/marketing listings and product descriptions display “3rd party tested” badges and assert independent testing for purity and quality, but the badges and statements on product pages are not the same as publicly available, verifiable CoAs [6] [7].

3. How customers and reviewers say to obtain lab reports

Independent commentary and the Athletic Insight review say the practical route to see batch CoAs is to contact Rosabella directly — email requests rather than clicking a public CoA link [3]. The Athletic Insight article explicitly reports the lab used (Eurofins) and that CoAs cover heavy metals and microbial testing, but stresses the files aren’t readily available online and require outreach [3].

4. Conflicting signals: marketing badges vs. transparent evidence

Several third‑party reviews and storefronts highlight “third‑party tested” on labels or in images [7] [6]. That marketing claim can mean anything from a single outsourced assay to a full, published CoA. Available reporting shows Rosabella claims third‑party testing and a testing partner [3] [7], but published, downloadable batch reports are not shown in the sources provided [3] [1].

5. Practical next steps to verify an individual bottle or batch

Based on the reporting, the most direct, verifiable approach is: request the Certificate of Analysis for your bottle’s lot number from Rosabella via the company contact channels — the Athletic Insight piece and product pages imply emailing the brand is how customers access batch CoAs [3] [5]. If you receive a CoA, check the lab name (e.g., Eurofins), test parameters (heavy metals, microbial, pesticide residues), and the lot number/date to confirm it matches your purchase [3].

6. Questions to ask and red flags to watch for

When you request a CoA, ask for: the full report or CoA with lot/batch number, testing date, methods used, and the lab’s contact info so you can verify authenticity; the Athletic Insight source names Eurofins as a lab used by Rosabella, which can be a check point if the returned CoA claims that lab [3]. Be cautious if the company only provides summary claims or marketing badges without a lot‑specific CoA, or if the lab named is unverifiable in the report [7] [6].

7. Limitations in available reporting and alternative sources

Available sources do not include a public Rosabella CoA file or a direct link to batch reports on the company site; reporting instead documents that CoAs exist and are provided on request [3]. Independent third‑party verification beyond those secondary articles is not presented in the collected sources (p3_s1 — marketplace listings offering “3rd party tested” searches are not reliable proof themselves) [8].

8. Balanced takeaway and next action

Rosabella claims single‑ingredient moringa capsules and third‑party testing; a review specifically names Eurofins and says Certificates of Analysis exist but must be requested by email [1] [3]. If you need verified lab reports, email Rosabella asking for the CoA for your lot number and inspect the returned document for lab name, tested analytes, and matching lot/date — if the company refuses or provides only marketing summaries, available reporting suggests that is when independent caution is warranted [3] [7].

Want to dive deeper?
Does Rosabella publish Certificates of Analysis (COAs) for their Moringa supplements online?
Which third-party labs commonly test dietary supplements for contaminants and potency?
How can I verify the authenticity of a supplement COA or lab report PDF?
Are there independent review sites or databases that aggregate lab results for Moringa products?
What regulatory standards and contaminants should I look for on Moringa supplement lab reports?