HealthTech

Iron Mountain Labz 2026 Review: Catalog, COAs, and Customer Experience

Iron Mountain Labz

The research compound market has no shortage of suppliers making similar claims, wide catalogs, “lab-tested” products, and fast shipping. What’s harder to find is a supplier willing to put its documentation where researchers can actually see it before they buy. This review takes an independent look at Iron Mountain Labz (IML) across the three areas that matter most to a research buyer: catalog depth, COA transparency, and the overall customer experience.

Disclosure: All products discussed are intended strictly for laboratory research purposes and are not approved by the FDA for human or veterinary use. Nothing in this review should be interpreted as guidance for human consumption, dosing, or administration.

Catalog Overview

Iron Mountain Labz carries a broad catalog spanning several research compound categories: SARMs, peptides, SERMs, nootropics, aromatase inhibitors, PDE5 inhibitors, and prohormones, available in capsule, liquid, injectable-vial, and nasal spray formats.

On the peptide side, commonly requested compounds include BPC-157, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, GHRP-2, MK-677, Epithalon, DSIP, and Kisspeptin-10, with some also offered pre-combined (BPC-157 + TB-500, for example). The SARMs lineup includes well-known research compounds like RAD-140, LGD-4033, Ostarine (MK-2866), Cardarine (GW-501516), S-23, and the newer RAD-150. Ancillary items like bacteriostatic water and sterile oil are also available, which matters for research groups that need reconstitution supplies from the same supplier rather than sourcing them separately.

Catalog verdict: Breadth here is a genuine strength. Few suppliers cover this many compound categories under one roof while maintaining format variety (capsule vs. liquid vs. injectable) for the same compound. That said, breadth alone isn’t proof of quality, which is where COAs come in.

COAs and Testing Transparency

This is the area where IML has visibly changed its approach over the past year. Earlier third-party reviews of the research compound space flagged Iron Mountain Labz for having no visible, published Certificates of Analysis, and for inconsistent responses to COA requests submitted directly to support.

As of this review, that gap appears to have been addressed: IML now maintains a First-Party COA library on its site, with certificate images published for a large share of its catalog, including BPC-157, RAD-140, LGD-4033, MK-677, Cardarine, Ostarine, CJC-1295, and others. Rather than researchers having to request documentation and wait, the certificates are browsable directly.

This is a meaningful improvement, but a few caveats are worth flagging for anyone doing due diligence:

  • A published COA reflects a specific batch or lot. Researchers should confirm the lot number on their own order matches the batch shown in the published certificate — the two aren’t automatically the same.
  • The review doesn’t have visibility into whether every single SKU in IML’s catalog has a corresponding COA, or whether coverage is close to complete. Spot-checking a handful of products against the library before ordering is a reasonable step.
  • IML doesn’t publicly specify the testing methodology (e.g., HPLC vs. mass spectrometry) used to generate every certificate. Researchers with strict methodology requirements should confirm this directly with support before relying on a COA for their specific use case.

COA verdict: A clear improvement over what earlier reviews described, and ahead of suppliers who make testing claims with no documentation to show for it. Still, “published” isn’t the same as “independently audited.” Treat the COA library as a strong starting point for due diligence, not a substitute for it.

Customer Experience

Beyond the product side, IML offers a few channels researchers can use to get support or verify details before ordering:

  • Direct support via email and phone for order-specific or product-specific questions.
  • Trustpilot presence, giving prospective buyers a way to see recent customer feedback rather than relying solely on testimonials the company chooses to display.
  • Community channels, including Discord and social media (Instagram, X), which some researchers use informally to compare notes on order experiences.
  • An educational library (the IML Library) with free resources on SARMs, peptides, nootropics, and SERMs, plus an active blog covering topics like peptide purity and compound classification useful context for newer researchers navigating the space.

What this review can’t independently verify is shipping consistency, average response time on support tickets, or return/refund handling in edge cases. These are worth checking against recent (not just older) Trustpilot reviews before ordering, since experiences can shift over time as a company scales.

Pros and Cons Summary

Strengths:

  • Broad catalog across peptides, SARMs, SERMs, and ancillaries
  • Published First-Party COA library a real documentation trail, not just a claim
  • Active educational content and community channels
  • Multiple product formats for many compounds (capsule, liquid, injectable)

Things to verify yourself before ordering:

  • Batch/lot matching between your order and the published COA
  • Testing methodology for the specific compound you’re sourcing
  • Recent (not just historical) customer feedback on shipping and support responsiveness
  • Whether COA coverage extends to every SKU you’re interested in, not just the popular ones

Final Verdict

Iron Mountain Labz in 2026 looks meaningfully different from how it was described in earlier, less favorable reviews, largely because of the shift toward publishing COAs directly rather than gating them behind a request process. For researchers who prioritize transparency and want to check documentation before buying rather than after, that’s a real point in IML’s favor.

That said, no review should substitute for a researcher’s own verification process. A published COA library lowers the barrier to due diligence it doesn’t eliminate the need for it. Anyone sourcing from IML or any other research compound supplier should still confirm batch numbers, ask about the testing methodology directly, and check recent customer feedback before placing an order.

This review is for informational purposes only. All compounds referenced are intended for laboratory research use only and are not approved for human or veterinary use.

 

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