Guide A certificate of analysis can be useful, but only if readers understand the sample, date, lab, and test scope.
What a COA can help with
A COA may show cannabinoid profile, potency, residual solvents, pesticides, heavy metals, microbial testing, or other panels depending on the product and lab. It can help verify whether a product is documented rather than purely claimed.
The usefulness depends on whether the COA matches the actual product batch.
What a COA cannot prove
A COA for one batch does not prove every future batch. A narrow panel does not prove absence of every possible contaminant. A document without lab identity, date, method, or batch match should be treated cautiously.
A COA also does not evaluate device construction or battery behavior.
VapeRisk takeaway
CBD vape coverage should cross-check COAs rather than merely display them. Product identity and test scope come first.