Top 3 Methylene Blue Brands Ranked by Lab Transparency

Top 3 Methylene Blue Brands Ranked by Lab Transparency

Written by: Sam Carlson

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Published on March 5, 2026

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Time to read 9 min

Key Takeaways

Most methylene blue companies use the right language. Far fewer publish the documentation to support it. Here's how three of the most-discussed brands compare when you look past the marketing and examine the evidence.

  • Claims about pharmaceutical grade and third-party testing are common. The gap between stating that testing happened and showing what it found is where most companies fall short.
  • Three criteria separate stronger brands from the rest: grade specification, independent testing with a named lab, and documentation you can actually access before purchasing.
  • Nutricel is the only brand in this comparison that publishes annual Eurofins results publicly and provides lot-specific COAs upon request. In a compound that operates at the cellular level, that transparency is part of the safety standard.

Important: Methylene blue has documented interactions with serotonergic medications including SSRIs and MAOIs. Review the full adverse medications list before starting any methylene blue protocol.

Blue Boost 60

Blue Boost 60 – Methylene Blue with Vitamin C Ester

$34.90

See Product
Blue Boost 120

Blue Boost 120 – Methylene Blue with Vitamin C Ester

$49.90

See Product
Blue Immune

Blue Immune – Methylene Blue with Copper & NAC

$39.90

See Product
Blue Shroom

Blue Shroom – Methylene Blue + 6 Mushroom Extracts

$33.90

See Product

Why Company Standards Matter More Than Any Single Product

Here's a question most methylene blue buyers never think to ask: What does this company actually do before a product ships?

Not what they say on the label. Not what the headline copy promises. What are the actual processes, lab partners, and documentation that determine whether what's in the bottle matches what's on the label?

In the supplement industry, there is often a gap between marketing language and operational reality. "Third-party tested" can mean a comprehensive lab panel with documentation. It can also mean minimal verification with limited visibility.

Methylene blue makes this question more important than most supplements. This is a redox-active compound that interacts with mitochondrial pathways at the cellular level. Manufacturing standards matter.

Comparison table of methylene blue capsule brands showing Nutricel, Troscriptions, and Earth Harmony USP grade status, lab testing, and COA transparency

The Ranking Criteria

Three questions. Every company either answers them or they don't.

  1. Do they specify USP-grade sourcing?
    USP-grade means the material meets United States Pharmacopeia standards for identity, purity, potency, and contaminant limits.
  2. Do they independently test with a named, credentialed lab?
    Independent testing confirms whether the material meets the claimed standard.
  3. Can you actually access the results?
    Having test results is not the same as making them available.
Nutricel Blue Boost USP grade methylene blue capsules on dark navy background

#1 — Nutricel

Standard: Publishes the actual numbers. Makes documentation available.

Nutricel ranks first because they answer all three questions directly, and the third one — the hardest one for most companies to clear — they answer more thoroughly than anyone else in this category.

Their certifications page publishes annual Eurofins COA summary results for their products, covering real ppb values for heavy metals and real microbial findings. For buyers who want to go deeper, supporting documentation is available upon request by email. Not a summary statement that testing happened — the actual underlying documentation from one of the most recognized ISO-accredited independent labs in the supplement industry.

Here's what that looks like in practice. Across their tested results, heavy metal values for mercury, lead, cadmium, and arsenic come in within USP and FDA guidance thresholds for daily supplementation at labeled serving sizes. Microbial testing across their products consistently shows E. coli absent, Salmonella absent, Staph aureus absent, and yeast and mold within acceptable limits. These aren't claims. They're documented results supported by independent laboratory testing, available to buyers upon request.

Nutricel uses USP-grade methylene blue across their product line, a baseline that matters before any testing even begins, and pairs it with Eurofins testing that goes beyond what many supplement companies bother to document at all.

There's a principle worth stating plainly here: a company that does rigorous testing and publishes nothing gains nothing from that testing as far as buyers are concerned. The willingness to make annual results publicly accessible and to provide documentation upon request is itself a signal. It means the company is confident enough in what they found to let you review it yourself.

That's the standard that puts Nutricel at the top of this ranking.

What to know: Nutricel's line includes both standalone and combination formulas, pairing methylene blue with ingredients like functional mushrooms or Vitamin C Ester. Buyers should review the specific formula that fits their goals. As with any supplement company, potency verification — confirming exact active compound concentration per dose — is the emerging frontier of transparency that forward-looking brands are beginning to address.

