Why we built VitaCheck

You take supplements. But has anyone ever checked if they're right — for you?

Three out of four American adults take a dietary supplement.1 Almost none of them have ever had the whole shelf checked at once — for the thing taken twice, the dose quietly over the limit, and the one nutrient actually missing. VitaCheck started with a simple, uncomfortable question: confident isn't the same as correct.

Educational information, not medical advice · Evidence-graded · We sell nothing
The quiet math of a supplement shelf

The supplement aisle is mainstream, expensive, and almost entirely unsupervised. Three numbers explain why a second look pays off.

75%
of U.S. adults take dietary supplements
A mainstream habit, not a fringe one — and rising.1
$50B+
spent on supplements in the U.S. each year
Much of it topping up nutrients people already get from food.2
84
studies the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force reviewed
Across ~739,000 people — and still couldn't recommend most vitamins for preventing heart disease or cancer in healthy adults.3
This doesn't mean supplements are useless. It means the average bottle is bought on hope, not need — and the people who do benefit are usually those filling a specific, identifiable gap.34 Knowing which group you're in is the entire point.

Most stacks aren't designed. They accumulate.

A bottle gets added for a symptom, another because a friend swears by it, a third from a sale. Nobody sits down and audits the whole shelf. So three predictable failures creep in — and they're exactly what VitaCheck looks for.

01 · Taken twice

You're probably paying for nutrients your diet already covers.

If you eat fruit most days, a 1,000 mg vitamin C tablet is mostly expensive urine. Yogurt and greens can make a calcium pill redundant. The honest question is never "is this healthy?" — it's "do you still need it?" For many stacks, the overlap between the cabinet and the plate is the single biggest line item.

Why it matters: Reviews of large trials find that for well-nourished adults, routine multivitamin and mineral use shows no clear benefit for preventing chronic disease or death — the nutrients are already coming from food.345
02 · Over the limit

"More" has a number. It's called the upper limit.

A multivitamin here, an immunity gummy there, fortified cereal in the morning. Nobody decides to exceed the safe ceiling — it just adds up. Zinc, iron, vitamin B6, and vitamin A are the usual suspects, and the margin between "enough" and "too much" can be surprisingly narrow.

Zinc — daily totalUL 40 mg/day
Multivitamin 11 mg Immunity gummies 25 mg Fortified cereal ~4 mg= 40 mg (at the ceiling)
Why it matters: Excess of one nutrient can quietly induce a deficiency or harm elsewhere — chronic high-dose zinc suppresses copper absorption; vitamin A excess pulls calcium from bone; high-dose vitamin B6 can, over time, cause nerve damage despite being water-soluble.67 In one study of regular supplement users, 18% reported at least one adverse effect — rising to 20% for combination products.8
03 · The blind spot

Meanwhile, the one you actually need sits unfilled.

Rarely eat fish? Rarely outdoors? Mostly plant-based? The nutrient you're genuinely low on is usually predictable from how you live — and it's often the one bottle not in your cabinet. The shelf is crowded with what's trendy, not with what your particular week is missing.

Why it matters: The people who clearly benefit from supplements are those correcting a real gap — e.g. vitamin D and calcium for fracture risk in some older adults, B12 and omega-3 for many plant-based eaters, folate in pregnancy.34 The benefit is real when it's matched to the person. Matching is the hard part — and the part a checkout aisle never does.
How the check works

Four quick steps. One honest answer.

No quizzes that funnel you toward more bottles. We read your routine, your plate, and your cabinet — then tell you what to keep, stop, and add, with the reasoning shown.

01

Tell us about you

Age, sex, lifestyle, how you've been feeling.

Sets the reference ranges — the right RDA and upper limit change with age, sex, and pregnancy status.

02

Describe your plate

A week of meals, in your own words. No tracking, no logging.

We estimate which nutrients your diet likely already covers — the source of most "paying twice" overlaps.

03

List your cabinet

Every bottle, gummy, and powder you currently take — plus any meds.

We add up each nutrient across all sources to catch duplicates and totals creeping over the ceiling, then screen for interactions most quizzes ignore.

04

Get your report

Keep, stop, add — with dosing, timing, and an evidence grade on every card.

Each recommendation shows the why and a Strong / Moderate / Limited grade, so you can disagree with us intelligently.

