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Ranked picks

Best vitamin D - ranked with the micronutrients shoppers stack it against

Deficiency correction and maintenance are clinical conversations; this list only sorts published ingredients in our vitamins & minerals grouping using evidence, safety, and hype gap.

We pin vitamin D when live, then surface neighbors you often compare on labels (magnesium, zinc, iron, etc.).

Top picks

Ranked using live scores in our database - refresh cadence is editorial, not real-time.

  1. 1

    Vitamin D

    Vitamin D supplementation is well supported for deficiency correction and bone-relevant outcomes; broader “longevity” claims are more mixed.

    82Overall
    Strong support

    Evidence

    84

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    86

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    55

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  2. 2

    Vitamin B12

    B12 replacement is standard of care for deficiency; oral therapy often works even in many absorption issues, but dosing and monitoring depend on cause.

    88Overall
    Strong support

    Evidence

    90

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    92

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    48

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  3. 3

    Iron

    Iron is one of the few supplements that can be truly necessary - yet it is also risky when taken without deficiency.

    72Overall
    Caution

    Evidence

    88

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    58

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    45

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  4. 4

    Folate

    Folate deficiency has clear consequences; public-health fortification and targeted supplements have a strong rationale when indicated.

    82Overall
    Strong support

    Evidence

    84

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    80

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    46

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  5. 5

    Vitamin C

    Vitamin C prevents scurvy and supports collagen synthesis; routine megadosing has limited cold benefit for most people.

    80Overall
    Strong support

    Evidence

    82

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    84

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    58

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  6. 6

    Omega-3 fatty acids

    Omega-3s have meaningful evidence in specific cardiovascular and triglyceride contexts; general “brain upgrade” claims are softer.

    77Overall
    Promising

    Evidence

    80

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    78

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    55

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  7. 7

    Vitamin K1

    Essential for blood clotting; supplementing is mainly for deficiency, anticoagulant reversal, or clinical indication. We summarize evidence, safety, and hype as editorial context-not medical advice.

    76Overall
    Strong support

    Evidence

    80

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    72

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    36

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

  8. 8

    Thiamine (vitamin B1)

    Thiamine deficiency has serious neurologic and cardiac consequences when untreated.

    76Overall
    Strong support

    Evidence

    78

    Human trial breadth and quality

    Safety

    80

    Tolerability and known risks

    Hype gap

    32

    Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

    Open full verdict · Scores are editorial summaries - not medical advice.

Product considerations

Product rows later can flag D3 vs D2 and third-party testing - not a substitute for dosing decisions with a clinician.

How this list is ordered

For picks on this page, we sort candidates by evidence score (human trial quality for common uses), then safety score, then prefer a lower hype gap when the first two tie. Pinned ingredients stay at the top so the page answers the headline before expanding context.

Numbers are not personalized risk scores and not brand QA. For the full rubric, read Methodology.

What to treat skeptically

  • Megadosing without monitoring when hypercalcemia risk exists.
  • Treating vague fatigue as “deficiency” without a real assessment plan.
  • Animal vs vegan D forms marketed with certainty that outruns your actual needs.

Head-to-head comparisons

Side-by-side verdicts that touch ingredients on this leaderboard.