Skip to main content

Side-by-side comparison

1,000 mg Vitamin C Strawberry-Kiwi vs 1,000 mg Vitamin C Acai Berry

Compare 1,000 mg Vitamin C Strawberry-Kiwi and 1,000 mg Vitamin C Acai Berry on the label attributes recorded in the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database, drawn from manufacturer filings, not marketing copy.

Side-by-side comparison using Source: NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD). According to the National Institutes of Health Office of Dietary Supplements, the DSLD catalogs 113,539 product labels as of April 2026, so every attribute below is drawn directly from manufacturer label filings rather than marketing copy. How we compile this data.

Attribute 1,000 mg Vitamin C Strawberry-Kiwi 1,000 mg Vitamin C Acai Berry
Product 1,000 mg Vitamin C Strawberry-Kiwi 1,000 mg Vitamin C Acai Berry
Brand Emergen-C Emergen-C
Type Multi-Vitamin and Mineral (MVM) Multi-Vitamin and Mineral (MVM)
Physical state Powder Powder
Ingredient count 28 24
Serving size
Servings per container
Market status On market Off market
Entry date 2019-09-24 2017-10-21

How to Read This Comparison

Every value above is read directly from the Source: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD). The DSLD records what manufacturers print on product labels, not independent laboratory verification. Comparable attributes (ingredient counts, market status, serving size) are shown side by side so you can see label-declared differences at a glance.

Percentages and active-catalog rates are computed directly from label filings on file in the database at build time, no editorial weighting, no paid placements. Because the DSLD adds filings as labels are submitted, a brand's catalog here may be smaller than its historical SKU count.

Not medical advice. This comparison is for informational and educational purposes only under the Source: Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA), 1994, 21 U.S.C. § 321(ff) framework, which does not require FDA pre-market approval for safety or efficacy. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or combining any dietary supplement.