#2 — Troscriptions

Standard: Claims public availability. Delivers a contact form.

Troscriptions Just Blue methylene blue troches packaging on blue background

Troscriptions was founded by physicians, and four of them use their products in clinical practice. That's a different kind of accountability than most supplement brands operate under. When the people who built the product are prescribing it to patients, the consequences of cutting corners are immediate and professional, not just reputational.

Their stated testing standard is specific: COAs for all active ingredients documenting both purity — including absence of mold, toxins, and pesticides — and potency, meaning actual concentration verification against the label. Potency testing is something many supplement companies quietly skip. Stating it as a standard, with a physician team that understands exactly what's at stake, carries weight.

Their safety disclosures are unusually thorough. They prominently warn against use with SSRIs, SNRIs, and MAOIs, flag the risk for patients with G6PD deficiency, and specifically address the serotonin syndrome interaction. That level of clinical transparency reflects a company that genuinely understands the pharmacology of what they're selling.

Here's where it gets interesting: across multiple product pages on their site, Troscriptions states explicitly that "all our test results are publicly available." That's a strong claim. When you follow it to their formulation process page — the logical place to find them — what you find instead is a prompt to email buccalup@troscriptions.com and request the documents.

That's not the same thing. Publicly available means accessible without a request. What Troscriptions actually offers is documentation available upon inquiry, which puts them in a similar position to other companies that say "ask us and we'll send it." For a brand that built its identity on going beyond USP standards, the gap between the stated claim and the actual access path is worth noting.

The credibility is real. The accessibility isn't.

What to know: Troscriptions uses a troche (buccal lozenge) delivery format. Their methylene blue products include Blue Cannatine — 5mg with caffeine, nicotine, and hemp — and Just Blue, 16mg standalone. Their format and physician-designed approach make them a strong option for buyers who want clinical credibility and who are willing to follow up with an email to actually see the documentation they're promised.

#3 — Earth Harmony

Standard: Established manufacturer. Testing stated. Documentation not publicly accessible.

Earth Harmony USP Grade Ultimate Methylene Blue liquid supplement bottle

Earth Harmony has been in the supplement business for over a decade. They've served more than 100,000 customers. Their manufacturing facility in Phoenix, Arizona, carries cGMP and ASI certification, which means their processes meet FDA good manufacturing practice standards. Their methylene blue uses 99.99% USP-grade material, is formaldehyde-free, and comes in UV-protective glass packaging. These are not meaningless details. They reflect a company that takes the manufacturing side of supplement production seriously.

The problem is everything that happens after. Earth Harmony states across their product pages, press releases, and marketing materials that products undergo rigorous third-party testing. But the results of those tests don't appear anywhere that a buyer can actually find them. There's no public COA page. No lot-specific numbers. No lab name. No documentation you can review before deciding whether to purchase.

What's worth flagging is that most of what looks like independent coverage of Earth Harmony's testing claims turns out to be press releases they published themselves — content distributed through wire services that reads like third-party credibility but isn't. When you strip that away, what remains is a company saying it tests its products, without identifying who does the testing, when it was done, or what it found.

That's a legitimate manufacturing operation making claims that the documentation doesn't support. The gap between "we test" and "here's what we found" is the same gap that separates every company that doesn't publish from every company that does.

Earth Harmony lands at #3 not because anything is known to be wrong with their products. Their operational history is real, and their manufacturing credentials are substantive. The issue is that none of their testing evidence is visible from the buyer's side, and in a category where the best companies are making that evidence accessible before you ever open your wallet, the absence of documentation is the story.

What to know: Earth Harmony's methylene blue comes in both liquid (1% solution, 10mg/mL) and capsule formats. Their broader product line spans multiple supplement categories, suggesting a general wellness brand rather than a methylene blue specialist. For buyers who prioritize brand longevity and manufacturing credentials over documentation depth, they're a legitimate option — with the understanding that you're taking their testing claims on faith.

What Every Methylene Blue Buyer Should Demand

Before purchasing from any company in this category, here's the floor — not the ideal, the minimum:

  • Clear USP-grade specification, stated upfront and unambiguously
  • Named independent testing laboratory with verifiable credentials
  • COA results accessible, whether publicly posted or available upon request
  • Heavy metals testing, including mercury, lead, cadmium, and arsenic
  • Microbial safety results confirming absence of E. coli, Salmonella, and Staph
  • Documentation you can actually obtain without jumping through hoops
  • Potency verification confirming active compound concentration per dose

Which Nutricel Product Is Right for You

Every Nutricel product uses USP-grade methylene blue, is manufactured in an NSF-certified cGMP facility in the United States, and is independently tested through Eurofins. The difference between them is what they are built to support alongside the methylene blue itself.

