Quick answer: From March 31, 2026, Amazon requires all supplement ingredient claims on product detail pages to exactly match the Supplement Facts Panel — same ingredient name, same weight, same presentation. "Raw material equivalent" claims (e.g., "10,000mg raw garlic" when the panel shows "500mg garlic extract") are banned. Amazon's AI scans listing text, images, A+ Content, backend search terms, AND sellers' external websites (Shopify, WooCommerce, etc.) for non-compliance. Violations result in listing suppression.
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Deadline has passed: The March 31, 2026 enforcement deadline is active. If you have not yet audited your supplement listings for ingredient claim compliance, those listings are currently at risk of suppression. Use the audit framework in this article and the checklist at the end to review every listing against its Supplement Facts Panel immediately.

What Amazon Changed on March 31, 2026

The March 2026 Amazon supplement update requires that ingredient claims in supplement listings exactly match the Supplement Facts Panel in three dimensions: the ingredient name (no synonyms or marketing names), the ingredient weight (no rounding, no raw material equivalents), and the ingredient presentation (extract ratios, standardization percentages). This applies to every text field Amazon scans — including content that was previously considered outside the listing's "official" copy.

Amazon has been gradually tightening supplement listing compliance requirements over several years, responding to FTC pressure, FDA enforcement signals, and consumer protection concerns about misleading supplement advertising. The March 2026 update is the most significant change in this progression — and the one that most directly affects how supplement copy is written.

Before March 2026, many supplement brands used "marketing" ingredient amounts in their listings that differed from the amounts on their Supplement Facts Panels. This was common, widely tolerated, and rarely enforced. The March 2026 update ends that tolerance explicitly and creates an automated enforcement mechanism through Amazon's AI scanning systems.

The Three Dimensions of Exact Matching

Amazon's "exact match" requirement covers three specific dimensions of every ingredient claim:

Dimension 1: Ingredient Name
The ingredient name in the listing must match the ingredient name on the Supplement Facts Panel exactly — including the form designation. If the panel shows "Magnesium Glycinate," the listing cannot say "Magnesium" or "Chelated Magnesium" without the glycinate specification. If the panel shows "Ashwagandha Root Extract (KSM-66)," the listing must include the extract designation and, where used, the branded extract name.

Dimension 2: Weight
The weight (mg, mcg, g, IU) must match the panel exactly — in the same unit of measurement. If the panel shows "400mg," the listing cannot say "400 milligrams" (spelling versus abbreviation is generally acceptable) but cannot say "0.4g" (unit conversion) or "400mg raw material equivalent" (equivalent framing). The actual weight from the panel is the only weight permitted in the listing.

Dimension 3: Presentation
Standardization percentages, extract ratios, and form designations must match the panel. If the panel shows "Turmeric Extract (Curcuma longa) (standardized to 95% curcuminoids)," the listing cannot omit the standardization percentage and claim a higher curcuminoid content than what the panel specifies.

Raw Material Equivalent Claims: The Most Common Violation

Raw material equivalent claims present an ingredient amount in terms of the raw material before processing — not the actual ingredient in the finished product. "10,000mg raw garlic equivalent" when the Supplement Facts Panel shows "500mg garlic extract (2% allicin)" is a raw material equivalent claim. These are misleading because consumers cannot meaningfully compare 10,000mg of whole garlic to 500mg of extract. Amazon has banned them entirely from March 2026.

Raw material equivalent claims are the most widespread compliance violation in supplement listings — and the specific claim type that Amazon's March 2026 update was designed to eliminate.

Why Raw Material Equivalent Claims Were Used

Raw material equivalent claims arose from a legitimate marketing challenge: concentrated extracts often have small-number dosages that look unimpressive to consumers. "500mg garlic extract" sounds like much less than "10,000mg raw garlic" — even though 500mg of a 20:1 garlic extract contains the equivalent active compounds as 10,000mg of whole garlic. Brands used raw material equivalent framing to make their concentrated extracts sound more substantial.

The problem is that consumers cannot meaningfully compare "raw garlic equivalent" amounts to other products or to the Supplement Facts Panel amount. The framing creates the impression that the product contains 10,000mg of garlic — which it doesn't. This is exactly the type of misleading ingredient claim that both the FTC and Amazon are targeting.

