Fish Oil Score
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Third-party tested omega-3: the real list

Last reviewed July 2026.

"Third-party tested" gets printed on a lot of boxes. It should mean an independent lab — not the brand — verified what's in the bottle. But the phrase is unregulated, so the useful question isn't "does it say third-party tested?" It's "can I see the certificate?" This page is about the programs whose results are actually public, and how to read them.

The programs that publish results

ConsumerLab and Labdoor also test supplements, but their detailed results sit behind a paywall or are proprietary — useful to know they exist, but you can't independently pull the numbers.

What third-party testing does — and doesn't — tell you

A certificate confirms the tested batch: that the EPA/DHA is really there, the oil is fresh, and contaminants are low. It does not promise a health outcome, and it doesn't cover batches it didn't test. Ratings are lot-specific. Treat a certificate as evidence about one production run, not a permanent grade.

How to verify any product in 30 seconds

  1. Find the product on our ranking table.
  2. Click the certificate link in its row.
  3. Check three things: measured EPA+DHA vs. the label claim, the TOTOX freshness number, and the heavy-metals section.

If a brand claims "third-party tested" but you can't find a certificate anywhere, that's a meaningful gap — and in our coverage work, a couple of well-known bestsellers fall into exactly that bucket.

This page explains published testing programs and makes no health, benefit, or treatment claims.

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