How to Read Supplement Labels
Your complete guide to decoding what's really in your supplements — from serving sizes to certifications.
Understanding Serving Size
The serving size is the single most deceptive element on many supplement labels. Manufacturers often list impressive nutrient amounts — but per 2, 3, or even 4 capsules. If you only take one capsule, you are getting a fraction of what's advertised on the front of the bottle.
What to look for:
- •Check "Serving Size" at the top of the Supplement Facts panel. It tells you the number of capsules, tablets, or scoops per serving.
- •Check "Servings Per Container" to calculate how long a bottle will last at the recommended dose.
- •Compare cost per serving, not cost per bottle. A cheaper bottle with 2-capsule servings might actually cost more per day.
Pro tip: Always calculate the per-capsule amount by dividing the listed amount by the number of capsules per serving. This gives you the true comparison metric between products.
Active Ingredients vs Fillers
Every supplement label has two key sections: the "Supplement Facts" panel listing active ingredients with amounts, and the "Other Ingredients" section listing everything else in the capsule or tablet.
Active Ingredients
- ✓Listed in the Supplement Facts panel
- ✓Show specific amounts per serving
- ✓Often show % Daily Value
- ✓These are the compounds you're paying for
Other Ingredients (Fillers)
- •Listed below the Supplement Facts
- •Include binders, flow agents, coatings
- •Some are necessary (capsule shell)
- •Others are cheap fillers to watch out for
Common acceptable fillers include cellulose (plant fiber), rice flour, and gelatin or vegetable capsule shells (HPMC). These are structurally necessary and generally harmless.
Third-Party Testing & Certifications
Unlike pharmaceuticals, supplements are not required to prove their effectiveness before going to market. Third-party testing is your best guarantee that what's on the label is actually in the bottle — and that dangerous contaminants are absent.
USP (United States Pharmacopeia)
The most rigorous verification program. USP tests for identity (correct ingredient), potency (correct amount), purity (no harmful contaminants), and dissolution (will it break down properly in your body). Products that pass carry the "USP Verified" mark.
NSF International
NSF offers two main programs: "NSF Contents Tested & Certified" (verifies label claims) and "NSF Certified for Sport" (additionally tests for 270+ banned substances — essential for athletes). Both involve regular facility audits and product testing.
ConsumerLab
ConsumerLab independently purchases and tests products off the shelf. They check for label accuracy, contamination, and disintegration. Their "CL Approved" seal is credible, though they also sell subscription-based access to detailed reports.
Warning: Some brands create their own "certification" logos that look official but mean nothing. If you don't recognize a certification seal, search for the certifying body online to verify it's a legitimate independent organization.
Bioavailability: Forms Matter
Bioavailability refers to how much of a nutrient your body can actually absorb and use. Two products might list the same amount of a nutrient on the label, but dramatically different amounts reach your bloodstream depending on the form used.
Magnesium
Magnesium oxide is cheap but mostly passes through unabsorbed. Glycinate is gentler on the stomach.
Vitamin B12
Methylcobalamin is the active form your body uses directly. Cyanocobalamin requires conversion and contains a tiny amount of cyanide.
Iron
Iron bisglycinate causes significantly fewer stomach issues and is better absorbed, especially on an empty stomach.
Zinc
Zinc picolinate shows the highest absorption in studies. Always take zinc with food to prevent nausea.
Curcumin
Curcumin alone has very poor absorption (~1%). Piperine (black pepper extract) increases absorption by up to 2,000%.
What to Avoid
Watch out for these red flags when reading supplement labels:
Proprietary blends
A "proprietary blend" lists ingredients but hides individual amounts. This makes it impossible to know if you're getting effective doses or mostly cheap fillers. Reputable brands disclose all individual amounts.
Artificial colors (Red 40, Yellow 5, Blue 1)
These synthetic dyes serve no nutritional purpose and are linked to behavioral issues in some studies. They are purely cosmetic — avoid them.
Titanium dioxide
Used as a whitening agent. While generally recognized as safe, it's unnecessary and some countries are phasing it out as a food additive due to concerns about nanoparticle absorption.
Hydrogenated oils
Sometimes used as fillers or to improve texture. These contain trans fats, which are harmful to cardiovascular health. There is no reason for them to be in a supplement.
Mega-doses (10,000%+ DV)
Unless treating a documented deficiency under medical supervision, extremely high doses of most vitamins are unnecessary and potentially harmful. More is not always better — especially with fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K).
"Miracle" claims on the label
Any supplement claiming to "cure," "treat," or "prevent" a disease is violating FDA regulations and should be treated with extreme skepticism.
Your Label-Reading Checklist
Use this quick checklist every time you evaluate a supplement:
- 1Check the serving size — how many capsules per serving?
- 2Verify the amount of active ingredient per capsule (not just per serving).
- 3Identify the specific form of each nutrient (e.g., magnesium glycinate vs oxide).
- 4Scan "Other Ingredients" for unnecessary fillers, colors, or hydrogenated oils.
- 5Look for a third-party testing seal (USP, NSF, ConsumerLab).
- 6Check for a "proprietary blend" — if present, individual doses are hidden.
- 7Compare cost per serving across brands, not cost per bottle.
- 8Verify storage instructions (some supplements need refrigeration).
- 9Check the expiration date — nutrients degrade over time.
- 10Research the brand's reputation and manufacturing practices.