Walk into any Irish health food shop, pharmacy, or supermarket and you will be confronted with an overwhelming array of supplement products, all making compelling claims and none of them immediately transparent about whether they are worth buying. The supplement market in Ireland and across Europe is large, competitive, and โ in the absence of robust pre-market approval requirements โ highly variable in quality.
Pat Coffey at The Honey Pot in Clonmel, 14 Abbey Street, has spent twenty years of professional practice learning to distinguish genuinely excellent supplements from mediocre or outright poor ones. She has walked away from dozens of supplier relationships over the years because the products did not meet her standards, and she curates The Honey Pot's range on the basis of quality evidence rather than profit margins. This guide shares what she looks for โ and what to avoid โ when reading a supplement label.
Understanding What a Supplement Label Must (and Must Not) Show
In Ireland, food supplements are regulated under the EU Directive on Food Supplements (2002/46/EC), implemented through Irish SI No. 506 of 2007. This means that:
- Supplements must list all ingredients, including excipients (fillers, binders, coatings)
- They must show the quantity per dose of the active nutrients
- They may show "nutrient reference values" (NRVs, the EU equivalent of RDAs) as a percentage
- They may not make unauthorised health claims โ the claims that can be made are tightly regulated under EU Regulation 1924/2006
- They do not require pre-market approval for safety or efficacy โ this is a crucial difference from pharmaceutical medications
This means that a supplement can be legally sold in Ireland while containing ineffective doses, poorly absorbed forms of nutrients, excessive fillers, and no meaningful third-party quality testing. The label is your primary tool for assessing quality โ but you need to know how to read it.
Active Ingredients: Forms Matter Enormously
The single most important thing to look for on a supplement label is the chemical form of the active ingredient. This is where the biggest differences between cheap and quality supplements are found.
Magnesium
- Magnesium glycinate, malate, citrate โ well absorbed, gentle on digestion. The forms Pat recommends.
- Magnesium oxide โ very cheap, poorly absorbed (approximately 4% bioavailability), commonly causes loose stools at effective doses. The form found in most budget products.
Vitamin B12
- Methylcobalamin or adenosylcobalamin โ the active, bioavailable forms. Especially important for people with MTHFR gene variants (very common in Ireland's genetically Celtic population).
- Cyanocobalamin โ synthetic, requires conversion. Less effective for people with methylation issues.
Folate
- 5-methyltetrahydrofolate (5-MTHF) โ the active form. Particularly important in pregnancy supplementation and for people with MTHFR variants.
- Folic acid โ the synthetic form, requires enzymatic conversion. Still adequate for most people but less optimal than 5-MTHF.
Iron
- Iron bisglycinate, fumarate, gluconate โ better absorbed, gentler forms.
- Ferrous sulphate โ the most commonly prescribed form in Irish GP practice; effective but can cause significant digestive side effects. Many health food shop customers come to Pat specifically because ferrous sulphate has caused them problems.
Zinc
- Zinc glycinate, picolinate, citrate โ well absorbed.
- Zinc oxide โ poorly absorbed. Common in budget products and most cheap multivitamins.
Vitamin D
- D3 (cholecalciferol) โ the form produced by skin in sunlight; significantly more effective at raising blood levels than D2.
- D2 (ergocalciferol) โ plant-derived, less effective. Check labels carefully โ some products (especially vegan/vegetarian formulas) use D2.
Dosage: Are You Getting a Meaningful Amount?
Many supplements contain doses that are far too low to produce a meaningful physiological effect โ they are dosed to achieve a price point, not a health outcome. The "NRV" (nutrient reference value) percentages on labels are based on the minimum amounts needed to prevent deficiency diseases, not on optimal intake for health. A supplement containing "100% NRV" of a nutrient is not necessarily at a therapeutic dose.
Examples of the gap between NRV and therapeutic dose:
- Vitamin D NRV: 5mcg (200 IU). Evidence-based winter supplementation in Ireland: 25โ50mcg (1000โ2000 IU).
- Magnesium NRV: 375mg. Therapeutic dose for sleep or anxiety: 200โ400mg of elemental magnesium in a bioavailable form.
- Vitamin C NRV: 80mg. Common therapeutic supplementation: 500โ2000mg daily.
Excipients: What Else Is in the Capsule?
Every supplement contains excipients โ the non-active ingredients that hold the product together, fill the capsule, improve shelf stability, or enhance absorption. Most are harmless, but some are worth knowing about:
- Titanium dioxide (E171) โ a whitening agent now banned in food in the EU but still permitted in supplements. Many premium brands have voluntarily removed it. Pat avoids products containing E171.
- Magnesium stearate โ a common flow agent. Generally safe; some practitioners prefer products that avoid it, particularly for digestive conditions.
- Hydrogenated oils โ occasionally found in softgel capsules. Worth avoiding.
- Artificial colours and flavours โ no place in a quality supplement. If you see FD&C dyes on a supplement label, put it back.
Quality Assurance: Third-Party Testing
Because supplements do not require pre-market approval, the most important quality signal is independent third-party testing. Reputable supplement brands will confirm that their products are tested by independent labs for:
- Potency verification โ does the product actually contain what the label claims?
- Heavy metal contamination (particularly relevant for fish oil, greens powders, and products from some Asian sourcing regions)
- Microbial contamination
- Absence of common allergens if claimed
Certifications to look for include NSF International, USP (United States Pharmacopeia), and Informed Sport (particularly relevant for athletes). GMP (Good Manufacturing Practice) certification means the manufacturer meets standards for production consistency. These certifications are not legally required in Ireland but are strong indicators of quality commitment.
Red Flags: When to Put It Back on the Shelf
- Unspecified "proprietary blend" with no individual ingredient quantities
- Implausible claims ("reverses ageing," "cures diabetes")
- No contact details for the manufacturer or distributor
- Missing expiry date
- Cheap forms of key nutrients (magnesium oxide, cyanocobalamin, zinc oxide) in a product marketed as "premium"
- Excessive number of ingredients โ products containing 50+ nutrients are typically dosed far too low in each to be meaningful
Pat's Shopping Shortcut
Pat's simplest advice: "Buy fewer supplements, buy better quality." A targeted selection of high-quality, properly dosed, well-absorbed supplements will outperform a trolley full of cheap, poorly formulated products every time. The Honey Pot's range is curated on exactly this principle. If you are ever uncertain about a product, bring the label to the shop and Pat or the team will give you an honest assessment.
For more on which supplements to prioritise, see our guide to natural health on a budget in Ireland. For winter-specific supplement priorities, see our winter immune-boosting guide.