Is Solaray third-party tested?
Last reviewed July 2026.
Not that we can verify. Solaray references an internal quality standard, but we could not find a public third-party certificate (IFOS/NSF/USP) for its omega-3 products at the last review.
Why that matters
"Third-party tested" only means something if you can read the test. When a brand doesn't publish a certificate, you're trusting the label's claim on potency, freshness, and purity with no independent check. That's not proof of a bad product — but it is a real gap next to brands whose IFOS or NSF certificates are one click away.
If you want products where the numbers are public and comparable, our ranking only includes fish oils with a verifiable third-party certificate, sorted by cost per gram of lab-measured EPA+DHA.
If Solaray begins publishing third-party certificates, we'll update this page — the source always wins.
This page summarizes published third-party testing data and makes no health, benefit, or treatment claims. A certificate describes one tested batch, not a permanent grade.
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