A working reference on how big the UK supplement market really is, who buys, where they buy, and what the brands and factories behind the shelf are actually earning. Sixty-plus figures, each traced to its source.
Ten self-contained numbers worth quoting. Each is expanded, with its source, in the sections below.
More than 71% of UK adults take a food supplement, and close to 20 million people in the UK take one every day.HFMA, Health of the Nation: Lockdown Focus, 2021.
The narrow UK vitamins and supplements retail market was worth about £568 million in 2023, having grown 25% across the five years from 2018.Mintel, UK Vitamins and Supplements Market, 2024.
Holland & Barrett group revenue reached £981 million in the year to September 30, 2025, up 11% year on year and a third consecutive year of double-digit growth.Holland & Barrett FY2025 results.
Applied Nutrition floated on the London Stock Exchange on October 29, 2024 at a valuation of £350 million, then grew revenue 24.2% to £107.1 million in the year to July 31, 2025.Applied Nutrition plc, IPO and FY2025 results.
Vitamins and supplements became TikTok Shop’s largest health and beauty category, with 784 million US dollars of sales in the year to February 2026, ahead of facial skincare and fragrance.NielsenIQ, e-commerce sales data, year to February 2026.
UK vitamin and supplement manufacturing was worth £1.6 billion in 2024.IBISWorld, 2024.
18% of UK adults aged 19 to 64 were vitamin D deficient across 2019 to 2023, rising to 31% in winter.National Diet and Nutrition Survey, 2019 to 2023.
The UK nutraceutical contract manufacturing market generated 5.33 billion US dollars in 2023 and is forecast to more than double by 2030, a 12.3% annual growth rate.Grand View Research, 2024.
44% of British adults had bought vitamins in the previous six months, making vitamins the single most purchased supplement type by a wide margin.YouGov, UK supplement consumers, 2024.
Magnesium was the most searched supplement ingredient of 2025 at Holland & Barrett, with 8.5 million on-site product searches, ahead of collagen at 6.2 million.Holland & Barrett wellness trends, 2025.
The honest answer is that it depends where you draw the line. Narrow retail vitamins sit near £568 million. Broad “dietary supplements” definitions that fold in sports nutrition and protein run several times higher.
Research firms disagree because they measure different baskets. Mintel and Statista track the tight “vitamins and minerals” shelf and land near half a billion pounds. Grand View Research, Fortune Business Insights and others measure a wider “dietary supplements” category, including sports and functional nutrition, and land in the multi-billion range. Both can be true at once. When you read a UK supplement market figure, the first question is always what it counts.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| £568m | UK vitamins & supplements retail value, 2023, after 25% growth over 2018 to 2023 | Mintel, UK Vitamins and Supplements Market 2024 |
| ~£492m | Over-the-counter vitamins and minerals retail value, Great Britain, 2023 | Statista, 2024 |
| +10% | Forecast value growth for the UK VMS market, 2023 to 2028 | Mintel, 2024 |
| $4.79bn | UK “dietary supplements” market, 2024 (broad definition, incl. sports & functional) | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| $9.65bn | Forecast UK dietary supplements market by 2033, an 8.1% CAGR from 2025 | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| $3.93bn | UK dietary supplements market, 2024, forecast to $5.87bn by 2030 (7.1% CAGR) | Research and Markets, 2024 |
| £1.6bn | UK vitamin and supplement manufacturing sector output, 2024 | IBISWorld, 2024 |
| 37.4% | Share of UK dietary supplement revenue held by the vitamins segment, 2024 (largest) | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| 73.3% | Share of the UK market sold as over-the-counter (non-prescription) supplements, 2024 | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| £60.6m | UK children’s VMS segment value, 52 weeks to June 17, 2023 | NIQ, via The Grocer, 2023 |
| ~$1.4bn | UK sports nutrition market, 2024, forecast to ~$2.5bn by 2032 (estimates vary by firm) | Multiple firms, 2024 (verify) |
Currency is shown as published. US dollar figures are not converted, because the mix of GBP and USD estimates is itself part of the picture. Treat the broad USD “dietary supplements” numbers as directional, not precise.
