Choosing the Best Fish Oil

Favorite Fish Oil Brands – Part 1

written by Vin Kutty

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best fish oil supplement

Fish Oil Brands That We Like & Recommend

Joan called last week with a problem.

Her husband, Mark, (no, he’s not the problem) is an OmegaVia customer and is very happy with the product. Encouraged by his results, Joan tried to swallow one of our pills. “I just can’t do it,” she complained. “I can’t swallow pills. Is there a liquid fish oil brand that you recommend?”

I told her to try my two favorite liquid fish oils:

I know a few people at Zone Labs and they’re driven by science, knowledge and quality, so I’m sure I steered Joan in the right direction.

Yes, we sell OmegaVia here, which we think is pretty dang special.

But that doesn’t mean other good fish oil brands don’t exist! Actually, there are a few that we really like.

What’s wrong with corner drug store fish oil?

For the most part, fish oil supplements sold in corner drug stores (and, yes, even health food stores) are useless. There are exceptions, but most are useless because:

  • Omega-3 content is too low
  • Lack of transparency of purity & potency
  • Unknown oil source and quality

You need Omega-3 (lots of it) to balance the effect of too much Omega-6 that comes from eating vegetable seed oils. The two Omegas (3 and 6) compete in your body for enzymes and placement into cells. As your Omega-6 consumption increases, your need for Omega-3 goes up as well.

It’s a vicious cycle because unlimited amounts of Omega-3 is not the answer to compensate for unlimited amounts of Omega-6 in the diet.

But given that the average American eats almost 20 times as much Omega-6 as he or she should, we need high-potency, ultra-concentrated grade fish oil to the rescue. And with drug store or mass market fish oils you’d have to pop a dozen a day!

Mass-market fish oils contain 30% Omega-3. That aint enough!

Some new products are 50% to 60% Omega-3. That’s certainly better, but it still aint enough, amigo.
Omega-3 Concentrate
Nordic Naturals makes some very good products that are about 50% Omega-3. I call these products ‘health-food grade’ or ‘concentrates.’ You will notice benefits with them. But there are much more potent and effective products available – see list in Part 2.

Why High Omega-3 Content Matters

Studies have shown that you can take the same amount of Omega-3 from 60% pure oil or 85% pure oil and you will significant improvement in absorption with lower potency oils. This is the main reason why I’m recommending the handful of products here – they are all at least 80% pure.*

* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

There is a reason why most retail fish oil are not this concentrated: cost.

A drum of 50% pure Omega-3 fish oil costs about 4 to 5 times more than a drum of 30% pure fish oil. And a drum of 85% ultra concentrated fish oil can cost 25 times that of the 30% material.

It takes a lot of work to get crude fish oil to over 80% purity.

Do you REALLY Know What You are Buying?
Transparency and Disclosure Are Important

When you buy a bottle of fish oil from Walmart or CVS, you hope it is fresh. You hope it contains, what it says it does. Both Walmart and CVS have strong quality requirements from their vendors, but the point is, you don’t have proof of quality and potency. You have to trust. You just have to believe what the label says.

A few years ago, Walgreens used to have a No-Chinese-Fish-Oil policy – I don’t know if that’s still in place. But Walmart did not have a No-China policy on fish oils.

Quality is where neutral, third-party testing agencies like IFOS help.

IFOS testing lays it all bare for you to review, compare and make an informed decision. You will know the exact milligram amount of EPA or DHA Omega-3. You will also know how many parts per billion of mercury or PCB are present. It’s not cheap for a brand to get its products tested at IFOS. And if it fails IFOS’ guidelines, the certificate of analysis may not be posted for public view.

International Fish Oil Standards Tested fish oil

There are dozens of IFOS tested fish oil brands – yeah, we’re one of them. Click here to check our IFOS results for OmegaVia and other quality fish oils. IFOS-tested brands are confident in their quality, potency and purity that they are essentially saying, ‘You deserve to know what you’re buying and we have nothing to hide.’

Not all the fish oil brands we recommend here are IFOS tested. But then again, IFOS testing is not the only criteria for selection. And also, IFOS testing won’t tell you if the oil came from China!

In part 2, we’ll review and compare some of our favorite fish oil brands.


* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

  1. What is the difference between Omegavia and my Nutrigold Triple Strength Omega-3 GOLD by which each 1,200 mg fish oil softgel contains 1,060 mg of Omega-3s consisting of
    750 EPA, 250 DHA, and 60 other EFAs? Thank you.

    • Hi Dave – These two product are similar, but OmegaVia has 1105 mg Omega-3 per label claim but over 1200 mg based on its IFOS test results. There is a big difference between the cost of the oil that goes into a product that is ‘80% Omega-3’ versus one that is 90% like OmegaVia.

      Also, OmegaVia is enteric coated. This prevents digestive discomfort and the exposure of Omega-3 to stomach acids, as enteric coated pills are released in the intestines instead of the stomach.

  2. Hi Jack – I’d suggest OmegaVia, but it is not cheap. Our sister company makes a very similar product that’s not sold on this website: http://www.amazon.com/Strength-InnovixLabs-Concentrated-Burp-Free-Capsules/dp/B00FM9KNSI/ I suggest you try that product instead. Aim for 3000 mg of Omega-3 per day. Also, cut back dramatically on soda, juice, alcohol, milk and anything with sugar or flour. It’s sugar and starch that’s causing most of your high triglycerides.

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