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Leggi in EN →How to use a reagent test kit properly
A field guide to reagent testing — what kits actually tell you, what they don't, and how to interpret the colors without fooling yourself.
A reagent test takes 30 seconds, costs a few cents per use, and is the single most effective harm-reduction step you can take with a pressed or unknown substance. It is also routinely misused. This guide covers the practical details that get glossed over in the kits' instructions.
What a reagent kit actually does
Reagent kits are presumptive colorimetric tests. You drop a small amount of acid onto a tiny scraping of your sample and watch the color change over 30–60 seconds. Each reagent gives a known reaction with known compounds. The kit confirms presence; it does not confirm purity, dose, or absence of adulterants.
A positive reagent reaction tells you a substance class is present. It does not tell you how much, or what else might also be present. This is why we recommend multi-reagent testing. Different reagents react differently with different compounds, and overlapping results let you triangulate.
What you need
- The reagent itself, refrigerated, in its original bottle
- A small ceramic or glass plate (or the cap of the bottle)
- A toothpick or razor blade for scraping a tiny sample
- Good lighting, ideally daylight
- A reference color chart for the specific reagent and substance class
- A phone timer
Step by step
- Take a tiny sample. A grain of rice's worth of powder, a corner of a pill, or 1 mm of a blotter. More sample does not give a clearer result; it usually gives a less clear one.
- Place the sample on a non-reactive surface. White ceramic shows colors most accurately. Avoid plastic, some reagents will react with it.
- Drop the reagent on top. Just one drop. The bottle should hover; do not touch the sample.
- Watch the color develop over 60 seconds. The reaction is often fastest in the first 5 seconds, then evolves. Note the peak color, not the final color.
- Compare to the reference chart for that specific reagent. Reactions vary substantially between reagents. Marquis purple is not the same purple as Ehrlich purple.
- Repeat with a second reagent to confirm. If you only have Marquis, you cannot distinguish MDMA from PMA or PMMA. And PMA has killed people at MDMA-typical doses.
Common pitfalls
- Using only Marquis. Marquis turns purple-black for MDMA, but it also turns purple-black for PMA, PMMA, methylone, MDA and several others. Always confirm with Mandelin and Mecke, or Simon's (for secondary amines).
- Misreading the color. Reagent colors evolve. The five-second color is not the final color. The peak color is the diagnostic one.
- Bad lighting. Yellow indoor light shifts blues and greens noticeably. Use a window if you can.
- Old reagent. Reagents degrade. A bottle older than 12 months, or one stored at room temperature for any length of time, may give weak or shifted reactions. Keep them in the fridge.
- Cross-contamination. A previously used toothpick will throw off the next test. Use a fresh one each time.
Reagent recommendations by substance class
| If you think you have | Test with |
|---|---|
| MDMA / "ecstasy" | Marquis + Mandelin + Mecke + Simon's |
| LSD / 1P-LSD | Ehrlich (and confirm no reaction with Marquis) |
| Ketamine | Morris |
| Cocaine | Scott's three-stage |
| 2C-B, 2C-x | Marquis + Mecke + Liebermann |
| Mushrooms | Ehrlich |
When reagent testing isn't enough
For pure compounds and unknown solids, fentanyl test strips are a separate and necessary test, especially in regions where unintentional fentanyl contamination is a known risk. Reagent kits do not detect fentanyl.
For final certainty, send a sample to a drug-checking service if one is available in your region (DanceSafe in the US, MAPS-affiliated programs in some EU countries, the Spanish Energy Control project, or organizations operating under PsyCare-style permissions at festivals).