EVIDENCE-BASED SUPPLEMENT SCORING
5.9/10
AVERAGE

Confidence: 95%

OLLY Ultra Women's Multi Softgels, Overall Health and Immune Support, Omega-3s, Iron, Vitamins A, D, C, E, B12, Daily Multivitamin, 30 Day Supply - 60 Count

OLLY Ultra Women's Multi Softgels, Overall Health and Immune Support, Omega-3s, Iron, Vitamins A, D, C, E, B12, Daily Multivitamin - 60 Count

B08LQTJKHR

View on Amazon →

Decision summary

CONSIDERAVERAGE

Not a strong option overall. The product is materially held back by weaker formulation coherence.

Best for

Buyers comparing price and availability and okay with a middle-of-the-pack option.

Consider another option if

You want one of the best-absorbed options in this category.

Score breakdown

Tap a module to see what it measures. A 0 can reflect missing disclosure, not just a negative result.

Dosage quality

2.4/10

Dosing looks weaker than ideal

Checks whether labeled ingredient amounts fall within clinically studied ranges (not just regulatory minimums). Low/0 can reflect under-dosing or missing amounts (e.g., proprietary blends).

Multi-ingredient formulation analysis

Dose 2.4/10 · Bioavailability 4.8/10 · Coherence 0/10

Dose quality suggests a diluted formulation.

Ingredient form quality suggests suboptimal ingredient forms.

This is a multi-ingredient product. The score reflects formulation quality, not efficacy for a specific health goal.

Score summary

Iodine: dose within clinically studied range (evidence A). The main limitation is that iron: below clinically studied range.

Strengths

Iodine: dose within clinically studied range (evidence A)
Vitamin-d: high-bioavailability form declared (Cholecalciferol (D3))
Inositol: high-bioavailability form declared (Myo Inositol)

Weaknesses

Iron: below clinically studied range
Formula coherence is weak: diluted, decorative or overly complex
Vitamin-a: below clinically studied range

Final verdict

Not a strong option overall. The product is materially held back by weaker formulation coherence.

Ingredient Analysis & Evidence

A closer look at the main ingredients, how they influence the score, and the supporting evidence when available. Tap any ingredient to expand.

⚠ Moderate evidence exists, but dose is below effective threshold

A clear drag on the formula: Dose is likely below clinically useful levels. The declared form is acceptable, but not among the best-absorbed options.

Scientific evidence

Meta-analysis

Pasricha et al. systematic review iron and fatigue in non-anaemic women

BMJ Open • 2012

PMID: 23169929.0

✔ Clinically effective dose with strong supporting evidence

Dose is well positioned: Dose is strong and within effective ranges.

Scientific evidence

Systematic review

Zimmermann et al. review on iodine deficiency and thyroid function in human populations

Endocrine Reviews • 2009

PMID: 19357404.0

Cohort

Bath et al. maternal iodine status and offspring cognitive outcomes (ALSPAC cohort)

Lancet • 2013

PMID: 23683674.0

⚠ Dose is below commonly used clinical ranges

A clear drag on the formula: Dose is likely below clinically useful levels. The declared form supports strong absorption.

Clinical dosing guidance

Based on established dosing ranges used in clinical practice.

Min effective: 700 mcgOptimal: 900 mcgUpper: 3000 mcgGrade: A

⚠ Moderate evidence exists, but dose is below effective threshold

A clear drag on the formula: Dose is likely below clinically useful levels. The declared form is acceptable, but not among the best-absorbed options.

Scientific evidence

RCT

Broome et al. RCT selenium and immune function

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition • 2004

PMID: 14657398.0

RCT

Clark et al. RCT selenium supplementation and cancer prevention

JAMA • 1996

PMID: 8629283.0

ℹ Dose is below the optimal range and supported by limited evidence

A clear drag on the formula: Dose is below the ranges usually used for stronger effects.

Scientific evidence

narrative_review

Hodges et al. review on pantothenic acid physiology and human deficiency implications

Advances in Nutrition • 2020

⚠ Strong evidence exists, but dose may be too low to be effective

A clear drag on the formula: Dose is likely below clinically useful levels. The declared form supports strong absorption.

Scientific evidence

Meta-analysis

Martineau et al. meta-analysis vitamin D supplementation and respiratory infections

BMJ • 2017

PMID: 26864360.0

Meta-analysis

Bischoff-Ferrari et al. meta-analysis vitamin D fracture prevention

BMJ • 2009

PMID: 20198382.0

OLLY Ultra Women's Multi Softgels, Overall Health and Immune Support, Omega-3s, Iron, Vitamins A, D, C, E, B12, Daily Multivitamin, 30 Day Supply - 60 Count

OLLY Ultra Women's Multi Softgels, Overall Health and Immune Support, Omega-3s, Iron, Vitamins A, D, C, E, B12, Daily Multivitamin, 30 Day Supply - 60 Count

Warnings & notes

Important label or formulation details that may affect how this product should be interpreted.

!

Iron dose looks below clinically effective levels

Declared amount falls below ranges used in human trials.

Warning

Formula design looks less coherent than stronger alternatives

The formulation appears less focused than better-built options.

Note
!

Vitamin A dose looks below clinically effective levels

Declared amount falls below ranges used in human trials.

Warning

Methodology

Read our methodology overview to understand how SuppScoreLab combines multiple scientific dimensions into one practical score.

View methodology →

This evaluation is based on the product label and declared Supplement Facts available at review time. It does not verify laboratory-tested composition, purity, or batch-level quality. This content is educational and not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional for personal health decisions. Affiliate disclosure: SuppScoreLab may earn a commission from qualifying Amazon links.

Still comparing options?

See the best Omega-3 supplements ranked with the same methodology, or keep exploring the database.