Raw Material Equivalent: Before and After March 2026

IngredientSupplement Facts Panel ShowsBanned (Raw Material Equivalent)Compliant (March 2026)
Garlic500mg Garlic Extract (2% allicin)"10,000mg raw garlic equivalent""500mg garlic extract (standardized to 2% allicin)"
Ashwagandha300mg Ashwagandha Root Extract (5% withanolides)"600mg ashwagandha root equivalent""300mg ashwagandha root extract (5% withanolides)"
Turmeric500mg Turmeric Extract (95% curcuminoids)"10,000mg whole turmeric equivalent""500mg turmeric extract (95% curcuminoids)"
Green Tea400mg Green Tea Leaf Extract (45% EGCG)"4,000mg whole green tea leaf equivalent""400mg green tea extract (45% EGCG)"
Valerian450mg Valerian Root Extract (0.8% valerenic acid)"2,250mg valerian root powder equivalent""450mg valerian root extract (0.8% valerenic acid)"

Everything Amazon's AI Scans

Amazon's AI does not limit its scanning to the visible listing text. It scans every text field on the product detail page, all images (including text in product photos and label photography), every A+ Content module, backend search terms, and the seller's external brand website. This cross-platform scanning is the most significant expansion of Amazon's enforcement reach — it means listing compliance and website compliance are now linked.

Understanding exactly what Amazon's AI scans helps supplement brands know where to look when auditing for compliance. The scan is comprehensive — and the external website component is the one that catches most brands by surprise.

Amazon Listing Elements Scanned

ElementScan TypeCommon Violation Pattern
Product TitleText extractionIngredient amount in title doesn't match panel (e.g., "10,000mg" in title when panel shows 500mg extract)
Bullet PointsText extractionRaw material equivalent claims in feature bullets; rounded ingredient amounts
Product DescriptionText extractionMarketing language describing ingredient amounts that differ from panel
Product ImagesOCR (text recognition)Text on product images — including label photography — showing raw material equivalent amounts
A+ ContentText extraction from all modulesComparison tables, ingredient callouts, and hero text using non-panel amounts
Backend Search TermsText extractionKeyword stuffing with ingredient amounts that don't match panel (not visible to consumers but scanned by Amazon)
External WebsiteWeb crawlerShopify product pages, WooCommerce listings, and brand websites showing different ingredient amounts than Amazon listing or Supplement Facts Panel

The Image Scanning Implication

The image scanning element of Amazon's enforcement is one of the most underestimated compliance requirements. Amazon uses optical character recognition (OCR) technology to read text that appears in product images — including label photography, lifestyle imagery containing text, and infographic-style images.

This means a brand can have a fully compliant text listing — all ingredient amounts matching the Supplement Facts Panel — and still face suppression because an infographic image in the listing shows "10,000mg raw garlic equivalent" in large text. The image and the text listing are both checked.

For brands using label photography, this creates an additional audit requirement: review the label itself for raw material equivalent claims. If the label shows ingredient amounts that differ from the Supplement Facts Panel, the label needs to change before the listing can be fully compliant.

What Happens When a Listing Is Suppressed

Amazon listing suppression removes the product from search results and product recommendations — making it effectively invisible to new customers while the ASIN remains technically active. Suppressed listings cannot receive organic traffic, lose Buy Box eligibility, and may affect the brand's overall account health metrics. Corrections must be submitted through Seller Central and validated before the listing returns to search.

Listing suppression is not the same as a product removal or an account suspension — it's a more surgical enforcement action that removes specific listings from customer-facing search while preserving the underlying ASIN. But the commercial impact is immediate and significant.

What Changes When a Listing Is Suppressed

  • Search visibility: The product does not appear in organic search results on Amazon. Customers can still reach it via direct link, but cannot discover it through category browsing or keyword search.
  • Buy Box: Suppressed listings are not eligible for the Buy Box — which accounts for more than 80% of Amazon purchases. Without Buy Box eligibility, even customers who find the listing cannot purchase normally.
  • PPC advertising: Sponsored Product and Sponsored Brand ads cannot run on suppressed listings. Ad spend pauses automatically, affecting any PPC-dependent sales velocity.
  • Ranking: Suppression eliminates organic ranking signal. Even after a listing is reinstated, the sales velocity lost during suppression affects the listing's organic rank recovery timeline.
  • Account health: Repeated suppressions or listing violations affect the brand's Account Health dashboard, which can trigger account-level review at sufficient severity.

