Third-party testing adds an extra layer of control by checking ingredient identity, purity and batch consistency before materials move into production across the WiredWrong range.
Independent Verification
Ingredient samples can be assessed by independent laboratories using established analytical methods to confirm that materials match their intended specification before they are approved for use.
What Testing Checks
Third-party analysis can be used to verify the identity of a compound, confirm it aligns with its specification, and review whether the overall material remains consistent from batch to batch.
Purity & Screening
Testing may also be used to screen for contaminants, impurities or unwanted substances that can appear through sourcing, extraction, handling or transport before ingredients reach manufacturing.
Batch Consistency
Natural ingredients can shift depending on harvest timing, growing conditions and processing methods. Third-party testing helps keep each batch within a more controlled and repeatable specification.
Transparency In Production
Using independent laboratories adds another layer of visibility within the supply chain, helping support traceability, consistency and quality control before final formulations are produced.
What is third-party testing?
Third-party testing means ingredient samples are assessed by an independent laboratory rather than being checked only through internal handling. It adds an extra layer of verification before materials move into production.
What does it actually check?
Independent analysis can be used to confirm ingredient identity, review purity, and check whether a material aligns with its intended specification before it is approved for manufacturing.
Does it screen for impurities?
Testing may include screening for contaminants, impurities or unwanted substances that can appear during sourcing, extraction, handling or transport before ingredients are used in final formulations.
Why does batch consistency matter?
Natural ingredients can vary depending on growing conditions, harvest timing and processing methods. Third-party testing helps keep materials within a more controlled and consistent specification across batches.
When does this happen?
The process happens before materials are cleared for production. A batch can be sampled, analysed by an independent lab, reviewed against its specification, and then approved once it meets the required standard.
How does this improve transparency?
Using an external laboratory adds another checkpoint within the supply chain. That supports clearer quality control, better traceability, and more confidence that materials have been reviewed before use.
Why does WiredWrong use this approach?
Because ingredient quality should not be left to guesswork. Third-party verification adds another layer of control before materials are used, helping support consistency across the WiredWrong range.