Skip to main content

Peak Performance · Botanical with Nutrients supplement

Raw Whole Food Zinc

30 ingredients on file in the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database. Off-market, label data preserved for reference.

30
Ingredients
6
Nutrient categories
Top 7%
By ingredient count

Raw Whole Food Zinc is a botanical with nutrients supplement by Peak Performance in capsule form, listing 30 ingredients in the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD), maintained by the Office of Dietary Supplements at the National Institutes of Health. Currently listed as off-market (no longer available for purchase, but label data is preserved). Daily Value percentages shown below are based on FDA reference daily intake amounts for adults.

Product Details

Form
Capsule
Database Entry Date
2022-06-16
Ingredients
30

Supplement Facts (30 Ingredients)

Per-row amounts not disclosed: The NIH DSLD record for this product lists ingredients but does not include the per-row Supplement Facts panel (quantities and Daily Value percentages). The full panel may be visible on the physical label or on the manufacturer's site. Verify amounts before use. Look up on NIH DSLD →
Ingredient Group Amount % DV
Vitamin C Vitamin C Not disclosed on label No DV
Zinc Zinc Not disclosed on label No DV
Organic Fruit and Vegetable Blend Blend (Herb/Botanical) Not disclosed on label No DV
Alfalfa Alfalfa Not disclosed on label No DV
Barley Barley Not disclosed on label No DV
Oat Oats Not disclosed on label No DV
Wheat Wheat Not disclosed on label No DV
Chlorella Chlorella Not disclosed on label No DV
Spirulina Blue Green Algae Not disclosed on label No DV
Broccoli Broccoli Not disclosed on label No DV
Cabbage Cabbage Not disclosed on label No DV
Kale Kale Not disclosed on label No DV
Parsley Parsley Not disclosed on label No DV
Kelp Kelp Not disclosed on label No DV
Broccoli Broccoli Not disclosed on label No DV
Dandelion Dandelion Not disclosed on label No DV
Dulse Dulse Not disclosed on label No DV
Pomegranate Pomegranate Not disclosed on label No DV
Euterpe oleracea Acai Not disclosed on label No DV
Acerola Cherry extract Acerola Not disclosed on label No DV
Black Currant Black Currant Not disclosed on label No DV
Blackberry Blackberry Not disclosed on label No DV
Blueberry fruit extract Blueberry Not disclosed on label No DV
Cranberry cranberry Not disclosed on label No DV
Grape Grape Not disclosed on label No DV
Goji Lycium Not disclosed on label No DV
Maqui Maqui Not disclosed on label No DV
Raspberry Raspberry (unspecified) Not disclosed on label No DV
Cellulose Cellulose Not disclosed on label No DV
Water Water Not disclosed on label No DV

How does Raw Whole Food Zinc compare?

Ingredients listed on each label, against the botanical with nutrients category average of 16. Data from the NIH DSLD.

Raw Whole Food Zinc30
1 Liver & Organ Quick Detox24
Botanical with Nutrients average16

Raw Whole Food Zinc lists 6 ingredients more than 1 Liver & Organ Quick Detox. That is 14 above the botanical with nutrients average.

What the Label Data Shows

Raw Whole Food Zinc is cataloged in the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD) as a botanical with nutrients supplement from Peak Performance, sold in capsule form. The label declares 30 ingredients. These ingredients span 6 nutrient categories, botanical, other, vitamin, mineral, and 2 more, reflecting a multi-component formula rather than a single-nutrient product.

Daily Value coverage on this label is informative. No ingredients on this label reach 100% of the FDA reference Daily Value, 0 fall below 100% DV, and 30 have no FDA-established Daily Value reference.. Some nutrients (such as botanicals, amino acids, and specialty compounds) have no Daily Value because the FDA has not set a reference intake; absence of a DV is neither good nor bad on its own.

Market status matters for supplement research. This product is currently listed as off-market in the DSLD, with its label first entered into the database on 2022-06-16. Off-market products are no longer being produced or distributed under this label, but the DSLD preserves their historical label data for researchers, consumers checking older bottles, and for tracking how formulations have evolved. The DSLD is a label database, not an FDA approval list, under the 1994 DSHEA framework, dietary supplements do not require pre-market approval, and label information reflects what manufacturers self-declare rather than independent laboratory verification. This page presents factual label data for reference only and is not medical advice; consult a licensed healthcare provider before making decisions about any supplement.

Source: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD) Supplement label data for Raw Whole Food Zinc: ingredients, % Daily Value, market status, brand · 2026 DSLD captures manufacturer-self-declared label information; the NIH does not verify accuracy or evaluate safety/efficacy. Dietary supplements are regulated under DSHEA 1994, no pre-market FDA approval is required.

Nearby Botanical with Nutrients Products

Other products in the NIH DSLD cataloged under the same supplement type. Useful for comparing formulations within the botanical with nutrients category.

Compare Raw Whole Food Zinc vs 1 Liver & Organ Quick Detox →

Ingredient Breakdown by Category

botanical
22
Alfalfa, Barley, Oat, +19 more
other
4
Chlorella, Kelp, Dulse, +1 more
vitamin
1
Vitamin C
mineral
1
Zinc
blend
1
Organic Fruit and Vegetable Blend
fiber
1
Cellulose

Daily Value Coverage

0
Above 100% DV
0
Below 100% DV
30
No DV Established

Supplement Guides

Explore more supplement data

Frequently Asked Questions

What ingredients are in Raw Whole Food Zinc?
Raw Whole Food Zinc contains 30 ingredients. Ingredients span 6 categories: botanical, other, vitamin, mineral, blend, fiber.
Who manufactures Raw Whole Food Zinc?
Raw Whole Food Zinc is was manufactured by Peak Performance. It is classified as a Botanical with Nutrients supplement in capsule form.
Is Raw Whole Food Zinc still available for purchase?
According to the NIH DSLD database, Raw Whole Food Zinc is listed as off-market and may no longer be available for purchase.
What is the serving size of Raw Whole Food Zinc?
The serving size is not specified.
What type of supplement is Raw Whole Food Zinc?
Raw Whole Food Zinc is classified as a "Botanical with Nutrients" supplement in the NIH database. This category includes products primarily composed of botanical with nutrients ingredients. The NIH DSLD tracks 9 supplement categories: Vitamin, Mineral, Botanical, Amino Acid & Protein, Non-Nutrient, Fat & Fatty Acid, Multi-Vitamin & Mineral, Botanical with Nutrients, and Other Combinations.
Where does this Raw Whole Food Zinc data come from?
All label data comes from the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD), maintained by the Office of Dietary Supplements at the National Institutes of Health. The DSLD is a publicly accessible database containing label information, including ingredients, serving sizes, and Daily Value percentages, for dietary supplement products marketed in the United States.

Data Sources & Methodology

Data as of 2025. Source: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD).

Supplement label data sourced from the Source: NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD), maintained by the Office of Dietary Supplements at the National Institutes of Health. The DSLD contains label information from dietary supplement products marketed in the United States.

Daily Value (DV) percentages are based on Source: FDA 21 CFR 101.9 Reference Daily Intake (RDI) values for adults. Products marked "Off Market" may no longer be available for purchase but their label data remains in the database for reference.

Disclaimer, Not Medical Advice: Label data from the Source: NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD). This information is for educational and reference purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or combining any dietary supplement, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, take prescription medication, or have a medical condition.