05-02-2024 2:43 PM
This is meant to initiate a constructive discussion, food for thoughts so to say, for people who ponder about the same thoughts:
I as many others, purchase Nurition Supplements on eBay on a regular base, due to eBays' fantastic search function (compared to platforms like Amazon)
One issue of course when buying Supplements (anywhere, no matter if online or IRL) is of course how to know if the contents of any Product are genuine and in the ammount stated on the label.
Note I am talking about substances humans ingest, hence it is a different matter to stuff people put on their hair, or give a pet etc (not dismissing pets health of course, just pointing out for "human consumption")
Trust is nice, basically DYOR, then "believe or not", but real verification a sold substances by a (trustworthy) 3rd party is as I see it the only option, as long as this information is SHARED and transparent.
Some examples, note that all of these types of Sellers make money:
Note that even with an existing Certificate you can see as a Buyer, you still need to ckeck with the Lab if it is a real, issued valid certificate, as such can easily photoshopped (less likely, still a posibility)
To play devils advocate, the more likely possibility, if a seller wants to cut product pricing is dilution; get a certificate once, then later sell whatever he wants (as nobody checks again anyway)
So again, Trust and DYOR about reputation and appearance of any given seller is a factor.
That's where eBay makes its recent great Move with the product(specific, not seller) reviews, as so far this was only something Amzon had, and was actually one useful thing to look at amazon which is search-wise totally useless and aggrivating (thumbs up eBay for offering such a great search capabilty)
Now recently I came across a nice feature on an eBay supplement listing called "Online medicines seller registry" which I never seen before - as a buyer of course appreciated, I can imagine this might be quite costly, and it is probably more for drugs etc, so not very aplicable for vitamins etc
(example of this actual seller on ebay: medicine-seller-register.mhra.gov.uk/search-registry/1108 )
The other example I want to add as food for though in context to above is the certificate shared by a Seller in a listing, again much appreciated, as many others do not share such, but again, this then makes you think "is this actually real". But, it is really great to see some sellers show a certificate (or link to one somehwere)
...so to conclude, in the end as a Buyer we somehow have to make the decision to trust a Seller at some point, or not. As we do in the pharmacy in a way as well (where we trust the regulatory body above, I think it is the MHRA in UK)
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PS: I am sure there are as usual people reading this thinking and potential already stretching their fingers to reply "If you want genuine then buy in your local pharmacy, why do you buy on eBay" ...please skip that comment for now, as 1) we are on eBay (and we all love it) and 2) Prices in pharmacies are simply not for everyones' wallet, double, triple to 5x, so if above people leave their contact after their comment I'm sure many of us will be happy to have them buy our stuff for parmacy prices and give them a warm hug 😉
10-02-2024 12:26 PM
Unfortunately a buyer cannot do that until they have the actual item in their hands.
11-02-2024 5:10 PM
You mean by paying for external testing?
That would be too expensive for a buyer on consumer priced supplements.
12-02-2024 10:37 AM
All a buyer can do is if they have serious doubts and feel the seller is misleading them is to speak to CAB who could get trading standards involved.
Of course a buyer has eBay protection to get their money back.
As I'm sure you are aware sellers can make any claim online and a buyer won't know until they receive the item.
buying items online to ingest is not advisable [and dangerous] unless from a recognised established seller.
12-02-2024 11:53 AM
If you need the supplements for a medical reason (as opposed to manufacturer advertising, celebrity promotion etc.) then you should ask your GP to prescribe them for you. Most likely you'll get a generic brand. If you're on low income then you probably won't have to pay for the prescription. Similarly, some people are entitled to Healthy Start vitamins.
09-02-2025 12:19 PM
I have the same issue with the cheap supplements on eBay. I have decided it simply isn't worth buying them. I buy branded (proper brands, not one made up by the seller) ones only.
I see a couple of the above replies mention that the buyer can only tell if a product is genuine when it arrives. Sadly this is only possible with recognisable branded goods. An unbranded/seller branded zip bag of vitamines/supplements may look nice but no one has any idea if they are genuine unless they send them to a lab.