# What Is a Dietary Supplement?

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What Is a Dietary Supplement? In everyday U.S. terms, a dietary supplement is a product meant to supplement the diet. It is taken by mouth and may contain vitamins, minerals, herbs or botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, or other dietary substances. That sounds simple, but a lot of real-world confusion starts with the fact that supplements are not the same thing as regular food, and they are not regulated like drugs. This page is the plain-English foundation. If you also want the legal context behind the label, see how supplements are regulated in the U.S.. Quick answer A dietary supplement is an ingestible product sold to add to the diet. It is usually sold as a tablet, capsule, softgel, powder, gummy, or liquid. It can contain vitamins, minerals, herbs, amino acids, enzymes, or combinations of these. It is not represented as a conventional food or the sole item of a meal or the diet. It is not reviewed the same way as a drug before sale. It can still affect the body in meaningful ways, so "sold without a prescription" does not mean "always low risk." What counts as a dietary supplement According to FDA and the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, dietary supplements are products intended to add to the diet. They may contain vitamins, minerals, herbs or botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, other dietary substances, or concentrates and extracts of those ingredients. They are meant for ingestion, which is why they usually show up as capsules, tablets, softgels, powders, gummies, or liquids. A useful shortcut is this: if the product is sold to add to the diet, taken by mouth, and clearly presented as a supplement rather than a conventional food, it is probably in the dietary supplement category. How supplements differ from regular foods Supplements can look food-like, especially when they come as gummies, flavored powders, drink mixes, or chewables. But FDA says dietary supplements are not represented as conventional foods and are not represented as the sole item of a meal or the diet. That matters because packaging often blurs the line. A product can look casual or snack-like while still being sold as a supplement with a Supplement Facts panel, dosage expectations, warnings, and ingredient concentrations that deserve more attention than a normal food label would get. How supplements differ from drugs This is the part most shoppers underestimate. FDA says dietary supplements are not approved for safety and effectiveness before they are sold, and supplement labels are not pre-approved before sale either. That does not mean supplements are unregulated. It means the system is different. Drug approval is built around premarket review. Supplement oversight relies much more on manufacturer responsibility, labeling rules, manufacturing rules, and FDA action when products are adulterated, misbranded, or marketed in misleading ways. Why labels and marketing create so much confusion A lot of confusion comes from presentation rather than chemistry. A label can look polished, "clinical," or premium without changing the product's legal category. Words like natural, advanced, or clean can also make a supplement sound more proven or more necessary than the evidence supports. In practice, the product category, the Supplement Facts panel, the warnings, and the source quality matter more than the front-of-label mood. Our guide on how to read a supplement label walks through that side of the decision. How does the FDA define a dietary supplement? In simple terms, a dietary supplement is a product taken by mouth that is meant to supplement the diet and contains one or more dietary ingredients such as vitamins, minerals, herbs, amino acids, or similar substances. The legal definition matters because it explains why supplements are sold in a different category than drugs. That category also shapes what companies can and cannot claim on the label, which is one reason supplement marketing can feel so slippery. Can a supplement be marketed as a treatment for a disease? Not legally in the same way a drug can. This is one of the biggest reasons label-reading matters. Supplement labels can make softer structure-function claims, but that is very different from saying a product treats, cures, or prevents a disease the way an approved medicine would. If the marketing sounds like straight disease treatment language, that should raise your guard rather than your confidence. Does dietary supplement mean natural or automatically safe? No. "Dietary supplement" is a legal category, not a safety guarantee and not proof that a product is natural in the way people often mean it. A supplement can still cause side effects, interactions, or simple disappointment if it is the wrong fit. That is why beginners do better when they treat the category with some caution instead of assuming anything sold as a supplement is mild, harmless, or necessary. What readers often get wrong "If it is sold in stores, FDA must have approved it first." For supplements, that is usually false. "Natural means safe." Natural does not automatically mean safe, necessary, or well-supported. "If it looks like food, it is basically food." Gummies, powders, and flavored drinks can still be supplements. "A supplement label proves the product is a good fit for me." A label explains the product. It does not make a personal decision for you. "Supplements and drugs are basically checked the same way." They are not. When the safer move is to pause and ask questions It is worth slowing down if a product sounds like it is promising treatment, replacing meals, or solving a serious health issue with marketing language alone. It is also worth pausing if you already take medicines, have an ongoing medical condition, or are trying to self-manage symptoms rather than understand them. For those situations, the next useful page is usually when to talk to a clinician before taking supplements. Next Questions to Read How Supplements Are Regulated How to Read a Supplement Label When to Talk to a Clinician FAQ Short answers to the basic supplement category questions readers usually ask first. What is a dietary supplement in simple terms? A dietary supplement is a product taken by mouth that is meant to add to the diet, often as a capsule, tablet, softgel, powder, gummy, or liquid. What ingredients can dietary supplements contain? They may contain vitamins, minerals, herbs or botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, other dietary substances, or extracts and concentrates of those ingredients. Are dietary supplements the same as drugs? No. Supplements are not reviewed through the same premarket approval process as drugs, and they are not approved for safety and effectiveness before sale in the same way. Can a supplement be marketed as a treatment for disease? Not legally in the same way a drug can. Disease-treatment language should make shoppers slow down and read the claim carefully. Does dietary supplement mean natural or automatically safe? No. Dietary supplement is a legal category, not a safety guarantee and not proof that a product is natural, necessary, or low risk. References FDA: Dietary Supplements NIH ODS: Dietary Supplements - What You Need to Know NCCIH: Using Dietary Supplements Wisely Update Note Last reviewed and updated on May 15, 2026. Added AI-ready FAQ answers for common reader questions. Added follow-up guidance on the FDA definition, disease-treatment claims, and why the supplement category is not a safety guarantee. Publisher Trust Notes Publisher: Supplement Explained Editorial Team Review model: Editorial evidence review; clinician review is shown only when a named clinician is listed. Last reviewed: May 15, 2026 Last updated: May 15, 2026 Editorial Policy | How We Review Evidence | Research Process | Disclaimer Use: Informational only. Not personal medical advice.
