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Changes to dietary supplements policy

by News_Amazon

We’ve updated the policy on dietary supplements to meet safety standards in our store. Effective April 2, 2024, dietary supplement products need to be verified through a third-party Testing, Inspection, and Certification (TIC) organization.

The Manage Your Compliance dashboard shows listings for dietary supplements that require your action along with the due dates under Compliance status. Listings may be subject to removal if they are not confirmed as being compliant with our policy by the specified due date.

To ensure that your listings are compliant with our policy, you must use the Manage Your Compliance dashboard to initiate a test for each product with one of the third-party TIC organizations. Once testing is requested, you’ll work directly with the third-party TIC organization to complete the testing of your products. For testing instructions, go to the Manage Your Compliance dashboard and select Add or appeal compliance.

Once we receive a test result that confirms compliance with our policy, your product will be eligible for sale on Amazon.

We will host a live webinar on April 17, 2024, at 11:00 a.m. Pacific Time to cover Amazon’s policy on selling dietary supplements and to answer any of your questions.

Register here for the webinar

For more information, go to Dietary supplements.

Tags: News and Announcements
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Seller_oJY2X570rx42E
In reply to: News_Amazon's post

Of course, the problem is the Amazon bots frequently label regularly grocery items as dietary supplements in error.

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Seller_r7vALkAuZ93lo
In reply to: News_Amazon's post

does this include animal supplements?

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Seller_YKLpQ70xDuwk1
In reply to: News_Amazon's post

My opinion :This policy now only applies to those products that require compliance(weight loss ,sexul enhance ,sport nutrient), not all dietary supplements.Be verified through a third-party Testing, Inspection, and Certification (TIC) organization rather than solely relying on ISO/IEC 17025 accredited labs, represents a significant shift in their approach to ensuring product quality and safety. This change has implications for sellers ,and the dietary supplements industry as a whole on Amazon .

1.Potential for Higher Costs

2.Transparency and Information Access

3.Barrier to Entry for Smaller Brands

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Seller_r9wMm8LrE5iKj
In reply to: News_Amazon's post

Would I bet this is the top reason, and that Amazon has started stocking and selling a larger percentage of supplements (and my not subject themselves to the same stringent rules, as I've discovered when they've started counterfeiting our items):

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Seller_YKLpQ70xDuwk1
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Barrier to Entry for Smaller Brands
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Seller_IZ2OuLIRU25XZ
In reply to: News_Amazon's post

Is there a way to proactively upload these documents to prevent disruptions to your listings? I've never understood why we need to wait for Amazon to pull down listings in order to provide the documentation they want. Listings will go down for 3-5 days minimum even if you have the documents immediately ready to submit.

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Seller_S73kEdwzPz0zD
In reply to: News_Amazon's post

I'm confused. Is the ISO LAB COA no longer required? Do they now need a COA with contaminant screening? And is GMP certification still mandatory?

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