Uzorak
South East Europe peptide testing lab with visible pricing, direct ordering, sample reports, and a strong public analytical-method story.
This label reflects how the provider presents itself on its own site today, not a formal accreditation category.
Whether the site appears to invite direct sample submission from individuals rather than only business or institutional clients.
Whether the provider appears to offer public-facing report publishing, result browsing, or direct verification tooling.
This is our shorthand for how visible the provider's result or verification layer appears to be, ranging from none to searchable public verification.
Location details are kept conservative and only shown when clearly supported by the source page or the provider’s public materials.
What we can verify now
Uzorak turned out to be much more structured than the initial seed profile suggested.
From the live site, we can verify:
- direct order flow
- visible starting prices
- sample reports
- standard purity and mass analysis
- advanced LC-MS analysis
- heavy metals screening
- and a stated South East Europe positioning
The site also publicly discusses future or coming-soon layers such as:
- amino acid analysis
- batch fingerprinting
- and endotoxin testing
Coverage notes
- The exact country still needs tighter verification, so the geographic label remains regional rather than more specific
- This is already one of the stronger public-facing international entries in the directory
Why it matters in the current ecosystem
Uzorak matters because it is one of the clearest international examples of a public-facing analytical-lab profile that still feels approachable to individual researchers.
It helps widen the testing directory beyond U.S.-centric provider names while still contributing several useful public trust signals:
- visible pricing
- direct ordering
- sample reports
- and explicit analytical-method framing
What to watch for
The main caution here is that public-facing structure is not the same thing as the deepest public verification model.
Uzorak looks strong for transparent service presentation and sample-report visibility, but readers should still separate that from the more mature provider-side verification patterns represented by names like Janoshik or Kovera.