Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new supplement or wellness protocol.
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How to Read a Supplement Label Like a Scientist

Most people look at the brand name and the price. Here is how to actually evaluate what you are buying.

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WellSourced Editorial ยทMarch 25, 2026 ยท6 min read
How to Read a Supplement Label Like a Scientist

The supplement industry generates over $50 billion annually in the US alone. It's also one of the least regulated consumer product categories. The FDA doesn't approve supplements before they hit shelves โ€” your ability to read a label is your primary defense.

Start with the Supplement Facts Panel

  • Serving size: The most common trick. If a bottle says "500mg magnesium" but the serving size is 3 capsules, each capsule only contains ~167mg
  • Amount per serving: Compare this to the clinically studied dose โ€” if studies used 2000mg and the product provides 200mg, it's underdosed
  • % Daily Value: Useful for vitamins and minerals, less meaningful for specialty compounds

Ingredient Forms Matter

Magnesium example: Magnesium oxide has ~4% bioavailability. Magnesium glycinate has ~80%. The form matters as much as the dose.

  • Vitamin B12: methylcobalamin (active) vs. cyanocobalamin (synthetic, needs conversion)
  • Folate: methylfolate (active) vs. folic acid (synthetic, ~40% have reduced conversion)
  • CoQ10: ubiquinol (reduced, more bioavailable) vs. ubiquinone (oxidized)
  • Curcumin: standard extract vs. phytosome or piperine-enhanced (dramatically different absorption)

Third-Party Testing

  • USP Verified: The most rigorous. Tests for purity, potency, and contaminants
  • NSF International: Common for sports supplements
  • ConsumerLab: Independent testing and reporting

Red Flags

  • Claims that sound too medical: "cures," "treats," or "prevents" (illegal for supplements)
  • Proprietary blends with 10+ ingredients (likely all underdosed)
  • No third-party testing mentioned anywhere
  • Dramatically cheaper than competitors

Key Takeaways

Reading a supplement label takes two minutes once you know what to look for. Check the serving size, verify the ingredient forms, look for third-party testing, and be skeptical of proprietary blends.

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