Supplement Stack
Compatibility Checker
Find out which supplements work together, which need timing separation, and get a personalised daily schedule — including African herbals and botanicals.
Build Your Supplement Stack
Search or browse — add up to 8 supplements, then check compatibility and get your schedule
Analysing your supplement stack...
📅 Your Optimised Daily Supplement Schedule
Supplement Combination Questions Answered
Evidence-based guidance on the most commonly asked supplement stacking questions
Understanding Supplement Interactions
Supplement interactions are just as real as drug interactions, yet they receive far less attention. Some combinations dramatically enhance each other's benefits — vitamin D3 and K2 together are far more effective for bone health than either alone. Others cancel each other out — calcium and magnesium compete for the same intestinal transporter, making separate timing essential. A few combinations carry genuine safety concerns, particularly when supplements are combined with prescription medications.
Why Timing Matters as Much as Which Supplements You Take
Many supplement incompatibilities are not about what you take — they are about when you take it. Iron and calcium do not interact dangerously, but taking them simultaneously reduces iron absorption by up to 60%. Calcium and magnesium both absorb through the TRPM7 transporter — taking them together means neither absorbs optimally. The schedule optimiser in this tool addresses exactly this problem, separating competing nutrients while keeping synergistic pairs together.
Fat-Soluble Vitamins: The Rules Are Different
Vitamins A, D, E, and K are fat-soluble — they require dietary fat for absorption and accumulate in body fat rather than being excreted daily. They should always be taken with a fat-containing meal. They can also reach toxic levels with excessive supplementation. The most important pairing in this category is vitamin D3 with vitamin K2: D3 dramatically increases calcium absorption, and without K2 to activate the proteins that direct calcium to bone, that excess calcium can deposit in arteries instead.
African Herbals and Supplement Interactions
This checker includes documented interactions for West African and Nigerian traditional supplements including zobo (hibiscus), bitter kola, black seed (Nigella sativa), moringa, and fenugreek. Zobo contains significant tannins that reduce iron absorption — an important consideration for iron-deficient individuals. Moringa provides a natural source of non-haem iron plus vitamin C for enhanced absorption. Black seed has complementary anti-inflammatory properties when combined with turmeric. These African herbal interactions are not covered in any other free supplement checker.
Not Sure About Your Stack?
Our licensed pharmacist can review your full supplement and medication list and advise on interactions, timing, and what to prioritise.
