Updated
Updated · KCRA Sacramento · Jun 15
Consumer Reports Flags Quality Issues in 20 Fish Oil Supplements as Some Brands Dispute Findings
Updated
Updated · KCRA Sacramento · Jun 15

Consumer Reports Flags Quality Issues in 20 Fish Oil Supplements as Some Brands Dispute Findings

3 articles · Updated · KCRA Sacramento · Jun 15

Summary

  • Testing of 20 popular fish oil supplements found no major safety problems, but Consumer Reports said several showed rancidity or contained less omega-3 than their labels claimed.
  • Those findings matter because fish oil ranks among the five most popular supplements in the United States, with many buyers taking it for heart-health benefits linked to omega-3s.
  • Qunol challenged Consumer Reports' testing methods, Nature Made said its own tests met quality standards, and California Gold Nutrition paused sales of certain products for additional testing.
  • Consumer Reports said evidence for many marketed benefits remains inconclusive and advised most people to get omega-3s from fish such as salmon or sardines a couple of times a week.

Insights

Consumer Reports found major quality issues in fish oils. What safer, plant-based alternatives should you consider?
Many fish oil supplements are rancid. What are the expert-approved signs of a trustworthy omega-3 product?
With top brands facing lawsuits over false claims, is your fish oil supplement doing more harm than good?