Juice concentrates used purely to give your supplement a natural-looking color.
Neither adds health benefits at these amounts. But natural colors avoid the controversial synthetic dyes some people prefer to skip.
Extremely rare at these trace amounts. Possible if you have specific fruit allergies.
In theory, trace amounts of plant pigments. In practice, the amount is so small it's meaningless.
Click through to the studies bar for the evidence base.
See the dosing guide below.
Compare formats before buying.
Some ingredients build up over weeks. Others act fast.
The compound effect of consistent dosing.
Check the cautions section if you have a pre-existing condition.
Some ingredients you feel. Others just work in the background.
Consumer psychology. People expect supplements to look a certain way. Uncolored products can look unappealing.
Yes. It's processed specifically to concentrate pigments, not for nutrition or taste.
Beets (red/pink), carrots (orange), spirulina (green), berries (purple). Depends on desired color.
Concentrated plant pigments (anthocyanins, carotenoids, chlorophylls) provide color. Amounts are far too small for any antioxidant or nutritional effect.
Fruit and Vegetable Juice (Color) has emerging evidence.
Concentrated juices from berries, beets, carrots, and other colorful produce
Fruit and Vegetable Juice (Color) interacts with other supplements and meds. The analyzer flags interactions, dose mismatches, and timing collisions across your whole list.
FDA Disclaimer: These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your healthcare provider before starting any supplement regimen.