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Ingredient Testing

Multivitamin Testing: Multi-Analyte Potency, Label Overage

9 min read Updated June 12, 2026

Multivitamin testing is one of the most analytically complex tasks in supplement quality control because a single product may contain 20 or more vitamins and minerals, each requiring different analytical methods and preparation procedures. Unlike single-ingredient supplements, multivitamins demand a coordinated testing strategy that combines HPLC for water-soluble and fat-soluble vitamins, ICP-MS for mineral elements, and microbiological methods for any vitamin fractions derived from fermentation. Getting the label overage right -- the extra amount added to compensate for degradation over shelf life -- is equally critical and requires understanding how each vitamin degrades over time.

This article explains the multi-analyte testing approach for multivitamins, the common methods used for different vitamin groups, typical costs, and what to ask your lab when requesting multivitamin potency testing. The goal is to help supplement brands build a practical testing specification that covers all labeled nutrients without unnecessary expense.

The Multi-Analyte Testing Challenge

Testing a multivitamin is not a single test -- it is a coordinated set of analyses that may include four or more separate analytical runs. Water-soluble vitamins (B-complex, vitamin C) require HPLC with different column and mobile phase conditions than fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K). Minerals like calcium, magnesium, zinc, and iron are measured by ICP-MS or ICP-OES. Some nutrients, like vitamin B12 and folate, may require specialized extraction or microbiological assays.

A well-planned multivitamin testing program starts with grouping nutrients by compatible analytical methods. Most ISO 17025 accredited labs that specialize in dietary supplement testing can run multiple vitamin panels simultaneously using HPLC with diode array or fluorescence detection, but the methods must be validated for the specific matrix of your product. The mineral premix and excipients can interfere with vitamin extraction, so method validation on your specific formulation is essential before relying on routine testing results.

⚠️ Note

Not all labs can test every vitamin in a multivitamin. Confirm in advance that your lab has validated methods for all vitamins and minerals on your supplement facts panel. Some labs may subcontract fat-soluble vitamin testing or ultratrace mineral analysis to partner labs, which can add cost and turnaround time.

Label Overage Verification

Label overage is the practice of adding extra active ingredient beyond the labeled amount to ensure the product meets label claim throughout its shelf life. Different vitamins degrade at different rates: vitamin C and B vitamins are relatively unstable and typically require higher overages (10-25%), while minerals are stable and need minimal to no overage. Fat-soluble vitamins fall somewhere in between, with overages commonly in the 5-15% range.

Testing at the time of manufacture should confirm that the overage is present and within your specification. A product labeled at 100 mg vitamin C per tablet might be formulated at 115 mg to allow for 15% degradation over two years. The initial test result should be near 115 mg, not 100 mg. Testing at multiple time points during a shelf-life stability study confirms whether the overage was sufficient to maintain label claim through the expiration date.

If your lab only reports results against label claim without accounting for your expected overage, the data may appear to show a failing product when the overage is actually correct. Always share your overage targets with the lab so they can apply the correct specification windows.

Method Considerations by Nutrient Group

Water-soluble vitamins, including thiamin (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), pyridoxine (B6), folic acid, and ascorbic acid (vitamin C), are typically tested by HPLC with UV detection. A single HPLC run can often quantify multiple B vitamins simultaneously if the method is properly optimized, though B12 and biotin may require separate runs due to their much lower concentrations and different detection requirements.

Fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K require extraction with organic solvents followed by HPLC analysis, typically with UV detection for vitamins A and E, and fluorescence or mass spectrometry for the lower-concentration vitamins D and K. Vitamin D potency testing is particularly challenging because vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) and D2 (ergocalciferol) must be distinguished, and concentrations are typically in microgram rather than milligram ranges.

Minerals including calcium, magnesium, zinc, iron, selenium, chromium, copper, manganese, and molybdenum are most efficiently tested by ICP-MS, which can measure all mineral elements simultaneously at detection limits well below typical supplement concentrations. ICP-OES may be used for macro-minerals present at higher levels, but ICP-MS offers better sensitivity for trace elements like selenium and chromium.

Disintegration and Dissolution Testing

For multivitamin tablets and capsules, disintegration and dissolution testing is an important complement to potency testing. A tablet that contains the right amount of nutrients but does not break down in the digestive tract will not deliver those nutrients to the body. USP <2040> provides guidelines for disintegration testing of dietary supplements.

Disintegration testing measures how quickly a tablet breaks apart in a simulated gastric fluid. Most multivitamins should disintegrate within 30 minutes. Dissolution testing goes further, measuring how much of each nutrient actually goes into solution over time. Dissolution is more complex for multivitamins because different nutrients have different solubility profiles, and the dissolution medium may need to be tailored to your specific formulation.