The Reinstatement Process

Correcting a suppressed supplement listing for ingredient claim compliance requires: identifying all non-compliant ingredient claims across every scanned element, revising them to exactly match the Supplement Facts Panel, updating listing text, image text, A+ Content, and backend search terms, and submitting the corrected listing through Seller Central. Validation typically takes 24-72 hours, during which the listing remains suppressed. For high-velocity products, this revenue gap is significant.

The Complete Listing Audit Framework

Auditing Amazon supplement listings for March 2026 compliance requires a systematic approach: collect Supplement Facts Panels for every product, then review every ingredient claim in every scanned element against those panels. The audit has five stages: collect panels, extract claims from each listing element, verify claim accuracy, identify raw material equivalents, and document corrections needed.

An effective listing audit follows a structured process that ensures no ingredient claim is missed. Here is the framework WriteLift uses when auditing existing supplement listings for post-March 2026 compliance.

Stage 1: Collect Supplement Facts Panels

Before auditing any listing content, assemble the current Supplement Facts Panel for every supplement product in your catalog. Use the COA (Certificate of Analysis) from your manufacturer if the label is not available digitally. This is the reference document against which every ingredient claim in the listing will be checked.

Stage 2: Extract Ingredient Claims from Every Listing Element

For each product, extract every ingredient mention from: the listing title, all five bullet points, the product description, all product images (screenshot and review each for text content), all A+ Content modules (text extract from each module), and backend search terms (pull from Seller Central). Create a spreadsheet with each claim in a separate row alongside the corresponding panel information.

Stage 3: Verify Claim Accuracy Against Panel

For each extracted claim, verify: (1) Does the ingredient name match the panel exactly? (2) Does the ingredient weight match the panel exactly in the same unit? (3) Are standardization percentages, extract ratios, and form designations correctly stated? Flag every discrepancy — even minor ones like "Magnesium" when the panel says "Magnesium Glycinate."

Stage 4: Identify Raw Material Equivalent Claims

Flag every instance of: "equivalent to," "raw [ingredient]," "whole [ingredient] equivalent," concentrate descriptions that imply a higher weight than the panel shows, or any wording that presents the ingredient in terms of raw material rather than the actual extract/ingredient form on the panel.

Stage 5: Audit External Website

Review every product page on your Shopify, WooCommerce, or other external website for ingredient claims that differ from (a) the Amazon listing and (b) the Supplement Facts Panel. Amazon's AI crawls these pages — any discrepancy creates suppression risk for the Amazon listing. Update external pages to match the panel-compliant Amazon listing.

Amazon Supplement Listing Compliance Checklist (March 2026)

  • Supplement Facts Panel collected for each product (use most recent COA)
  • Product title reviewed — no ingredient amounts present that don't match panel
  • All 5 bullet points reviewed — every ingredient claim matches panel in name and weight
  • Product description reviewed — no raw material equivalent claims
  • Every product image reviewed for text content (OCR check) — no non-panel ingredient amounts
  • Label photography checked — label itself must match panel; non-compliant labels flagged for update
  • All A+ Content modules reviewed — ingredient callouts match panel exactly
  • Backend search terms reviewed — no ingredient amounts that differ from panel
  • External brand website reviewed — product pages match panel-compliant listing
  • Corrections documented in writing with specific before/after for each element
  • Revised listing submitted through Seller Central
  • Reinstatement monitored within 24-72 hours after submission

The Most Common Violation Patterns by Supplement Category

Certain supplement categories have particularly high rates of raw material equivalent claim violations because the marketing convention of presenting "raw" amounts was deeply embedded in how those categories sold. Herbal extracts (garlic, turmeric, ashwagandha, valerian), concentrated mushroom extracts (lion's mane, reishi, chaga), and adaptogenic botanicals are the highest-violation categories. Every concentrated extract in these categories should be assumed to have existing violations until audited.