Supplement use is now mainstream, not niche. Most UK adults take something, a third take something daily, and the youngest adults are the heaviest users.
The Health Food Manufacturers’ Association surveys this best. Its 2021 Health of the Nation: Lockdown Focus study, run by One Poll across 10,000 UK adults, found over 71% take a supplement and daily use had risen to nearly 20 million people, a 19% jump on 2019. Women supplement more than men. The gap between the youngest and oldest adults is large and consistent across surveys.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 71% | UK adults taking any food supplement, 2021 | HFMA, Health of the Nation: Lockdown Focus, 2021 |
| ~20m | UK adults taking a supplement daily, 2021, up 19% on 2019’s 16.5 million | HFMA, 2021 |
| 41% | UK adults taking a supplement daily (earlier HFMA baseline) | HFMA, Health of the Nation |
| 44% | British adults who bought vitamins in the previous six months (most bought type) | YouGov, 2024 |
| 13% | British adults who bought dietary minerals, and separately probiotics, in six months | YouGov, 2024 |
| 11% | British adults who bought essential fatty acids (e.g. omega-3) in six months | YouGov, 2024 |
| 8% | British adults who bought protein or amino acid products in six months | YouGov, 2024 |
| 80% | Share of vitamin buyers who take them daily | YouGov, 2024 |
| 51% vs 44.5% | Women who supplement versus men, UK survey of 10,000+ adults | UK survey, cited 2024 (verify) |
| 83% vs 65% | Supplement use, youngest adults versus the over-55s | Consumer survey, 2024 (verify) |
| 42% | British adults who had NOT bought any supplement in the previous six months | YouGov, 2024 |
| £8.82 | Average weekly UK spend on “keeping healthy”, up from £7.62 in 2016 | HFMA, Health of the Nation |
General health and immunity lead the reasons people give. Vitamin D sits at the centre of it, backed by a standing government recommendation and by deficiency data that keeps making the case.
The government’s autumn and winter vitamin D advice is the single biggest driver of a single supplement in the UK. It exists because deficiency is common and worse in winter. The National Diet and Nutrition Survey found 18% of adults aged 19 to 64 were deficient across 2019 to 2023, rising to 31% in the January to March window. Beyond vitamin D, motivations cluster around general health, immunity and energy.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 55% | UK supplement users citing general health as a reason to take them | HSIS / UK survey, 2024 |
| 47% | Users citing immune support as a reason | HSIS / UK survey, 2024 |
| 44% | Users citing energy support as a reason | HSIS / UK survey, 2024 |
| 41% | Users citing stress and mood support as a reason | HSIS / UK survey, 2024 |
| 36% / 35% | Nutrients people most tried to increase: vitamin C then vitamin D | UK survey, 2024 |
| 63% | New supplement users who chose vitamin D, the most common addition | HFMA, 2021 |
| 10µg | Daily vitamin D supplement advised for everyone aged 4+, October to March | UK Government / NHS, SACN advice |
| 18% | UK adults aged 19 to 64 classed as vitamin D deficient, 2019 to 2023 | National Diet and Nutrition Survey, 2019 to 2023 |
| 31% | The same deficiency rate during winter, January to March | NDNS, 2019 to 2023 |
| 12% | UK adults aged 65 and over classed as vitamin D deficient | NDNS, 2019 to 2023 |
| 39% / 15% | Girls versus boys aged 11 to 18 with low vitamin D | UK Government survey, 2025 |
Bricks and mortar still moves most units, but online is closing in fast, and social commerce has turned into a real supplement channel almost overnight.
