The supplement industry generates over $150 billion annually worldwide. Shelves are stacked with products promising energy, immunity, youth, cognitive performance, and fat loss. Most of them are selling hope more than science.
This guide distinguishes the supplements with genuine research support from the ones that represent expensive urine at best — and the principles that should guide anyone navigating this confusing market.
The Foundational Principle: Food First
Nutrients in whole foods exist in complex matrices with cofactors, fiber, and other compounds that affect absorption, bioavailability, and biological activity. Isolated supplements rarely replicate the full effect of nutrients in food. This is particularly true for digestive health; for more on this, see our guide on how to improve gut health naturally.
No supplement replaces a nutrient-dense diet. The evidence base for whole dietary patterns (Mediterranean, whole-food plant-based) producing health outcomes is far stronger than the evidence for any individual supplement.
Think of supplements as potential gap-fillers — not upgrades to a poor diet.
Supplements Worth Considering
Vitamin D
Vitamin D deficiency is estimated to affect 40–50% of the US population. Most people spend insufficient time outdoors, and very few foods contain meaningful amounts of vitamin D naturally. Deficiency is associated with impaired immune function, bone loss, depression, and increased risk of chronic disease.
Supplementation is widely recommended, especially for: people in northern latitudes or cloudy climates, people who spend most time indoors, darker-skinned individuals (who produce less vitamin D from sun exposure), and older adults. Testing (25-OH vitamin D blood test) is the most reliable way to know if you’re deficient and how much to supplement.
Typical supplementation range: 1,000–4,000 IU per day. D3 (cholecalciferol) is more bioavailable than D2.
Omega-3 Fatty Acids (EPA and DHA)
Omega-3s have among the strongest evidence of any supplement for cardiovascular health (particularly triglyceride reduction), anti-inflammatory effects, brain health, and mood. Most people in Western diets consume far more omega-6 fatty acids than omega-3s, producing an inflammatory imbalance.
Best source: fatty fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel) 2–3 times per week. If that’s not achievable, a quality fish oil or algae-based omega-3 supplement (1–2g EPA+DHA daily) is worthwhile. Look for products that have been third-party tested for purity and oxidation.
Magnesium
Magnesium is involved in over 300 enzymatic reactions in the body and is essential for sleep quality, muscle function, nerve transmission, and blood sugar regulation. An estimated 50–60% of Americans don’t meet the daily recommended intake. Depleted soils have reduced magnesium content in food over time.
Magnesium glycinate or magnesium threonate are better-absorbed forms with fewer gastrointestinal side effects than magnesium oxide. Timing before bed can support sleep.
Vitamin B12
Essential for nerve function, DNA synthesis, and red blood cell formation. Naturally found almost exclusively in animal products. People following vegan or strict vegetarian diets should supplement. Older adults (50+) have reduced ability to absorb B12 from food and may benefit from supplementation. Methylcobalamin is the preferred form.
Creatine
One of the most researched and well-supported performance supplements available, with consistent evidence for improving strength, power output, and exercise performance. More recent research also supports cognitive benefits, particularly under conditions of sleep deprivation or mental stress. Safe for long-term use. 3–5g daily of creatine monohydrate is the standard protocol.
Supplements Most People Don’t Need
Most multivitamins: Contain many nutrients you likely don’t need in forms that aren’t well-absorbed, at doses that may not be meaningful. Money is often better spent on food quality.
Fat burners and metabolism boosters: The evidence for any over-the-counter fat loss supplement is weak to nonexistent. Many contain stimulants that can be harmful.
Antioxidant megadosing (Vitamin E, beta-carotene): Large supplemental doses of isolated antioxidants have been shown in multiple trials to be neutral or harmful — in some cases increasing cancer risk. Whole foods provide antioxidants in beneficial form; isolated supplements at high doses may disrupt normal cellular signaling.
Detox products and cleanses: Your liver and kidneys perform continuous detoxification. No juice cleanse or supplement improves this process.
Most herbal supplements for common conditions: Ginkgo biloba, echinacea, valerian — most popular herbal supplements have weak, inconsistent, or nonexistent evidence for the conditions they’re marketed for.
How to Choose Quality Products
The supplement industry has minimal pre-market regulatory oversight in the US — manufacturers don’t need to prove efficacy before selling. What to look for:
- Third-party tested: Look for USP, NSF International, or Informed Sport certification on the label — these verify contents and purity
- Minimal unnecessary ingredients: Fillers, artificial colors, and proprietary blends without disclosed dosages are red flags
- Transparent labeling: Specific forms and doses of each ingredient clearly listed
Working With Your Doctor
Before starting significant supplementation, get relevant blood work done. Testing for vitamin D, B12, iron, and magnesium levels guides supplementation decisions with evidence rather than guesswork — and prevents overcorrecting in directions you don’t need.