Quick Reference

Lab Category Matching

Testing NeedLab Requirement
Water-soluble vitamins (B, C)HPLC-UV/DAD
Fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K)HPLC-UV/FLD or LC-MS/MS
Minerals (Ca, Mg, Zn, Fe, Se, etc.)ICP-MS or ICP-OES
B12, biotin, folateHPLC or microbiological assay
DisintegrationUSP <2040> apparatus
Multi-vitamin method validationMatrix-specific validation required

Real Methods Explained

MethodWhat It TestsDetection LimitCost per Sample
HPLC-UV (B-vitamins)B1, B2, B3, B6, folic acid0.01-0.1 mg/g$200-$400
HPLC-UV (Vitamin C)Ascorbic acid0.1 mg/g$100-$200
HPLC-FLD (D, K)Vitamins D3/D2, K1/K20.1 mcg/g$200-$400
ICP-MS (Minerals)Ca, Mg, Zn, Fe, Se, Cr, Cu, Mn, Mo0.01-1 ppm$150-$300
DisintegrationTablet/capsule breakupQualitative/timed$50-$100

What Sample to Send

Send 20-30 tablets or capsules for a full multi-analyte panel. For powder blends, send 25-50 grams. The sample amount needed depends on the number of nutrients being tested and whether separate extractions are required for different nutrient groups. Tablets should be shipped in their original container or sealed packaging to prevent moisture uptake that could affect disintegration results. If you want the lab to homogenize tablets before testing, specify this and send extra units to account for homogenization loss.

Expected Turnaround Time

TestingTypical TAT
B-vitamin panel7-10 business days
Fat-soluble vitamin panel7-10 business days
Mineral panel (ICP-MS)5-7 business days
Full multivitamin package10-15 business days
Rush service5-7 business days

Price Ranges

TestingTypical Price Range
B-vitamin panel (5-7 vitamins)$200-$400
Vitamin C (individual)$100-$200
Fat-soluble vitamin panel (A, D, E, K)$250-$500
Mineral panel (8-10 minerals)$150-$300
Full multivitamin (all vitamins + minerals)$800-$1,800
Disintegration testing$50-$100

Country/Region Targeting

Multivitamin regulations vary by country, with notable differences in permitted forms, upper limits, and labeling requirements. The EU sets maximum permitted levels for vitamins and minerals in food supplements, which differ from US limits. Canada's Natural Health Products Directorate (NHPD) maintains a monograph system for multivitamins. Australia's TGA regulates multivitamins as listed medicines. Brands selling internationally should confirm that both the nutrient forms used and the claimed levels are permitted in each target market, and that testing methods align with that country's pharmacopeial standards.

FAQ

Q: How many samples do I need for a full multivitamin potency panel?

Most labs require 20-30 tablets or capsules for a complete multi-analyte panel covering water-soluble vitamins, fat-soluble vitamins, and minerals. This accounts for separate extractions for different nutrient groups, replicate analyses, and retention samples. For powder blends, plan on 25-50 grams. Always confirm sample requirements with your lab before shipping, as the exact amount depends on the number of nutrients and whether method development is needed for your specific matrix.

Q: Why does my lab need to validate methods for my specific multivitamin?

The mineral premix, excipients, and coating materials in your multivitamin can interfere with vitamin extraction and detection. A method validated on a simple tablet matrix may not work for a complex formulation with chelated minerals, sustained-release coatings, or plant-based excipients. Method validation on your actual product confirms that the extraction efficiency, recovery, and detection are adequate for your specific formulation. This is a GMP requirement under 21 CFR 111.

Q: What overage should I use for each vitamin in my multivitamin?

Common overage ranges are 10-25% for vitamin C and B vitamins, 5-15% for fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K, and 0-5% for minerals. However, the right overage depends on your formulation, packaging, and target shelf life. A shelf-life stability study at multiple time points and conditions (accelerated and real-time) is the only reliable way to determine appropriate overages for your specific product.

Q: Can one lab test everything in my multivitamin?

Not always. Larger ISO 17025 accredited dietary supplement labs typically offer comprehensive multivitamin panels, but smaller labs may need to outsource fat-soluble vitamin or trace mineral testing. Before engaging a lab, confirm they have validated methods for every nutrient on your label and ask whether any testing is subcontracted. Subcontracted testing can add time and cost, and you should know which lab is performing which analysis.

Q: Do I need to test every lot of my multivitamin?

GMP regulations require that you establish specifications and verify that each lot meets those specifications. For multivitamins, many brands perform full potency testing on every lot given the complexity of the formulation and the number of label claims. Others use a skip-lot testing program where full panels are run on a defined frequency and reduced testing is performed on intermediate lots. Your testing frequency should be documented in your quality plan and justified by product risk, supplier history, and regulatory requirements.

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