Why Compliance Matters for Supplement Brands
Advertising natural supplements in the US is one of the most regulated digital marketing categories. Non-compliance can result in ad disapprovals, account suspensions, legal action, and even permanent bans from major platforms. The FTC and FDA have filed over 120 cases against supplement companies since 2013, and platforms like Meta, Google, and TikTok have their own strict—and evolving—policies[1].
- Federal FTC/FDA regulations
- Platform-specific ad policies
- Common rejection patterns and enforcement trends
Federal Regulations: FTC & FDA Foundation
All supplement advertising in the US is governed by two federal agencies:
- FDA (Food and Drug Administration): Regulates supplement labeling, manufacturing, and safety. Requires cGMP (current Good Manufacturing Practices). Does not pre-approve supplements or advertising.
- FTC (Federal Trade Commission): Regulates all forms of advertising, including digital ads and websites. Requires "competent and reliable scientific evidence" for any health-related claim. Does not pre-approve claims, but enforces against deceptive or unsubstantiated advertising[1][2].
The Three Types of Permissible Claims
- Structure/Function Claims (most common):
Describes the role of a nutrient in affecting normal structure or function of the human body.
Examples: "Supports immune health", "Promotes healthy digestion", "Helps maintain cardiovascular function".- Must be substantiated by scientific evidence before use.
- Must include the DSHEA disclaimer on product labels:
This statement has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. - DSHEA disclaimer does not make non-compliant ad copy legal.
- Nutrient Content Claims: Describes the level of a nutrient in the product. Examples: "Excellent source of Vitamin C", "High in calcium".
- Must meet FDA thresholds and have established Daily Value.
- Health Claims: Describes a relationship between a nutrient and reduced risk of a disease. Examples: "Adequate folate may reduce risk of neural tube defects".
- Must meet FDA "significant scientific agreement" or be a qualified health claim.
- Rarely used in supplement advertising due to high substantiation bar.
Any claim that a product can diagnose, treat, cure, mitigate, or prevent a disease is strictly prohibited.
Examples: "Treats diabetes", "Cures arthritis", "Prevents heart disease", "Reduces symptoms of COVID-19".
FTC Substantiation Standard
The FTC requires "competent and reliable scientific evidence" for any health-related claim. The gold standard is two or more well-conducted randomized controlled human clinical trials (RCTs) by independent researchers. Animal studies, in vitro studies, testimonials, and single case studies are not sufficient[1][2].
- Unsubstantiated efficacy claims
- False establishment claims ("clinically proven" without evidence)
- Weight loss claims without evidence
- Disease treatment claims
- Cherry-picking or misrepresenting study results
- Misleading testimonials
Sources: FTC Health Products Compliance Guidance | FDA Guidance on Supplement Claims
Platform-Specific Supplement Advertising Policies
Each major ad platform has its own supplement policies, approval processes, and prohibited product lists. Below is a detailed breakdown for Meta (Facebook/Instagram), Google Ads/YouTube, and TikTok, current as of November 2025[1][3][4][5].
| Feature | Meta (FB/IG) | Google Ads | YouTube | TikTok |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Certification Required | No (except pharmacies) | No (except pharmacies, CBD) | No | Yes (category qualification) |
| Pre-Approval Process | No | No | No | Yes (dietary supplements) |
| Age Restriction | 18+ (weight mgmt) | None specified | None specified | 18+ (sports/weight) |
| Prohibited: Ephedra | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Prohibited: DHEA | Yes | No (US targeting OK) | No (US targeting OK) | Yes |
| Prohibited: Steroids | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Disease Claims | Prohibited | Prohibited | Prohibited | Prohibited |
| Structure/Function Claims | Allowed if substantiated | Allowed if substantiated | Allowed if substantiated | Allowed if substantiated |
| Weight Loss Ads | Restricted | Allowed | Allowed | Restricted |
| Before/After Images | Restricted | Allowed | Restricted | Restricted |
| Conversion Tracking | Limited (Jan 2025) | Full | Full | Full |
| Purchase Event Optimization | Blocked (sensitive category) | Allowed | Allowed | Allowed |
| Review Time | 24 hours | 1-2 days | 1-2 days | Up to 24 hours |
Sources: Meta Ad Standards | Google Ads Healthcare Policy | TikTok Healthcare Policy
Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Supplement Ad Policies
Major 2025 Policy Changes
- Sensitive Category Designation: If your supplement business is flagged as a "sensitive category," you cannot optimize for Purchase, Add to Cart, or Initiate Checkout events. You must focus on upper/mid-funnel metrics like Landing Page Views and Engagement.