Herbal Extracts

Herbal extracts are the highest-violation category. The raw material equivalent convention was essentially industry-standard for garlic, turmeric, ashwagandha, holy basil, ginseng, and dozens of other botanical extracts. If your listing says "garlic" with a large milligram number but your panel shows a garlic extract with a smaller number, you have a violation.

Concentrated Mushroom Extracts

Lion's mane, reishi, chaga, cordyceps, and other mushroom extracts frequently used dual-extraction marketing language ("dual-extract," "10:1 extract," "fruiting body equivalent") that created apparent amounts higher than the actual extract amount on the Supplement Facts Panel. Each of these formulations needs individual review against its specific panel.

Collagen Products

Collagen supplements frequently marketed "collagen peptides" with total collagen content claims that combined multiple sources or included carrier amounts not separately listed on the panel. Review total protein content claims against the panel carefully.

Multi-Ingredient Proprietary Blends

Products using proprietary blend labeling on the Supplement Facts Panel (where individual ingredient amounts within the blend are not disclosed) face a specific compliance challenge: no ingredient amount can be claimed in the listing for ingredients within the blend, since the individual amounts are not on the panel. If the panel shows "Immune Support Blend 500mg" with listed ingredients but no individual amounts, the listing cannot claim specific amounts for those ingredients.

Images and A+ Content: Often Overlooked in Compliance Audits

Images and A+ Content are the two most commonly overlooked elements in supplement listing compliance audits. Product photography showing label text, infographic images with ingredient callouts, and A+ Content comparison tables are all scanned by Amazon's AI. Brands that update listing text but don't update images or A+ Content remain non-compliant after their "fix."

Most supplement brands audit their listing text — title, bullets, description — when compliance concerns arise. Far fewer audit their images and A+ Content with the same rigor. This oversight means many brands that believe they are compliant after updating their text listings still have suppression risk from image and A+ Content violations.

Image Types That Require Review

  • Label photography: Images showing the product label. If the label contains raw material equivalent amounts or ingredient amounts that differ from the Supplement Facts Panel, the image is non-compliant even if the listing text is correct.
  • Infographic images: Supplement brands commonly use ingredient callout images ("Contains 400mg Magnesium Glycinate" in large text). These must match the panel exactly.
  • Lifestyle images with text overlays: Marketing images with text overlays showing ingredient amounts or benefits must also comply.
  • Comparison images: Images comparing your product to competitors that include ingredient amount claims must use panel-accurate amounts.

Why Amazon Scans Your Shopify Site

Amazon's cross-platform scanning addresses a specific enforcement gap: brands that maintain compliant Amazon listings but make prohibited claims on their external websites. Because a consumer can read the Shopify site and then purchase through Amazon, Amazon considers external website claims part of the overall marketing environment for the Amazon listing. Discrepancies between the Amazon listing and external website ingredient claims create suppression risk on Amazon.

The external website scanning element of Amazon's March 2026 enforcement is the most operationally significant new development — and the one most brands have not yet addressed. Here is why Amazon began scanning external websites and what it means in practice.

Why Amazon Expanded to External Websites

Amazon's concern is that a brand could maintain a technically compliant Amazon listing while making prohibited ingredient claims on its Shopify store, directing consumers to its brand website through Amazon brand registry and A+ Content links, and creating a marketing environment where the Amazon listing is the purchase point but the Shopify site is where the actual misleading claims live.

By crawling external brand websites linked from Amazon listings and Brand Registry accounts, Amazon closes this loophole. The cross-platform scan creates a unified compliance standard: a brand's ingredient claims must be consistent and accurate across every platform where that brand promotes the product.

How the External Scan Works in Practice

Amazon's crawlers follow links from Amazon brand pages and product listings to the brand's external website. On the external website, they scan product pages for the same supplement ASINs sold on Amazon — specifically looking for ingredient amount claims that differ from the Supplement Facts Panel or from the Amazon listing.

