
Originally Posted by
Low Testosterone
HCG expirations aren't as cut and dry as one might think.
When a pharmacy makes HCG they are required to put an expiration on it, in most cases, this will be a 30 or 60 day expiration date. However, that does not mean the HCG actually goes bad or starts to lose potency at 30 or 60 days. It cost X amount of money for the 30 day test they are required to run, it cost a little more for the 60 day test - in either case, this means the HCG has been tested and proven to hold potency and quality for 30-60 days and such tests have been paid for. So what about after let's say 60 days? I've seen plenty of HCG products that have full potency at 90-100 days, the pharmacy cannot put an expiration of 90-100 days on the bottle because they did not pay to have it tested for that time frame and rarely will as it would be enormously expensive.
Lastly, whenever a bottle of HCG does start to lose potency, it does not rapidly fall. Potency loss is at a rate of approximately 10% per 15-20 days in most cases.