What this site is

Oath Peptides Reviews is an independent editorial review of Oath Peptides. We are not affiliated with the company we review. We do not sell research peptides, accept advertising from peptide vendors, or receive commission on purchases. We have no financial relationship with Oath Peptides, Freedom Diagnostics, or any vendor mentioned in our analysis. Our methodology relies on publicly available documentary evidence — lab reports listed in public COA archives, third-party listings, Reddit and Trustpilot discourse, business-directory listings, an openpr.com press release, and the publicly searchable CMS Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments database — and editorial judgment.

The site is published in the editorial “we” — it is a publication, not a person. We do not name individual reviewers. We do not claim a physical office or phone number. We do not receive or process customer complaints directly; customer-facing complaint channels belong to vendors and to consumer-protection bodies, not to editorial review sites.

Brand interchangeability: Oath Peptides and Oath Research are the same business

“Oath Peptides” and “Oath Research” refer to the same business. The legal entity and active commerce domain is oathresearch.com; the legacy sibling oathpeptides.com appears to be offline. Customers, third-party reviewers, and the brand’s own press releases use both strings interchangeably. peptidescore.com, peptideprotocolwiki, peptiderecon, openpr.com, hub.biz, and yellowpages.com all index the brand as “Oath Peptides” specifically. Trustpilot, RealPeptidesScores, amino.reviews, and the company’s own primary site use “Oath Research.” At least one Trustpilot reviewer explicitly wrote “Oath peptides is a great company” in body text (lowercase ‘p’), confirming the interchangeable usage on the customer side.

The two-name convention has structural implications worth one explicit note: the customer-facing brand string is “Oath Peptides”; the corporate brand string is “Oath Research”; both refer to the same business at the same Gilbert, Arizona address with the same Freedom Diagnostics third-party testing program. This site uses “Oath Peptides” as the primary brand string in body copy because that is what searchers arriving on oathpeptidesreviews.com are looking for. Where the editorial context calls for the corporate name (third-party citations, the COA-archive host domain, the press release filed under one name versus the other), this site uses “Oath Research” as appropriate. Public record verified

What this review is not

This review is not a dosage guide, a medical resource, a regulatory-status review, or a substitute for the reader’s own due diligence. Research peptides as a category are not FDA-approved; we do not provide dose recommendations for humans; we do not describe research findings as clinical guidance. We do not link to the company we review — this is a SERP-defense editorial property, not a referral one. Where the editorial argument benefits from naming oathresearch.com or oathpeptides.com, we name them as plain text; we do not hyperlink them.

We also do not accept testimonials or guest posts. Customer experiences quoted in our analysis are verbatim from publicly visible third-party platforms (oath.reviews, amino.reviews, Trustpilot, Reddit), attributed by reviewer handle and date where available, and cataloged in the references with URLs to the originating posts. We have not invented any testimonial.