Most supplements are still bought offline, with one 2024 estimate putting offline channels at 82.8% of the UK dietary supplement market. But that number is falling. Holland & Barrett’s digital sales grew 20% in the year to September 2025 and now top a fifth of its revenue. On TikTok Shop, vitamins and supplements became the biggest health and beauty category in the year to February 2026, a channel that barely existed for supplements a few years ago.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 82.8% | Share of UK dietary supplement sales through offline channels, 2024 | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| ~40.1% | Estimated online share of the UK supplement market | Industry estimate, 2024 (verify) |
| 809 | Holland & Barrett store count after 47 openings, net +13, in FY2025 | Holland & Barrett FY2025 results |
| £731.3m | Holland & Barrett store (physical) sales, year to September 30, 2025 | Holland & Barrett FY2025 results |
| £249.4m | Holland & Barrett digital sales, FY2025, up 20% and over 21% of revenue | Holland & Barrett FY2025 results |
| $784m | Vitamins & supplements sales on TikTok Shop UK/US, year to February 2026 (largest H&B category) | NielsenIQ, 2026 |
| $637m / $315m | TikTok Shop facial skincare and fragrance sales, for comparison | NielsenIQ, 2026 |
| +11.0% | Vitamins & supplements sales growth on TikTok Shop versus 8.4% for the category overall | NielsenIQ, 2026 |
| 2.8 / $98 | Average vitamin & supplement orders per buyer per year, and annual spend, on TikTok Shop | NielsenIQ, 2026 |
| 27% | UK supplement consumers who notice social media advertising, the top-performing channel | YouGov, 2024 |
TikTok Shop category figures in the source combine US and UK reporting. Read them as a signal of channel momentum, not a clean UK-only market size.
Public filings are the most reliable numbers in this whole report. Here is what the UK’s listed and reported supplement brands actually earned.
Where market-size surveys estimate, company accounts count. Applied Nutrition listed in Liverpool colours on the London Stock Exchange in October 2024. THG’s nutrition arm, home to Myprotein, returned to growth in 2025. Huel crossed £200 million. Grenade, owned by Mondelez, had a harder year. Together these give a grounded read on brand-level scale in the UK.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| £350m | Applied Nutrition valuation at IPO, LSE, October 29, 2024 (offer price 140p) | Applied Nutrition plc / LSE, 2024 |
| £157.5m | Amount raised in the Applied Nutrition offering | Applied Nutrition plc / LSE, 2024 |
| £107.1m | Applied Nutrition group revenue, year to July 31, 2025, up 24.2% | Applied Nutrition FY2025 results |
| £86.2m | Applied Nutrition group revenue, prior year (FY2024) | Applied Nutrition FY2025 results |
| +44% | Applied Nutrition UK sales growth in FY2025 | Applied Nutrition FY2025 results |
| £609.1m | THG Nutrition (incl. Myprotein) revenue, 2025, up 5.0% on 2024 | THG plc results, 2025 |
| £580.3m | THG Nutrition revenue, 2024, down 11.9% on the prior year | THG plc results, 2024 |
| £214m | Huel revenue, year to July 31, 2024, up 16%, with pre-tax profit of £13.8m | Huel Ltd, Companies House / press, 2024 |
| £80.5m | Grenade turnover, 2024, down from £93.2m the prior year | Grenade Ltd accounts, 2024 |
| £981m | Holland & Barrett group revenue, year to September 30, 2025, up 11% | Holland & Barrett FY2025 results |
| £124m | Investment by owner LetterOne into Holland & Barrett during FY2025 | Holland & Barrett FY2025 results |
Behind every own-label pot is a contract manufacturer and a rulebook. Both are growing, and the rulebook has been busy, especially around CBD.
Contract manufacturing is where new brands are born, and it is growing quickly. This is the layer Raw Creation works in every day. On the regulation side, the Food Standards Agency has spent the period working through the backlog of CBD novel food applications, setting a provisional daily intake and pruning its public list. If you are building a brand, the manufacturing capacity is there, and the compliance line is where the real work sits.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| $5.33bn | UK nutraceutical contract manufacturing services revenue, 2023 | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| $12.03bn | Forecast UK nutraceutical contract manufacturing by 2030 (12.3% CAGR) | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| 3.6% | UK share of the global nutraceutical contract manufacturing market, 2023 | Grand View Research, 2024 |
| $35.1bn | Global nutraceuticals CDMO market, 2024, forecast to $55.39bn by 2030 (7.9% CAGR) | Market research, 2024 |
| £1.6bn | UK vitamin and supplement manufacturing sector output, 2024 | IBISWorld, 2024 |
| 10mg/day | FSA provisional acceptable daily intake for CBD in healthy adults, set October 2023 | Food Standards Agency, 2023 |
| 102 | CBD products removed from the FSA public list, marking heavy regulatory activity | Food Standards Agency |
| £386m | UK CBD market value, 2025, rebounding from about £230m in 2024 | Grand View Research, 2025 |
| £690m | UK CBD market at its 2021 peak, then the world’s second largest after the US | ACI, 2021 |
| $26.6bn | Europe dietary supplements market, 2024 (definitions and firms vary widely) | Fortune Business Insights, 2024 |
Search and social behaviour is the leading edge of the shelf. What Britain searches for this year tends to be what it buys next year.