Blue Boost

Blue Boost is Nutricel's core formula. If your focus is methylene blue itself and you want a clean, research-backed capsule built around absorption and cellular energy, this is it.

Blue Immune

Blue Immune combines methylene blue with copper, NAC, grass-fed beef liver, and vitamins A, C, and E for cellular and immune function support.

Blue Shroom

Blue Shroom pairs methylene blue with six organic mushroom extracts including lion's mane, reishi, cordyceps, chaga, shiitake, and turkey tail.

Blue Renew

Blue Renew is built around GlyNAC (glycine and N-acetyl cysteine), studied for supporting glutathione levels and brain function in aging populations.

Blue Remove

Blue Remove combines zeolite, curcumin, and nattokinase based on the spike protein detoxification protocol developed by Dr. Peter McCullough.

Blue Liquid

Blue Liquid delivers USP-grade methylene blue in a precise dropper bottle for those who prefer liquid format and flexible dosing.

The Bottom Line

The methylene blue market isn't short on confident branding. Every label claims purity. Every website claims rigorous testing. The question worth asking is always the same: where's the documentation?

Nutricel publishes annual results and provides supporting documentation upon request. Troscriptions earns credibility through physician accountability. Earth Harmony asserts it without showing it.

That ordering reflects something simple: transparency isn't just a value statement. In a compound that operates at the cellular level, it's part of the product. The standard a company holds itself to behind closed doors matters enormously. Whether they let you see behind those doors matters just as much.

The brands that answer the documentation question clearly are telling you something real about how they operate. The ones that don't are asking you to trust them. In this category, trust is not a substitute for evidence.

  • USP-grade sourcing is the baseline — not a differentiator, a minimum.
  • Named, credentialed lab testing is what separates a claim from a verification.
  • Publicly accessible documentation is what separates a promise from proof.
  • Potency verification is the emerging frontier the best companies are starting to address.
  • Nutricel leads this ranking because they meet all three core criteria and offer the most accessible documentation trail in the category.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does USP-grade mean for methylene blue?

USP grade means the compound meets United States Pharmacopeia standards for identity, purity, potency, and defined contaminant limits. It is a specific manufacturing standard, not a general marketing term.

Why does third-party testing matter?

Independent laboratory testing verifies whether a product meets the standards a company claims. A lab that has no financial stake in the result provides objective confirmation that self-reported quality cannot.

What is a COA and why should I care?

A Certificate of Analysis is a laboratory document that records the actual testing results for a product. It shows measured values for things like heavy metals, microbial safety, and purity. It is the difference between a quality claim and documented evidence.

Is it a red flag if a company will not share their COA?

Yes. Companies with clean and compliant results typically have little reason to withhold documentation. Transparency with testing results is one of the clearest signals that a supplement company stands behind its product.

Does Nutricel publish their lab results publicly?

Yes. Nutricel publishes annual Eurofins COA summary results that include heavy metals and microbial findings. Supporting documentation is available upon email request.

What should I look for in a COA for methylene blue specifically?

At minimum, look for a heavy metals panel that includes mercury, lead, cadmium, and arsenic, microbial testing that includes E. coli, Salmonella, and Staph, the stated purity percentage, and the name of the independent testing laboratory. Potency verification — confirming the actual methylene blue concentration — is an additional indicator of transparency.

About the Author

Sam Carlson — Researcher and writer at Nutricel Supplements

Sam Carlson

Researcher and writer at Nutricel and a passionate advocate for cellular health. His favorite Nutricel product is Blue Boost, which combines Vitamin C Ester and organic cacao powder, for steady and clear focus and energy throughout the day.

Blue Boost 60

Blue Boost 60 – Methylene Blue with Vitamin C Ester

$34.90

See Product
Blue Boost 120

Blue Boost 120 – Methylene Blue with Vitamin C Ester

$49.90

See Product
Blue Immune

Blue Immune – Methylene Blue with Copper & NAC

$39.90

See Product
Blue Shroom

Blue Shroom – Methylene Blue + 6 Mushroom Extracts

$33.90

See Product
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