What’s the first red flag you look for on a supplement label?
I keep coming back to the same question when I’m looking at supplements: if the formula is actually good, why does the label need to play games? One stat that stuck with me: a 2024 ConsumerLab analysis found that roughly 1 in 4 supplements tested had some kind of quality issue, whether that was the wrong dose, contamination, or ingredients that didn’t match the label. That doesn’t mean every bottle is sketchy. It does mean the back label matters way more than the marketing on the front. A few things I check first: Serving size math. A bottle can brag about 500 mg on the front, then you realize that only applies if you take 2 capsules, and the bottle has fewer real servings than you thought. Proprietary blends. If a company won’t tell you how much of each ingredient is in the formula, I’m usually out. If the dose is strong, they can just print it. Ingredient form. Magnesium glycinate tells you something useful. “Magnesium” alone doesn’t. Same with probiotic strains, curcumin extracts, and a lot of mushroom products. Third-party testing. USP, NSF, or ConsumerLab means more to me than words like “doctor recommended” or “clinically studied.” Also, the “other ingredients” section tells you a lot. A clean formula looks different from a bottle packed with colors, fillers, and fluff. Curious what everyone here checks first when you flip a bottle around. What makes you put a supplement back on the shelf?