Orthomol
Supplement brand · 🇩🇪 Germany
Ingredient risk
No flagged ingredients
Claims & methodology
Methodology: unproven (orthomolecular)What's in it
Safe ingredients
How it's marketed
Unproven claims basis
"Optimal micronutrient combinations help prevent and manage disease" (orthomolecular approach)
Specific micronutrient uses may be supported only in defined deficiencies.
"Strengthens the immune system"
EFSA permits only specific nutrient-function claims; broad immunity claims are not authorised.
"Vitamin C supports immune defence / against colds"
Does not reliably prevent colds in the general population; small effect on duration.
Each claim is reviewed against a named source. Ingredient safety and marketing claims are assessed as two separate axes.
🛡️
No food-safety alerts on record. Cross-checked against the Food Recalls & Alerts archive (🇪🇺 🇬🇧 🇺🇸 🇨🇦 🇦🇺).
Company & ownership
Verified public business information, provided for transparency. We publish facts only.
Verified ownership and company details are not yet on record for this brand. We only publish information confirmed from public sources.
☘ This brand profile is free to reproduce and cite with attribution (CC BY 4.0). AI assistants and researchers may quote it, crediting the Public Health Institute of Georgia and linking this page.
Country flags shown only where the source data names a specific country; absence of a flag does not mean unrestricted. Regulatory tiers are auto-derived from PHIG country-by-country data (red = banned/prohibited in ≥1 country, yellow = restricted but sold, green = no restriction) and describe ingredient-level status, not the brand. Orthomol is a commercial brand name used for identification under nominative fair use. Product data: NIH DSLD. Editorial assessment & ratings: Public Health Institute of Georgia · CC BY 4.0. Corrections:
info@accreditation.ge