- Who Gets Flagged: Brands associated with medical conditions, specific health statuses, or disease-related content. Most general supplements (vitamins, protein, probiotics) are not flagged unless marketed for diseases.
Prohibited & Restricted Products
- Completely Prohibited: Anabolic steroids, chitosan, comfrey, DHEA, ephedra, HGH, products claiming to be as effective as prescription drugs, products subject to FDA/FTC warning letters.
- Restricted: General dietary supplements, protein powders, probiotics, weight loss products (must target 18+ and avoid rapid results/negative self-perception language).
Ad Content Requirements
- No disease claims or references to specific health conditions.
- No before/after images suggesting disease treatment.
- No exaggerated promises ("works in 24 hours", "100% effective").
- No negative self-perception or focus on specific body parts.
- Clear, accurate product description and functional landing page (mobile required).
- Privacy policy and refund/return policy must be present on website.
- All claims must be substantiated with scientific evidence.
- Age targeting set to 18+ (if weight management)
- No disease claims in ad copy or landing page
- No before/after images (or proper disclaimer if used)
- Landing page works on mobile
- Privacy policy, refund policy, contact info present
- No spelling/grammar errors
- Claims substantiated with scientific evidence
- Product not on prohibited list
- Checked Events Manager for sensitive category flag
- Using Landing Page Views if Purchase events restricted
Source: Meta Ad Standards
Google Ads & YouTube Supplement Ad Policies
Certification & Approval
- No certification required for OTC dietary supplements in the US.
- Certification is required for online pharmacies, prescription drugs, and CBD products.
Prohibited Products
- Products containing hCG, anabolic steroids, ephedra, DMAA, or other dangerous ingredients.
- Products claiming to prevent, cure, or treat diseases without government approval.
- Products subject to FDA/FTC regulatory action or warning.
Ad & Landing Page Requirements
- No disease treatment/cure claims.
- No "as effective as prescription drugs" language.
- Structure/function claims allowed if substantiated.
- Landing page must be functional, mobile-friendly, and match ad content.
- Clear pricing and billing model if applicable.
YouTube-Specific Restrictions
- No ads focusing on specific body parts or showing disturbing imagery.
- No false or exaggerated cure claims.
- Weight loss, hair loss, and skin condition ads allowed if imagery is not disturbing.
- Product not on prohibited substances list
- No disease treatment/cure claims
- Landing page functional on all devices
- Click-through URLs properly formatted
- Claims substantiated with evidence
- No "as effective as prescription drugs" language
- Pricing clearly stated (if applicable)
- No misleading before/after imagery (YouTube)
- No graphic medical content (YouTube)
- Mobile-friendly landing page verified
Source: Google Ads Healthcare Policy
TikTok Supplement Ad Policies
Category Qualification & Documentation
- Pre-approval required for dietary supplements via TikTok Ads Manager.
- Must upload valid cGMP certification, Supplement Facts label images, and manufacturing facility registration.
- Resellers must provide purchase invoice from manufacturer.
Prohibited & Restricted Products
- Banned: Weight loss supplements, fasting products, prescription drugs, CBD, meal replacements, tanning boosters.
- Allowed (with qualification): OTC supplements, sports supplements (18+ targeting), probiotics, beauty supplements, herbal/nutritional supplements.
Ad & Landing Page Requirements
- No unrealistic weight loss or body transformation claims.
- No disease treatment/cure claims.
- No comparison to prescription drugs.
- High-quality video, no spelling/grammar errors, no misleading overlays.
- Landing page must be mobile-friendly, with privacy policy, refund policy, and contact info.
