How to Verify a Supplier’s Test Reports Are Genuine
Fake and recycled test reports are widespread in China drinkware sourcing — suppliers recycle certs from different products, swap accreditation logos, or simply generate PDFs that look official. This guide shows importers exactly how to verify a supplier's test reports are genuine: check the accredited lab, decode the report number, confirm product scope, and cross-reference with the issuing body directly.
Why fake test reports are so common in drinkware sourcing
The short answer: compliance documentation is expensive and inconvenient to obtain legitimately, and most buyers never bother to check.
A proper LFGB migration test from an accredited German-recognised lab costs $800–1,500 per product variant. A Prop 65-specific heavy metals panel adds another $500–800. For a factory selling hundreds of SKUs across dozens of buyers, the math favours corners. Common fraud patterns include:
- Recycled certificates — a report originally issued for one SKU is re-presented for an entirely different product. The report number and lab name are real; the product tested is not yours.
- Doctored PDFs — a genuine report is edited in Acrobat to change the product description, client name, or test results. The formatting looks identical to a real document.
- Logo swapping — an unaccredited lab issues a report and inserts the SGS, Intertek, or Bureau Veritas logo. The accreditation mark is convincing unless you look up the document number.
- Scope mismatch — the test was performed on a 304 inner liner but the lid seal, straw, or silicone gasket were never tested. The certificate is technically real but does not cover the full product.
The stakes are not trivial. Amazon's September 2024 policy update made compliance documentation a pre-listing requirement. A fake FDA or LFGB report that slips through pre-listing can still trigger a listing suspension or recall — and that liability sits with the importer, not the factory. For a full picture of what each market legally requires, see our guide on drinkware compliance for Amazon, FDA, LFGB, Prop 65 and PFAS.
Step 1: Confirm the lab is genuinely accredited
Before reading a single line of the report, verify that the lab that issued it is accredited by a recognised body — not just that it claims to be.
Accreditation is the credential that a testing lab meets international quality standards (ISO/IEC 17025). The principal accreditation bodies to know:
- CNAS (China National Accreditation Service) — China's national body. A CNAS-accredited lab is acceptable for most markets but check whether the specific test method (e.g. LFGB §30/31) appears in that lab's scope.
- DAkkS (Germany) — required for results to be accepted under LFGB. Many Chinese labs hold CNAS but not DAkkS; a LFGB report from a CNAS-only lab may not satisfy a German retailer or Amazon.de.
- A2LA or NVLAP (USA) — relevant for FDA-related testing accepted in the US market.
- ILAC MRA members — the ILAC Mutual Recognition Arrangement links accreditation bodies globally. Labs accredited by ILAC MRA members (listed at ilac.org) are mutually recognised.
To verify a specific lab: go to the national accreditation body's online database and search by lab name or certificate number. For CNAS, the database is at cnas.org.cn/yw/labs. For DAkkS it is at dakks.de/en/search. If the lab does not appear, the accreditation is fraudulent regardless of what the letterhead says.
Well-known third-party testing houses — SGS, Intertek, Bureau Veritas, TUV Rheinland, Eurofins — are legitimate when the report is genuine; they are also the most commonly faked. Always verify the specific certificate number, not just the company name.
Step 2: Decode the report number and verify it with the issuing lab
Every legitimate test report has a unique document number. That number is your primary verification tool — and it takes three minutes to use.
Most major labs provide a public or client-facing verification portal:
- SGS — report verification at sgs.com/en/certified-client-documents (enter the report number and client code printed on the document).
- Intertek — certificate verification at intertek.com/about/certificate-verification/.
- Bureau Veritas — use the QR code or BV certification number at certificateverification.bureauveritas.com.
- TUV Rheinland — use the certificate portal at tuv.com/certificate-verification.
If the lab does not have a public portal, email or call the lab directly with the report number and ask them to confirm it was issued to the supplier in question. A genuine lab will confirm in writing within 24–48 hours. If the supplier objects to you contacting the lab directly, treat that as a serious red flag.
A doctored PDF will typically fail at this step: the report number either does not exist in the lab's system, or it returns results for a different product or client.
Step 3: Match the report scope to your exact product
Even a completely genuine, verifiable report can be irrelevant to your order. This is one of the most common certificate problems that buyers miss.
When reviewing the scope section of any test report, check each of the following:
- Product description — does it match your SKU by size, material, and configuration? A 20 oz tumbler certificate is not valid for a 32 oz wide-mouth bottle, even from the same factory, because wall thickness, coating weight, and weld geometry differ.
- Steel grade declared — the report must explicitly state 304 (or 316) stainless steel for the inner wall. If it says "18/8" or "18/10", that maps to 304 — but if it says "18/0" or does not name the grade, the document is incomplete. Reports that tested 201 steel and relabelled it as 304 are caught here; check the chemical composition table within the report itself.
- All sub-components covered — the lid, seal, gasket, straw, and any coating must each be listed. Migration testing for LFGB §30/31 must cover acid, alkaline, and aqueous food simulants for every food-contact surface. Powder coating that contacts the exterior may still migrate during dishwasher cycles; check that coating chemistry is in scope.
- Test methods cited — the report should reference specific standards (e.g. EU Regulation 1935/2004, EN 12983, 21 CFR 177, GB 4806). Vague references to "food safety standards" without citing method numbers indicate a weak or fabricated document.
- Issue date — compliance reports typically have a validity window. LFGB certificates are generally valid for two years if the formula and materials are unchanged; after that, a new test is required. A report dated 2019 cannot cover a new batch of product in 2025, because the factory may have changed steel suppliers, coating chemistry, or lid materials without your knowledge.
