Mineral · Supplement ingredient
Zinc
Zinc is listed on 12,064 U.S. supplement product labels in the NIH DSLD, making it more common than 99% of cataloged ingredients.
- 12,064
- Products
- Mineral
- Category
- Top 1%
- By frequency
- NIH
- Dosing fact sheet
Zinc dosing reference
NIH ODS Fact Sheet →- Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA / AI)
- 11 mg for adult men, 8 mg for adult women
- Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL)
- 40 mg per day for adults
- Drug interactions
- Reduces absorption of quinolone and tetracycline antibiotics, penicillamine. Long-term high-dose zinc can cause copper deficiency.
- Pregnancy & lactation
- RDA during pregnancy is 11 mg; lactation 12 mg.
Statement required by FDA: These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Dietary supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or combining any supplement, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, take prescription medication, or have a medical condition.
Source: https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Zinc-HealthProfessional/
What does the NIH label data show about Zinc?
Zinc appears as an ingredient in 12,064 dietary supplement product labels cataloged in the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD). The NIH classifies Zinc within the Mineral category. That frequency reflects how often manufacturers list Zinc on submitted labels, both in single-ingredient products focused on this nutrient and in broader multi-ingredient formulas such as multivitamins, specialty blends, and category-spanning formulations. Across this catalog of 12,064 filings, the ingredient appears in products ranging from standalone capsules to combination formulas containing dozens of other components. Counting how many labels declare an ingredient is a useful way to gauge how common it is in the United States supplement market, though it does not indicate efficacy or safety on its own.
When reviewing products that contain Zinc, pay attention to a few label signals. First, the ingredient's amount per serving and any Daily Value (DV) percentage, some nutrients have an FDA reference daily intake (so a DV is shown), while others (many botanicals, amino acids, specialty compounds) do not. Second, the chemical form listed matters: the same common name can refer to several compounds with different absorption or bioavailability profiles, so the exact wording on the label is worth checking. Third, look at what else the product contains, a supplement listing Zinc alongside many other active ingredients may deliver a smaller amount than a single-ingredient product of the same total size. All of these data points are declared by the manufacturer on the label as filed with the NIH DSLD.
A reminder on scope: the DSLD is a label database, not an approval list. Dietary supplements are regulated in the United States under the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) of 1994, which does not require FDA pre-market approval for safety or efficacy. Inclusion of Zinc on a product label does not imply that the FDA has evaluated claims about the ingredient, verified its potency, or tested the specific bottle you may buy. Some ingredients have well-established research bases, others are far more speculative, and effects can vary by form, dose, and individual health status. This page presents factual label-frequency data and is not medical or nutritional advice, consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or combining supplements, especially if you are pregnant, take prescription medication, or have a medical condition.
How common is Zinc?
Number of supplement labels listing Zinc vs nearby mineral ingredients
- Silicon
Silicon
35,613 products
- Calcium
Calcium
25,916 products
- Sodium
Sodium
14,494 products
- Zinc 12,064
Zinc
12,064 products
- Potassium 11,811
Potassium
11,811 products
- Iron 8,706
Iron
8,706 products
Products containing Zinc
Nearby Ingredients in Mineral
Other ingredients in the Mineral category cataloged in the NIH DSLD. Useful for comparing how common different nutrients are across the US supplement market.
Frequently asked about Zinc
What is the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for Zinc? ▼
Is there an upper limit for Zinc? ▼
Does Zinc interact with medications? ▼
What about Zinc during pregnancy or breastfeeding? ▼
How many supplement products contain Zinc? ▼
Source: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD) · Dosing reference: NIH ODS Zinc Health Professional Fact Sheet. Regulatory reference: Source: Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA), 1994, 21 U.S.C. § 321(ff).
Disclaimer, Not Medical Advice: Information on this page is based on manufacturer-declared label data and is provided for educational and reference purposes only. It does not constitute medical, nutritional, or health advice. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or combining any supplement, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, take prescription medication, or have a medical condition.
Read our methodology , how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.