Vitamins & Supplements

On this Vitamins & Supplements category page, products move in and out as partners update ranges and rotate stock, so a 30-tablet bottle or a 60-capsule pack can appear one week and vanish the next. The mix spans multivitamins, single-nutrient options, and specialist formulas, with strengths shown as mg or IU and pack formats like capsules, tablets, powders, and gummies. Some partners group flavours or sizes under one tile, while others split each strength into separate entries. It looks busy at first. A label might show “500mg” on one listing and “0.5g” on another, even when the format is the same, and that difference is part of what you’re browsing across retailers.

Read on for how vitamins and supplements are grouped, sized, and described across partner listings

Primary product groupings you’ll run into

Most ranges break out into multivitamins, single vitamins/minerals, and performance blends, with tubs of powder, blistered tablets, and capsule bottles appearing as separate entries. Some items show as one tile with strength and pack-size options, while others publish a new listing for each 90-capsule vs 180-capsule size. It varies fast. For multivitamins for adults, check whether the listing states tablets or capsules, the daily serving count (e.g. 1 vs 2 per day), and whether it’s a 30-day or 90-day supply. Optimum Nutrition appears in some partner ranges, and its products are often presented as tubs by weight (like 300g) rather than by tablet count.

Secondary formats: bundles, refills, and “same product” duplicates

Partners publish bundles and multipacks in different ways, so you may see a “2 x 60 capsules” twin pack beside a single 120-capsule bottle that looks similar at a glance. Small differences matter. One retailer will keep flavour or variant selectors inside one listing, while another splits each strength (e.g. 1000mg vs 2000mg) into separate entries with near-identical images. With omega 3 fish oil, watch for softgels vs liquid bottles, capsule count (like 90 or 180), and whether the label specifies EPA/DHA amounts per serving. Sports Direct appears in some rotations, and its assortment can lean towards multipacks and mixed “bundle” titles rather than clean single-item naming.

Sizing, strength, and serving details that don’t line up

Strength and serving info is not presented consistently, even when the product format is identical. Some listings headline “IU” while others lead with “µg”, and a few only show the per-serving amount in the description rather than the title. Expect gaps. For vitamin d supplements, check whether the strength is shown as 1000 IU or 25µg, confirm the form (capsule, tablet, or spray), and look for pack size like 30, 60, or 120 servings. A “one-a-day” claim can sit next to a similar-looking product that requires two capsules per serving, which changes how long a bottle lasts.

Materials, build, and functional features in the listing text

Capsule shell type and tablet finish are practical differences that partners sometimes surface and sometimes omit. Read the fine print. You’ll see veggie cellulose capsules versus gelatine softgels, and tablets described as coated, chewable, or slow-release, which affects swallowability and how the dose is delivered over time. For probiotic capsules, check whether the listing specifies delayed-release capsules, a CFU count per capsule, and storage notes like “shelf-stable” versus “keep refrigerated”. Innermost shows up in some partner selections, and its products are more likely to emphasise powder tubs (by grams) with scoop servings, rather than capsule counts.

Common checks that prevent like-for-like mistakes

Start with format and count: tablets vs capsules, then 30/60/90/180 units or a tub weight like 250g. Keep it simple. Confirm the labelled strength (mg, µg, or IU) and whether the serving is 1 or 2 units, because “500mg” per tablet is not the same as “500mg per serving” when the serving is two tablets. For magnesium tablets, look for the specific form (such as citrate or oxide), any “slow-release” wording, and whether the pack is a bottle or blister strips, since those packaging differences show up as separate listings.

How Discount Codes Help Lower Costs When Buying Vitamins & Supplements

Discount codes relate to saving money on Vitamins & Supplements by applying a retailer’s code at checkout, which matters when listings differ by a 60-tablet bottle versus a 120-capsule pack—small format shifts. No promises. Discount Promo Codes provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and links to retailers’ discount code pages may sit alongside product listings when available. Charity is part of the operating model—20% of profits are donated each month—though product availability still changes with listing turnover and range updates. For iron tablets, the same product can appear as 14, 28, or 90 tablets across partners, so any code link shown is tied to that retailer’s checkout rather than to a universal product entry.