If you’ve ever assumed that a dietary supplement you buy in the US has been reviewed, vetted, and approved before it lands in your cart, you’re not alone. But that’s not how it works.
Yes, dietary supplements are regulated by the FDA as a category of food. But unlike drugs, they don’t have to be approved before they’re sold. That means the responsibility for safety, quality, and label accuracy rests with the manufacturer—and not all manufacturers operate at the same level of rigor.
Most of the time, problems are addressed only after a product is already on the market.
When Oversight Occurs After the Fact
That gap between production and enforcement cannot be ignored, especially in this era of massive online marketplaces.
In a recent peer-reviewed study published in JAMA Network Open, researchers tested 30 popular “immune support” supplements purchased from Amazon. These weren’t obscure products. They were highly rated, prominently featured, and marketed with confidence-boosting language. More than half didn’t match their labels!
Some were missing ingredients they claimed to contain. Others included additional substances that were not listed at all. A few showed signs of contamination. Many consumers simply weren’t getting what they were paying for.
Similar findings have shown up in the testing of sports and botanical supplements, where some products contained none of the ingredients on the label while others included compounds the FDA restricts or prohibits.
Big Online Marketplaces Are a Different Animal
Convenience is the selling point of online marketplaces. The trade-off for that convenience is control.
When supplements are sold through third-party listings, it becomes harder to verify details such as:
- Where ingredients were sourced
- How the product was manufactured
- Whether storage conditions were appropriate
- Whether the product being shipped is the same one that was originally tested
- Product freshness
Even when platforms require documentation, enforcement can be uneven. Sellers change. Listings change. Supply chains stretch and blur.
Star ratings and polished claims don’t tell you much about what’s actually in the bottle.
What FDA Regulation Really Means
Here’s the nuance that most people miss. The FDA:
- Does not approve dietary supplements before sale
- Does require manufacturers to follow Good Manufacturing Practices
- Inspects facilities, reviews adverse event reports, and issues recalls or warning letters when needed
- Maintains a public database of products cited for health fraud or illegal claims
Regulation exists, but it’s primarily reactive, not preventive.
That makes manufacturer standards and internal controls more important than most consumers realize.
Where You Buy Matters as Much as What You Buy
In a system that relies on post-market enforcement, manufacturer standards matter more than most people think. Buying from a manufacturer you trust can make all the difference in the quality of supplements you get.
Manufacturers that sell direct are better positioned to ensure label accuracy and consistency. Melaleuca, for example, meets each of these standards across its supplement line. That kind of infrastructure costs more to maintain. But it also shows up in trust.
You’re not just paying for ingredients. You’re paying for verification, accountability, and the confidence that what’s on the label is actually in the bottle.
The Smarter Consumer Takeaway
Over the last several decades, many notable tests with hundreds of thousands of participants have shown little to no benefit for those taking dietary supplements. Unfortunately, these tests never identify the brands being used. Melaleuca’s human studies like the Freiburg Study and the Sterling Study document with certainty that Melaleuca’s supplements can be an important part of your wellness routine. But the same cannot be said for most other supplements.
Our good health is our most valuable asset. In a category built on trust, knowing who controls the product from start to finish may matter more than any claim on the label. And consumers should familiarize themselves with human studies done on the exact brand that they are purchasing, rather than unidentified brands.



