A daily multivitamin earns a place among foundational supplements as nutritional insurance when diet is inconsistent — not as a cure-all. We compared the multivitamins we have reviewed on our six-criteria methodology. Below are our four picks of the best multivitamins, ranked by overall score.
| Rank | Product | Score | Best For | Review |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Thorne Basic Nutrients 2/Day | 9.0 | Best overall | Read Review |
| #2 | Ritual Essential for Women 18+ | 8.5 | Best for transparency | Read Review |
| #3 | Garden of Life Vitamin Code | 8.4 | Best whole-food | Read Review |
| #4 | Nature Made Multivitamin Gummies | 7.8 | Best gummy | Read Review |
Thorne Basic Nutrients 2/Day
Thorne pairs comprehensive coverage in well-absorbed forms (methylated folate and B12, chelated minerals) with NSF Certified for Sport status — a rare combination of formulation quality and third-party testing in the multivitamin category.
Ritual Essential for Women 18+
Ritual takes a transparency-first approach: a vegan, delayed-release formula with methylated nutrients and disclosed ingredient sourcing. It deliberately fills common gaps rather than mega-dosing everything — a strength for some, a limitation for others.
Garden of Life Vitamin Code
Garden of Life delivers nutrients in a RAW, food-based format with added probiotics and enzymes, Non-GMO Project Verified. It appeals to those who prefer food-derived nutrients, with the trade-off of less standardized amounts.
Nature Made Multivitamin Gummies
For people who will not take a pill, Nature Made’s gummies are a palatable way to stay consistent. The trade-off is added sugar and a more limited nutrient profile (often no iron) than tablet multis.
How We Chose the Best Multivitamins
Each product was evaluated on ingredient quality, dosage transparency, safety, third-party testing, value, and overall fit. The most useful multis use well-absorbed nutrient forms, are transparent about amounts, and avoid both mega-dosing and proprietary blends. Certification (NSF, USP) and honest labeling separate the field more than marketing claims.
Who Should Be Careful?
Multivitamins can overlap with other supplements you take, leading to accidental stacking of nutrients like vitamin D, zinc, iron, and B-vitamins. Check your total daily intake across products, and if you suspect a specific deficiency, confirm it with bloodwork and a clinician rather than masking it with broad supplementation. This page is educational, not medical advice.
Final Verdict
Thorne Basic Nutrients leads at 9.0/10 for comprehensive, well-formed coverage with sport certification. Ritual (transparency), Garden of Life (whole-food), and Nature Made gummies (adherence) each suit different priorities. The best multivitamin is the one matched to your diet and the one you will actually take — read the broader multivitamin evidence overview for who actually needs one.
What is the best multivitamin?
By our six-criteria method, Thorne Basic Nutrients (9.0/10) leads for comprehensive coverage in well-absorbed forms with NSF Certified for Sport status, followed by Ritual (8.5), Garden of Life Vitamin Code (8.4), and Nature Made gummies (7.8). The best choice depends on your diet and preferences.
Do I actually need a multivitamin?
Not everyone does. Multivitamins are most useful when diet is inconsistent or restricted; well-nourished people with varied diets may see limited benefit. Confirm specific deficiencies with bloodwork rather than assuming a multivitamin covers them.
Are gummy multivitamins as good as tablets?
Generally they offer fewer nutrients and add sugar, so a well-formulated tablet usually covers more. But the best multivitamin is the one you take consistently — for pill-averse users, a gummy can be the practical choice.
Can I take a multivitamin with other supplements?
Yes, but watch for overlap. Multivitamins, mineral blends, and single-nutrient products often contain the same nutrients, which can stack to higher-than-needed doses. Total your daily intake of vitamin D, zinc, iron, and B-vitamins across all products.
Sources
- NIH Office of Dietary Supplements — Multivitamin/mineral Supplements fact sheet.
- Examine.com — Multivitamins reference page.

