Pick up almost any pre-workout, “fat burner,” sleep aid, or testosterone booster and you’ll see a familiar formatting trick on the back label. Under “Proprietary Blend” or some branded name like “Performance Matrix,” there’s a single total weightโsay, 3.2 gramsโfollowed by a list of ingredients with no individual dosages. You’re told what’s in it, but not how much of any one thing. That ambiguity is not a quirk of supplement design. It’s a deliberate feature, and it’s worth understanding what it accomplishes for the manufacturer at your expense.
The legal background that made it possible
The 1994 Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act lets supplement makers list ingredients in a proprietary blend by total weight only, as long as the ingredients are listed in descending order of prominence. That descending-order requirement is the entire transparency the law guarantees, and it’s not much. A blend listing ten ingredients tells you only that whatever appears first weighs at least as much as whatever’s second, and so onโnothing about ratios or whether any individual ingredient is present at a dose with documented physiological effects. Researchers studying dosing thresholdsโsay, the 3-to-6 gram range where creatine actually works, or the roughly 200-milligram caffeine effective doseโcan’t determine whether a product hits those marks. Neither can you.
What the opacity is for
There are two things proprietary blends are typically designed to obscure. First: cheap fillers in expensive-sounding company. A blend that lists premium-sounding ingredients alongside dirt-cheap ones often consists mostly of the cheap material, with the prestige ingredients present in trace amountsโsometimes called “fairy dusting.” The label gets to imply the formulation, while the actual content tracks the cost. Second: doses below research thresholds. If a “muscle recovery blend” totals one gram across eight ingredients, no individual ingredient is present at a meaningful dose, but listing them by name evokes studies done at full doses. The blend essentially borrows credibility from research it can’t replicate. The few brands that publish full per-ingredient dosingโoften called “transparent label” companiesโdo so as a competitive distinction, which tells you everything about what the rest are doing.
How to read past the blend
The cleanest defense is to skip products with proprietary blends entirely when more transparent options exist. Categories like creatine, whey protein, and basic vitamins have plenty of single-ingredient or fully disclosed competitors. For categories where blends dominate, look up each ingredient’s effective dose on independent sources like Examine.com and compare against the total weight of the blend. If the effective doses of the listed ingredients can’t all fit inside the stated total, the product is mathematically incapable of delivering the implied benefits. That kind of arithmetic check, done in a minute, eliminates a striking percentage of the supplement aisle.
Bottom line
Proprietary blends aren’t an industry tradition or a trade-secret protection. They’re a labeling shortcut that lets manufacturers imply efficacy without committing to it. Treat them as a yellow flag, do the dose math when you can, and prefer the brands willing to show their work.
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