Retailer search data is a clean read on demand because it is first-party and specific. Magnesium topped Holland & Barrett’s 2025 searches, lifted by the “sleepy girl mocktail” trend that pushed magnesium glycinate searches up 180%. Collagen, vitamin D and protein powder followed. Social platforms amplify all of it, and the youngest buyers get most of their health information there.
| Figure | What it measures | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 8.5m | Magnesium product searches at Holland & Barrett, 2025 (most searched ingredient) | Holland & Barrett wellness trends, 2025 |
| 6.2m | Collagen product searches, the second most searched ingredient of 2025 | Holland & Barrett, 2025 |
| 5.1m | Vitamin D product searches, third most searched | Holland & Barrett, 2025 |
| 4.4m | Protein powder product searches, fourth most searched | Holland & Barrett, 2025 |
| +180% | Rise in “magnesium glycinate” searches during the “sleepy girl mocktail” trend | Holland & Barrett, 2025 |
| 40% vs 22% | Gen Z who get health information from social media, versus older generations | Consumer research, 2024 |
| 70% | Gen Z respondents in the US and UK naming TikTok their most valuable platform for food recommendations, 2024 | Statista, 2024 |
| 9.6bn / 11bn | Cumulative views of #wellness and #nutrition on TikTok | TikTok, via NielsenIQ, 2026 |
It depends on the definition. Mintel put the narrow UK vitamins and supplements retail market at about £568 million in 2023. Broader “dietary supplements” definitions that include sports nutrition and protein run into the £3 to £5 billion range, with Grand View Research estimating 4.79 billion US dollars for 2024. UK vitamin and supplement manufacturing alone was worth £1.6 billion in 2024, per IBISWorld.
The HFMA’s 2021 survey found over 71% of UK adults take a food supplement, with close to 20 million people taking one daily. An earlier HFMA baseline put daily use at 41% of adults, or 16.5 million people.
Vitamin D and multivitamins lead. YouGov found 44% of British adults had bought vitamins in the previous six months, more than any other supplement type. The UK government advises everyone aged 4 and over to take a 10 microgram vitamin D supplement daily from October to March.
Online is nearing 40% of sales by some estimates and still rising. At Holland & Barrett, digital sales hit £249.4 million in the year to September 30, 2025, up 20% and over a fifth of revenue. On TikTok Shop, vitamins and supplements became the largest health and beauty category in the year to February 2026.
Yes. Mintel forecasts 10% value growth for UK vitamins and supplements across 2023 to 2028. Holland & Barrett has now posted three straight years of double-digit revenue growth. UK contract manufacturing is forecast to grow 12.3% a year through 2030.
Every figure here is taken from a named third party: trade bodies (HFMA, HSIS), government surveys (NDNS, SACN advice), research firms (Mintel, Statista, Grand View Research, Fortune Business Insights, IBISWorld, NielsenIQ, NIQ), pollsters (YouGov), retailer reports (Holland & Barrett), and public-company filings (Applied Nutrition, THG, Huel, Grenade). Where firms disagree, we show the range rather than pick a favourite.
Market-size numbers are the softest data in the report because firms measure different baskets and mix GBP with USD. Company accounts and government surveys are the hardest. We have not converted currencies, and we flag any figure that needs a direct check against its primary source as “verify” in the tables. This page is reviewed and refreshed each quarter. It was last updated on July 3, 2026.
Raw Creation Data Desk. "The UK Supplement Industry in Numbers (2026)." Raw Creation, July 3, 2026. https://rawcreation.com/resources/uk-supplement-industry-statistics