Best third-party-tested fish oil
We track products listed in NSF Certified for Sport and IFOS public registries. NSF covers potency and banned substances; IFOS publishes per-lot oxidation and purity data. We do not run the tests. Only products in an active public registry are listed here.
Evidence grade: well established in clinical research. This reflects the weight of current clinical literature; not medical advice.
Key Takeaways
- Third-party certification (NSF, USP, Informed Sport) means a public registry lists the product; we track those registries. We do not run the tests.
- Omega-3 (Fish Oil) has Grade A evidence for triglycerides: well established in clinical research.
- We found 23 certified Omega-3 (Fish Oil) products in public registries at time of review.
- Affiliate links appear only for products with an active certification listing. Grade and ranking cannot be purchased.
- Check the certification registry link on each product; listings can be removed when a cert lapses.
Only certified products
Third-party certified Omega-3 (Fish Oil) products
Every product below is listed in a public third-party certification registry. We observe the registry; we do not run the tests.
Expert stacks
What researchers and practitioners say
Each expert's stated dose and rationale, linked to their own words. Attribution only; no endorsement implied.
EPA reduces inflammatory cytokines that divert tryptophan away from serotonin synthesis; cites a double-blind study finding 1,000 mg/day EPA equivalent to 20 mg fluoxetine for depressive symptoms, with synergistic effect when combined; personally states: 'I personally take 1000 milligrams of EPA per day... I notice a pretty substantial positive effect'
www.hubermanlab.com ↗States this is a superior product; had independent toxicology analytics conducted to confirm absence of lead, arsenic, mercury, and other contaminants; presents as part of his documented personal supplement stack
peterattiamd.com ↗Emphasizes Omega-3 Index as the relevant biomarker; cites evidence that >= 8% Omega-3 Index is associated with approximately 5 years greater life expectancy vs <= 4%; frames mechanism as resolution of inflammation through specialized pro-resolving mediators (SPMs); recommends testing Omega-3 Index rather than assuming a fixed dose
www.foundmyfitness.com ↗Uses algae-sourced omega-3 to avoid ocean contaminants and fish; emphasizes brain health (DHA as structural brain fat), heart health (blood pressure, vascular function, cholesterol support), and joint/inflammatory function; lower dose vs Attia/Patrick consistent with systematic risk/benefit optimization approach
blueprint.bryanjohnson.com ↗Recommends the lower end of the dose range, citing AHA guidance (250-500 mg/day) and concern about dose-dependent atrial fibrillation risk at >1,500 mg/day in high-CV-risk populations; notes VITAL (840 mg/day) did not show an AF risk signal and explicitly avoids megadosing
drstanfield.com ↗Sources
- Fish oil supplements in New Zealand are highly oxidised and do not meet label content of n-3 PUFA (2015) observational
- Oxidation levels of North American over-the-counter n-3 (omega-3) supplements and the influence of supplement formulation and delivery form on evaluating oxidative safety (2015) observational
- Cardiovascular Risk Reduction with Icosapent Ethyl for Hypertriglyceridemia (2019) rct
- Marine n-3 Fatty Acids and Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer (2019) rct
- Effect of omega-3 fatty acids on cardiovascular outcomes: A systematic review and meta-analysis (2021) review
- Omega-3 Fatty Acid Dietary Supplements Consumed During Pregnancy and Lactation and Child Neurodevelopment: A Systematic Review (2021) review
- A Randomized Trial of Prenatal n-3 Fatty Acid Supplementation and Preterm Delivery (2019) rct
- Omega 3 fatty acid for the prevention of cognitive decline and dementia (2012) review
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