If your Shopify product page for "Magnesium Glycinate 400mg" says "equivalent to 4,000mg elemental magnesium" and your Amazon listing has been corrected to "400mg Magnesium Glycinate (as TRAACS)," Amazon's system may flag the discrepancy and suppress the Amazon listing despite the Amazon-side correction.

The FTC Connection: Why These Rules Exist

Amazon's March 2026 supplement requirements are not Amazon-invented rules — they reflect and implement FTC and FDA advertising compliance standards that apply to all supplement advertising regardless of platform. The FTC requires that ingredient claims in supplement advertising be accurate and not misleading. Raw material equivalent claims are inherently misleading under the FTC's standard. Amazon is enforcing compliance because it faces regulatory risk for hosting non-compliant supplement advertising.

Amazon's ingredient claim requirements are not arbitrary platform rules — they reflect the underlying legal standard that applies to supplement advertising generally. The FTC's "competent and reliable scientific evidence" standard for health claims, the FDA's DSHEA framework for supplement labeling, and the FTC Act's general prohibition on false and misleading advertising all create a legal environment where inaccurate ingredient claims are prohibited.

Amazon faces its own regulatory exposure for hosting supplement listings that contain false or misleading claims — including false ingredient amount claims. The March 2026 update is Amazon's compliance response to regulatory pressure to clean up the supplement category, which has historically had some of the highest rates of advertising violations on the platform.

For the broader FTC compliance context for supplement advertising, see our article on FTC liability for supplement advertisers and copywriters. For the complete guide to supplement structure/function claim compliance, see what supplement brands can't say — and what to say instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

From March 31, 2026, Amazon requires every ingredient claim on a supplement product detail page to exactly match the Supplement Facts Panel — including the ingredient name, weight, and presentation. Raw material equivalent claims (e.g., "10,000mg raw garlic equivalent" when the panel shows "500mg garlic extract") are specifically banned. Amazon's AI scans the listing title, bullet points, description, all product images, A+ Content modules, backend search terms, and the seller's external brand website for compliance.
Raw material equivalent claims present an ingredient amount in terms of the raw material before processing, rather than the actual finished product ingredient amount. For example: "10,000mg raw garlic equivalent" when the Supplement Facts Panel shows "500mg garlic extract (2% allicin)." These claims are misleading because consumers cannot meaningfully compare raw material amounts to the actual extract amounts in the product. Amazon bans them because they constitute false or misleading advertising about the actual ingredient content.
Yes. Amazon's AI system crawls sellers' external brand websites — including Shopify, WooCommerce, and any other platform where the brand sells the same product — for discrepancies with Amazon listings and Supplement Facts Panels. If your Shopify product page shows a different ingredient amount than your Amazon listing or your Supplement Facts Panel, Amazon may suppress the Amazon listing even if the Amazon listing itself is compliant. External website ingredient claims must be consistent with the panel and the Amazon listing.
Amazon suppresses non-compliant supplement listings — removing them from search results, Buy Box eligibility, and PPC advertising without warning. Suppressed listings must be corrected and re-submitted through Seller Central. Validation after correction typically takes 24-72 hours. During suppression, the listing generates no organic traffic, no Buy Box purchases, and no PPC-driven sales. Repeated violations can affect account health metrics and trigger account-level review. For high-velocity supplement products, even a 24-hour suppression creates significant revenue impact.
Start by collecting the current Supplement Facts Panel (or COA) for every supplement product. Then review every ingredient claim across: the listing title, all five bullet points, the product description, every product image (check all text in images), all A+ Content modules, backend search terms, and your external website product pages. Every claim must match the Supplement Facts Panel in ingredient name, weight, and presentation. Flag and rewrite any raw material equivalent claims. Submit corrections through Seller Central and monitor for reinstatement within 72 hours.

WriteLift — Karen Nielsen Palconit

WriteLift is a specialist eCommerce content service providing compliance-aware copy for health supplement, skincare, and premium pet product brands. Every Amazon supplement deliverable is verified against the client's Supplement Facts Panel before delivery. writelift.ph

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External references: FTC Health Products Compliance Guidance · FDA Dietary Supplements · Amazon Supplement Listing Requirements

This article is for informational purposes only. Amazon policies are subject to change. Consult Amazon Seller Central for the most current listing requirements.