How to build a supplement strategy, not a random stack
Most people don’t have a supplement strategy. They have a cupboard - a dozen bottles bought one panic-Google at a time, half-finished, taken irregularly, with no idea which (if any) are working. A real strategy is the opposite: a small number of things, in the right order, for reasons you can state, each with a date to judge it. Here is how to build one - and how to spend less while getting more.
In this guide
1. Foundations beat bottles
No supplement out-performs sleep, light, food, movement and stress regulation - and most are trying, at best, to nudge systems those foundations control directly. If you’re sleeping six broken hours, skipping morning light, under-eating protein and living on caffeine, a magnesium capsule is rounding error. Spend the first fortnight fixing the inputs. Supplements are the last 10%, not the first move. Everything below assumes the foundations are in hand.
2. Test, don’t guess
The supplements with the clearest payoff are the ones correcting a measured deficiency - iron/ferritin, B12, folate, vitamin D, sometimes thyroid markers. “Tired, so I’ll take iron” is exactly the wrong move: iron you don’t need does nothing useful and can cause harm, since the body has no easy way to excrete the excess.1 Likewise, mega-dosing vitamin B6 long-term can cause nerve damage.2 Test first, supplement to the gap, re-test. Our Lab Result Primer explains what the common markers mean before you pay for a private panel.
The rule: if a supplement is correcting a deficiency you’ve confirmed, the evidence it’ll help is strong. If it’s trying to push a normal system into “better than normal,” the evidence is almost always weaker - and the marketing almost always louder.
3. Judge the evidence honestly
Before buying anything, ask what tier of evidence it actually sits on. A useful grading:
| Tier | What it means | How to treat it |
|---|---|---|
| A | Strong human trials / correcting a real deficiency | Worth it if it applies to you |
| B | Moderate human evidence (e.g. several decent RCTs) | Reasonable to trial |
| C | Early or mixed human data | Optional; low expectations |
| D | Mechanism/animal data only | Speculative; rarely worth the spend |
| E | Anecdote / influencer hype | Treat as marketing |
The honest truth most sellers won’t tell you: a great deal of the supplement world lives at C-E. That’s not a reason to take nothing - it’s a reason to stop paying premium prices for tier-D promises, and to put your money where the evidence is.
4. One change, with a review date
If you start five things at once, you’ll never know which one helped, which did nothing, and which gave you the headache. Change one variable at a time, give it a fair trial (often 4-8 weeks), and set a date to decide: did this do what I hoped? If you can’t name the benefit you expected, you can’t judge it - and you should probably stop. A supplement with no stop-rule is just a standing order.
5. Order and timing matter
Sequencing is where most stacks fail. A few principles:
- Fix the cause before piling on supports. Digestive enzymes won’t fix a problem that’s really low stomach acid; probiotics won’t fix what’s really an overgrowth. Sort the upstream issue first - see the SIBO and candida guides.
- Mind stimulants and sedatives. Don’t cluster several stimulating things (caffeine, plus a “focus” blend, plus more caffeine) or several sedating ones - and don’t take both and wonder why you feel wired-but-tired.
- Timing changes everything. Caffeine before noon; anything calming in the evening; iron away from coffee/tea; fat-soluble vitamins with food.
6. “Natural” is not “safe”
Supplements are loosely regulated, and products are regularly found to be mislabelled or contaminated - sometimes with undeclared pharmaceuticals.3 “Natural” tells you nothing about dose, purity or interactions. Practical guardrails: avoid duplicates (two magnesiums, three choline sources); check interactions with your prescription medicines and with each other; and remember that prescription-only items belong with a prescriber, not in a self-built stack. A pharmacist will review your combination for free - use them. The Stack Checker gives you a cautious first pass for duplicates, stimulant/sedative clustering and clinician-only items before you add anything.
7. When the stack is the symptom
Here is the uncomfortable one. If you’re taking ten or twelve things and still feel unwell, the stack isn’t the solution - it’s a sign that the actual driver hasn’t been found. People rarely supplement their way out of an unaddressed gut problem, a sleep disorder, an iron or thyroid issue, or a nervous system stuck in overdrive. At that point the win isn’t another bottle; it’s stepping back and mapping the case. The Case Complexity Score is built for exactly that moment.
References
- Iron supplementation should follow confirmed deficiency; iron overload causes harm and the body cannot readily excrete excess. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Iron - Health Professional Fact Sheet. ods.od.nih.gov.
- Chronic high-dose vitamin B6 and sensory peripheral neuropathy. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Vitamin B6 Fact Sheet. ods.od.nih.gov.
- Dietary supplements are frequently mislabelled or adulterated, sometimes with undeclared drugs. e.g. Tucker J, et al. Unapproved pharmaceutical ingredients in dietary supplements. JAMA Netw Open. JAMA Network Open, 2018.
Nine free tools on this site help you act on what you just read: keep a think-out-loud health journal, prepare a GP appointment, check a supplement stack before buying more, or decode blood results.
Symptom Decoder · Health Journal · GP Script Generator · Stack Risk Checker · Lab Result Primer · Health MOT · All tools. Want it all synced and organised in one private map? The Club, £10/month.
This article is educational and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or a treatment recommendation. Medication uses described as “off-label” are not licensed for that purpose in the UK and should only be considered under qualified clinical supervision. Always speak to your GP, pharmacist, or a registered specialist before starting, stopping, or changing any treatment. If you have severe or alarm symptoms - unintentional weight loss, blood in your stool, difficulty swallowing, persistent vomiting, a fever, or severe pain - seek urgent medical care.