A clearer view of what you take.

Supplement labels can make ingredients, formulations, and testing claims sound more impressive than the evidence behind them. BareVue helps you see how transparent a label is, what the research actually supports, and how its nutrients fit with everything else you consume.

The form matters.

Two labels can list the same nutrient while using forms with very different evidence for absorption and use by the body. BareVue identifies the form disclosed on the label and explains what the research supports, where evidence is limited, and when premium-sounding language reaches further than the science.

BareVue explaining why magnesium bisglycinate is considered a favorable chelated magnesium form
Magnesium bisglycinate
BareVue explaining why magnesium oxide is a poorly absorbed magnesium form
Magnesium oxide

The dose matters too.

Formulation is only part of the picture. A dose can be ordinary under one country's guidance and exceed another's upper limit, the highest average daily intake unlikely to pose a risk for most people. BareVue compares the amount on the label with official guidance, explains the concern behind a finding, and keeps the underlying sources available.

BareVue showing a vitamin B6 amount above the European adult upper limit with an explanation and neuropathy risk note
One dose, compared across official guidance

Food and supplements add up.

BareVue logs supported nutrients from supplements alongside food, while keeping each source visible. That distinction matters because some upper limits apply to everything you consume, while others apply only to supplements and fortified foods.

BareVue nutrient breakdown separating manganese from food and supplements
See how much came from each source
BareVue showing total magnesium intake separately from the supplement-specific magnesium upper limit
Apply the upper limit to the source it actually covers

No overall good-or-bad score.

BareVue does not reduce an entire supplement to one verdict. Its colored indicators belong to individual findings: label transparency, formulation, testing claims, dose context, and other evidence-backed observations. A product can be strong in one area and raise questions in another.

Common questions

Does BareVue tell me whether a supplement is good?

No, but it gives you enough information to come to your own conclusion. BareVue shows separate findings about the label, formula, claims, and doses. It does not turn those findings into a single product score or decide whether the supplement is right for you.

Does BareVue verify what is physically inside the bottle?

No. That requires laboratory testing. BareVue analyzes what the label discloses and the claims it makes, including whether a testing or certification claim appears to apply to the product itself. It does not turn a label claim into independent proof.

Can supplement nutrients count toward my daily totals?

Yes. Nutrients the app can reliably map from the supplement label are logged alongside food while retaining their supplement source, so source-specific guidance can still be applied correctly.

Which supplements can BareVue analyze?

BareVue's launch catalog currently covers supplements sold in the United States. Its contribution system allows labels from other countries to be submitted, reviewed, and added so catalog coverage and analysis can expand to more regions.

The waitlist on the homepage is the fastest way to know when BareVue launches.