- Category qualification approved for dietary supplements
- cGMP certification uploaded and valid
- Age targeting set to 18+ (if sports supplements or weight management)
- Video high-quality (sharp, stable, clear)
- No spelling/grammar errors in captions
- Landing page mobile-optimized
- Privacy policy, refund policy, contact info present
- No unrealistic weight loss claims
- No disease treatment claims
- Product not in prohibited list
- No copyrighted music without license
- Consistent messaging (ad matches landing page)
Source: TikTok Healthcare Policy
Common Rejection Reasons & How to Fix Them
| Platform | Rejection Reason | Example | How to Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meta | Unsubstantiated health claim | "Clinically proven to boost immunity" | Remove "clinically proven" or provide RCT evidence and cite it |
| Meta | Disease claim | "Treats arthritis pain" | Change to "Supports joint comfort" |
| Meta | Exaggerated promise | "Lose 20 pounds in 2 weeks guaranteed" | Change to "Supports healthy weight management as part of a balanced diet" |
| Unapproved substance | Ad for DHEA supplement | Remove DHEA products or target US-only campaigns | |
| Misleading claims | "As effective as Lipitor" | Remove comparison to prescription drugs entirely | |
| TikTok | Category qualification denied | Missing cGMP certificate | Upload valid cGMP certification document |
| TikTok | Exaggerated performance | "Lose 5kg in 3 days!" | Remove specific weight/timeframe claims |
| YouTube | Shocking content | Graphic images of medical conditions | Remove disturbing imagery |
Sample Compliant Claims & Ad Copy
Structure/Function Claims (Allowed)
- "Supports immune health"
- "Promotes healthy digestion"
- "Helps maintain cardiovascular function"
- "Supports joint flexibility"
- "Helps maintain healthy cholesterol levels already within normal range"
Prohibited Disease Claims (Do NOT Use)
- "Treats diabetes"
- "Cures arthritis"
- "Prevents heart disease"
- "Reduces symptoms of COVID-19"
- "Lowers high blood pressure"
This statement has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.Pre-Launch Compliance Checklists
Product Compliance
- Product not on any platform's prohibited list
- No banned ingredients (ephedra, HGH, steroids, etc.)
- Valid Supplement Facts label
- cGMP certification (required for TikTok)
Claims Compliance
- No disease claims anywhere (ad, landing page, testimonials)
- All health benefit claims are structure/function only
- Each claim substantiated with 2+ RCTs
- No "cure," "treat," "prevent," "diagnose" language used
Ad Creative Compliance
- No spelling or grammar errors
- No before/after images (or proper disclaimer present)
- No exaggerated promises (guaranteed results, specific timeframes)
- Images do not focus on specific body parts
- No shocking or disturbing imagery
Landing Page Compliance
- Page loads in <3 seconds on mobile
- Page is mobile-responsive
- Privacy policy link present and functional
- Refund/return policy stated clearly
- Contact information present (email, phone)
- No 404 errors anywhere on site
- SSL certificate installed (HTTPS)
- Landing page claims match ad claims exactly
Platform-Specific Requirements
- Age targeting set to 18+ (weight management products)
- Geographic targeting set to US-only
- Conversion events properly configured (or Landing Page Views if Meta sensitive category)
- Budget allocated appropriately
Tracking & Measurement
- Tracking pixels installed on website
- Conversion events firing properly (test with browser extension)
- UTM parameters configured for campaign tracking
- Analytics dashboard set up
Documentation
- Campaign naming conventions consistent
- Substantiation documents saved in accessible location
- Team trained on policy requirements
- Escalation process documented (who to contact if ad rejected)
FAQ: Supplement Advertising Compliance
Can I mention specific health conditions in my ads?
No. Mentioning a disease or health condition (e.g., "for diabetics," "arthritis sufferers") is considered a disease claim and is prohibited on all major platforms[1][2][3][4][5].
What disclaimers do I need?
For structure/function claims, use the DSHEA disclaimer on product labels. For ads and landing pages, ensure all claims are substantiated and avoid disease language. Platform-specific disclaimers may be required for before/after images or weight management products.
How do I handle customer reviews?
Do not use testimonials that make disease claims or promise untypical results. All testimonials must be truthful, not misleading, and representative of typical outcomes[1].
What about email/SMS compliance?
Email and SMS marketing for supplements must comply with the CAN-SPAM Act and avoid disease claims. Always include an unsubscribe option and your business contact information.
What if my ad is rejected?
Check the rejection reason, edit your ad or landing page to address the violation, and resubmit. If you believe the rejection is in error, request a manual review or contact platform support.
Official Resources & References
- FTC Health Products Compliance Guidance (2022)
- FDA Guidance: Substantiation for Dietary Supplement Claims (2009)
- Meta Healthcare and Medicines Policy
- Google Ads Healthcare and Medicines Policy
- TikTok Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals Advertising Policy
- Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) of 1994
Book a free strategy call or contact us for expert guidance on supplement advertising compliance.
