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How to File an FDA Complaint About an Unsafe Supplement

Found a dangerous or contaminated supplement? Here is how to file an FDA complaint, report adverse events, and protect other consumers.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
4 min read

You bought a supplement that made you sick, contained undisclosed ingredients, or showed contamination levels that seem dangerous. The supplement industry is less regulated than most consumers realize, and the FDA relies heavily on consumer reports to identify dangerous products.

Here is how to file a complaint that actually gets attention.

Why Consumer Reports Matter for Supplements

Unlike prescription drugs, dietary supplements do not need FDA approval before they hit store shelves. Manufacturers are responsible for their own safety testing. The FDA only steps in after problems are reported.

This means your report could be the one that triggers an investigation, a recall, or a public safety warning.

Step 1: Report Through the FDA Safety Reporting Portal

The primary way to report an unsafe supplement is through the FDA's MedWatch system:

Online:

  1. Go to fda.gov/medwatch
  2. Click "Report a Problem"
  3. Select "Dietary Supplement" as the product type
  4. Fill out the form with details about the product and the problem

By phone:

  • Call 1-800-FDA-1088 (1-800-332-1088)
  • Available Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 4:30 PM Eastern

By mail:

  • Download Form FDA 3500 from the MedWatch website, complete it, and mail to the address provided

Step 2: Document Everything

Your report is stronger with documentation:

  • Keep the product — do not throw away the supplement. The FDA may want to test it.
  • Save the label — photograph the front, back, and any lot numbers or expiration dates
  • Record batch and lot numbers — these help the FDA trace the specific production run
  • Document your symptoms — dates of use, when symptoms started, severity, and any medical treatment received
  • Get medical records if you sought treatment — these significantly strengthen your report
  • Save the receipt — proof of purchase ties your complaint to a specific retailer and date

Step 3: Report Adverse Events

If the supplement caused a health problem, this is classified as an "adverse event" and has specific reporting requirements:

  • Serious adverse events (hospitalization, disability, life-threatening reactions, or death) must be reported by the manufacturer to the FDA within 15 days — but you should also report directly
  • Non-serious adverse events (nausea, headaches, rashes) should still be reported as they contribute to the FDA's overall safety picture

Include in your adverse event report:

  • Your age, sex, and weight
  • The specific product name, manufacturer, and lot number
  • The dosage you were taking
  • All other medications and supplements you were using
  • A detailed description of the adverse event
  • Any medical treatment received

Step 4: Escalate if Needed

If you believe the product is seriously dangerous and the FDA process feels slow:

Contact your state Attorney General

Most state AG offices have consumer protection divisions that can investigate. Some states have additional supplement safety regulations.

File a complaint with the FTC

If the product makes false health claims, the FTC handles deceptive advertising. Report at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

Send a certified letter to the manufacturer

Put the manufacturer on formal notice about the defect or contamination. This creates a paper trail and may prompt their own investigation.

Contact local media or consumer advocacy organizations

Public attention can accelerate regulatory action, especially for products that pose immediate health risks.

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Save the supplement product — do not discard it
  • [ ] Photograph the label including lot and batch numbers
  • [ ] Document all symptoms with dates and severity
  • [ ] File a MedWatch report at fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088
  • [ ] Get medical documentation if you sought treatment
  • [ ] File with your state AG if the product is seriously dangerous
  • [ ] Report false health claims to the FTC

Bottom Line

The FDA's ability to pull dangerous supplements off shelves depends on consumer reports. Your complaint is not just about your experience — it could protect thousands of other people from a contaminated or mislabeled product. File with MedWatch, keep your documentation, and escalate if the situation warrants it.

If navigating the FDA reporting process and making follow-up calls feels daunting, an AI assistant can file the complaint for you, track down the right agency contacts, and follow up until you get a response.

Lisa Wei

Lisa Wei

Content Strategist

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