Step 4: Check for 201-steel substitution in the report itself
One of the most serious compliance risks in Chinese drinkware manufacturing is suppliers using 201 stainless steel instead of agreed 304 — then providing a test report that claims 304. CCTV's investigation found 19 thermos brands with manganese levels roughly six times the permitted safety limit, all using 201 liners sold as 304.
A test report from a genuine accredited lab will include a chemical composition table showing the actual percentages of chromium, nickel, manganese, and other elements tested. Use it:
| Element | 304 stainless (correct) | 201 stainless (fraud indicator) |
|---|---|---|
| Chromium (Cr) | 18–20% | 13–15% |
| Nickel (Ni) | 8–10.5% | 3.5–5.5% |
| Manganese (Mn) | ≤2% | 5.5–7.5% |
If the report shows nickel below 7% or manganese above 3%, the tested material is not 304 regardless of what the grade field says. If the report contains no composition table at all, it was not conducted as a full material certification and should be rejected. For the complete guide to identifying 201 fraud before and after arrival, see how to verify 304 stainless steel and avoid the 201 scam.
Step 5: Cross-reference the report with a factory audit or pre-shipment inspection
Test reports describe what a single sample from a single batch tested at a specific moment. They do not guarantee the bulk order you receive was made from the same materials. Quality fade — where the pre-production sample diverges from the bulk run — is one of the most persistent problems in China sourcing. The golden sample is hand-finished; production is run on a high-speed line with whatever materials are in stock.
To close that gap, layer compliance documents with physical verification:
- Request the steel mill certificate (Material Test Report or MTR) tied to the coil of steel currently in stock at the factory. The heat number on the mill cert should match the batch about to go into production. A factory that refuses to share the mill cert before production has a transparency problem. See our full China drinkware factory audit checklist for what to request during a factory visit.
- Commission a pre-shipment inspection that includes physical sampling for XRF (X-ray fluorescence) analysis. An XRF gun scans the finished bottle and reads elemental composition in under a minute — it will catch a 201/304 substitution that a visual inspection cannot. Inspection costs $200–400 per day through firms like QIMA, Asia Quality Focus, or V-Trust; XRF testing adds $50–150 per sample batch. See our guide on pre-shipment inspection for drinkware from China.
- Match inspection samples to the test report — an inspector who sees the report and can compare product photos, dimensions, and part numbers against the shipment will catch a scope mismatch that document review alone misses.
Red flags that a test report is not genuine
Use this as a quick checklist before you accept any compliance document from a supplier:
- The lab name appears on the letterhead but the certificate number does not verify in the lab's online portal
- No report number, or a clearly sequential/generic number that suggests it was self-assigned
- Product description is vague ("stainless steel cup") rather than matching your specific SKU
- No chemical composition table — only a pass/fail statement for food safety
- Issue date is more than two years ago or predates the current supplier relationship
- The same PDF is used for multiple different products (you can check metadata in Acrobat: File → Properties → Description)
- LFGB logo present but the lab holds CNAS accreditation only, with no DAkkS scope listed
- The supplier becomes defensive or evasive when you ask to contact the lab directly
- All components are listed as one line item with a single pass, rather than individual sub-component testing
What MUCHUANG provides and why it matters
At MUCHUANG, every production batch is accompanied by a steel mill certificate showing the heat number tied to the coil used — that document is available to buyers before production starts, not after. LFGB and FDA compliance reports are maintained per SKU and per revision, so when you contact us with a compliance query, we can send a current, verifiable document for the exact product configuration you are ordering, not a recycled cert from a different run. Our full product range covers 304-inner-wall tumblers, bottles, and mugs tested across all food-contact components including lids, seals, and coatings.
If you are evaluating whether a supplier is a real manufacturer or a trading company (which affects both QC control and their ability to produce genuine mill certs), see our guide on factory vs trading company in drinkware.
Frequently asked questions
Can I trust a test report that has an SGS or Intertek logo on it?
Not automatically. The logo is easy to copy. Verify the specific report number directly in SGS's or Intertek's online certificate portal — both have free public verification tools. If the report number does not return a match, the document is fraudulent regardless of how professional it looks. Always check the number, not the logo.
How do I know if a LFGB certificate is really valid for my EU market?
The issuing lab must hold DAkkS (German) accreditation, not just CNAS. Check the lab's specific scope at dakks.de — LFGB §30/31 testing should appear under the lab's listed methods. A CNAS-only lab can run migration tests, but results may not satisfy German retailers or Amazon.de listing requirements without DAkkS recognition.
What does "recycled certificate" mean and how common is it?
A recycled certificate is a real report originally issued for one product that is re-presented for a different product. It is extremely common in China drinkware supply chains because full compliance testing costs $1,500–3,000 per product variant. The simplest check: confirm the product description and dimensions in the report match your specific SKU exactly.
If the test report passes, does that mean the bulk shipment is safe?
No. A test report covers only the sample submitted at the time of testing. Quality fade — where bulk production diverges from the approved sample — is a documented risk. Pair compliance documents with a pre-shipment inspection that includes XRF testing of finished goods to verify the actual batch, not just the original sample.
Which markets require separate compliance documents and can one report cover all of them?
No single report covers all markets. FDA (USA), LFGB (EU/Germany), Prop 65 (California), and PFAS restrictions (multiple US states and EU REACH) are separate regulatory frameworks requiring separate test scopes and accreditation. Budget for independent testing per market per SKU — typically $2,500–5,000 total for a product launching in both the US and EU simultaneously.