The design of novel stationary phases is a permanent demanding challenge in chromatographic and electrophoretic separation science to enable analysis with enhanced selectivity, specificity and speed. Therefore, the characterization of chemical and physical properties is next to calculation of chromatographic parameters essential. Conventionally, column performance is checked by a test run which only enables to prove efficiency column by column. Chemical parameters including surface coverage is normally analyzed by burning combustion or frontal analysis, physical parameters including particle size, pore size, pore volume and surface area by SEM, mercury intrusion porosimetry and Brunauer Emmett Teller. All these methods are extremely time consuming, invasive and require, beside special equipment, some specially trained lab staff. In order to enable a fast high-throughput control of chemical and physical parameters we introduced near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS, 4,000–10,000 cm−1) as a non-invasive, easy-to-handle technology enabling simultaneous analysis within only a few seconds at higher precision than the conventional applied methods. The method is applicable to porous/non-porous silica gel, carbon-based nano-materials (e.g. fullerenes), polymer beads, monoliths for solid-phase extraction, liquid chromatography, micro-liquid chromatography, material-enhanced laser desorption ionization and coated capillaries for capillary electrophoresis and capillary electrochromatography. Different carriers themselves and their kind of chemical derivatization (reversed-phase, normal-phase, ion-exchanger, immobilized affinity chromatography, affinity, endcapping) can be determined by applying principal component analysis of spectra recorded. Partial least square regression enables the determination of physical parameters particle size, pore size, pore volume, porosity, total porosity and surface area with one single measurement in an established quantitative model. For a detailed investigation NIRS imaging, which benefits from the combination of a NIR spectrometer with a microscope, allows to analyze materials of interest with resolution down to 4 μm. For the optimized design of polymeric phases real-time in situ monitoring to control polymerization progress can be highly helpful. In this article, the advantages of this novel infrared-based method for the fast high-throughput quality control are introduced.