Transparency starts before the lab report
A lab report is important, but it is not the only part of a transparent product page. You should be able to understand what the product is, what format it uses, how much CBD it contains, and what the supporting ingredients are before you even click the COA.
What transparent CBD pages usually make easy to find
- Clear product type and spectrum language
- Total CBD content and serving information
- An accessible ingredient list
- A current third-party lab report tied to the product
- Enough detail to compare the product with similar options
That list sounds simple, but it is exactly what turns a product page from persuasive copy into a usable buying tool.
What weak transparency looks like
Weak transparency often shows up as vague category language, generic claims, unclear serving details, or hard-to-find documentation. None of those signals automatically mean the product is bad, but they do make the category harder to compare and easier to misunderstand.
How this fits into the site's broader structure
This guide works best with the lab report guide, the quality guide, and the categories hub. Those pages help you move from a transparency question into the right product path instead of treating transparency as a separate abstract topic.
Use transparency as a filter, not a slogan
The best way to use transparency is to make it part of your comparison process. If one product page makes strength, ingredients, and testing easier to verify than another, that is useful buying information. It is not hype. It is structure.