The goal isn't to sell you a regimen. It's the opposite of the aisle: as often as not, the most valuable card in your report is the one that says stop.

How we grade

We'd rather be honest than flattering.

Every recommendation carries one of three grades. No brand can pay for a grade, a placement, or a recommendation.

Strong
Replicated human trials, consistent direction of effect.Vitamin D for correcting a measured deficiency.
Moderate
Real mechanism, limited or mixed human evidence.Zinc lozenges shortening a cold.
Limited
Mostly marketing — animal/in-vitro data, or failed-to-replicate trials. We'll say so plainly.Collagen for skin in already well-nourished adults.

Reference values (RDA, upper limits) follow the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and EFSA. Effect claims are graded against peer-reviewed trials and systematic reviews — never by what sells.6 Read our full methodology →

About VitaCheck

A second opinion, not a storefront.

VitaCheck was built by people who got tired of the supplement aisle answering a question nobody asked. The aisle is very good at "what's popular." It's terrible at "what does this person, eating this way, actually need?" That's the gap we wanted to close — a free, fast, plain-English check that reads your real week instead of selling you a bundle.

We're not a clinic and we don't replace one. We're the careful pharmacist friend who looks at everything on your shelf at once, says what's redundant, flags what's stacking past the limit, and points at the gap — then hands you back the decision.

Questions people ask before they trust us

Is VitaCheck medical advice?
No. VitaCheck provides educational information only — not diagnosis or treatment. It's a screen to bring to a real conversation with your doctor or pharmacist, especially if you're pregnant, nursing, managing a condition, or taking prescription medication.
Do I need an account, or to enter payment details?
Neither. The check is free, takes about two minutes, and requires no sign-up. We don't sell products, so there's nothing to buy.
Are supplements just a waste of money, then?
Not for everyone. For many well-nourished adults, routine multivitamins show little benefit in large reviews. But people filling a real, identifiable gap — vitamin D, B12, folate in pregnancy, and others — can clearly benefit. The whole point of the check is telling those two situations apart for you.
How can taking "extra" vitamins be harmful?
Because more isn't free. Nutrients have upper limits, and stacking several products plus fortified foods can quietly push past them. Excess zinc can cause copper deficiency, too much vitamin A can weaken bone, and chronic high-dose B6 can damage nerves. The check adds up every source to catch this.
Where do your numbers and grades come from?
Reference ranges follow the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements; effect claims are graded against peer-reviewed trials and systematic reviews like those from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and Cochrane. No brand pays for placement.

Confident is easy. Correct takes two minutes.

Free, no sign-up, nothing sold. Get the whole shelf checked at once — duplicates, ceilings, and the gap.

Check my stack
Sources & references8 cited sources · click to expand
  1. Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN), 2024 Consumer Survey (Ipsos). ~75% of U.S. adults report taking dietary supplements; 55% are regular users. — crnusa.org
  2. CNN Health / Northwestern Medicine editorial in JAMA (2022). U.S. adults spent an estimated ~$50 billion on vitamins and supplements in 2021. — cnn.com; news.northwestern.edu
  3. U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), 2022 recommendation, based on a systematic review of 84 studies (~739,000 participants): insufficient evidence that vitamin/mineral supplements prevent cardiovascular disease or cancer in healthy, non-pregnant adults; recommends against beta-carotene and vitamin E.
  4. Johns Hopkins Medicine — "Is There Really Any Benefit to Multivitamins?" and the editorial "Enough Is Enough: Stop Wasting Money on Vitamin and Mineral Supplements" (Annals of Internal Medicine). — hopkinsmedicine.org
  5. Harvard Health Publishing, "Don't waste time (or money) on dietary supplements" (2022). — health.harvard.edu
  6. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Zinc and Magnesium Health Professional Fact Sheets (RDA/UL reference values; zinc–copper interaction). — ods.od.nih.gov
  7. Nutrient-interaction / toxicity literature — e.g., Penniston & Tanumihardjo on vitamin A; reviews on high-dose B6 neuropathy and vitamin D / calcium load.
  8. Military Dietary Supplement Use Study (ScienceDirect, 2022). 18% of users reported ≥1 adverse effect overall; 20% for combination products. — sciencedirect.com