The supplement industry generated over $50 billion in U.S. sales in 2024, and the underlying pitch is consistent: your food isn’t enough, but our pill is. The research keeps disagreeing. Across decades of randomized trials, the supplements that reliably outperform diet are the narrow ones for documented deficiencies. Everything else, the evidence suggests, is a tax on people hoping to bypass the harder work of eating better.
What the trials actually show
Large randomized controlled trials โ VITAL on vitamin D and omega-3s, the SELECT trial on vitamin E and selenium, the Physicians’ Health Study on multivitamins โ repeatedly fail to show meaningful reductions in cardiovascular disease or cancer mortality from general supplementation in well-fed adults. A 2022 U.S. Preventive Services Task Force review concluded there’s “insufficient evidence” that multivitamins prevent the major chronic diseases they’re marketed to address. That doesn’t mean supplements are useless. Folate prevents neural tube defects. B12 helps people with absorption issues. Vitamin D helps when serum levels are genuinely low. The pattern is narrow correction of measured deficiency, not broad insurance against a bad diet.
Why food keeps winning
Whole foods deliver nutrients in matrices supplements can’t replicate. An orange contains vitamin C plus fiber, polyphenols, flavonoids, and water. A vitamin C tablet contains vitamin C. Trials that try to isolate single compounds โ beta-carotene from carrots, lycopene from tomatoes, EGCG from green tea โ have repeatedly underperformed the whole food, and in some cases produced harm. The CARET trial famously had to be stopped early when high-dose beta-carotene supplementation increased lung cancer risk in smokers. Nutrients in food appear to work as systems. Pulling one out and concentrating it isn’t the same intervention.
The behavioral cost nobody discusses
Beyond efficacy, supplements create a permission structure. People who take a daily multivitamin report higher rates of less healthy eating and lower exercise consistency in some surveys, an effect researchers call “licensing.” If you’ve already done the healthy thing this morning, the cookie at lunch feels earned. The same dynamic shows up with greens powders, collagen, and pre-workouts. Spending $80 a month on capsules is not a neutral act; it can quietly substitute for the harder, slower work of cooking, sleeping more, and walking. The supplement becomes the identity, and the underlying behaviors drift.
The bottom line
There’s a defensible case for targeted supplementation: vitamin D in winter at northern latitudes, B12 for vegans and older adults, iron for menstruating women with documented low ferritin, omega-3s for people who don’t eat fish. That’s a short list. Beyond it, the evidence for general supplements moving health outcomes in adults eating reasonable diets is thin to nonexistent. The much harder, much cheaper intervention is unchanged: more vegetables, more legumes, less ultra-processed food, more sleep, more movement. None of that is sold in a bottle, which is partly why the bottle keeps winning. Your money probably belongs in the produce aisle, not the supplement one.
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