Do I actually need a multivitamin?
Maybe not — and that's the honest answer. If your diet is genuinely varied and you're well-nourished, a multivitamin adds little. Its real value is correcting the specific shortfalls common on an Indian, plant-leaning diet — vitamin B12, vitamin D3 and folate — and acting as a daily safety net at RDA. Think of it as insurance against the gaps, not a substitute for food. If you want certainty, test vitamin D and B12; if they're low, this formula is a sensible, well-dosed way to top them up.
Is the vitamin D3 really vegan?
Yes. The D3 is Vitashine™, derived from lichen — most D3 on the market is extracted from sheep's-wool lanolin, which isn't vegan. The K2 (MK-7) is MenaquinGold®, fermented from chickpeas, and the capsule is plant-based HPMC. The whole formula is 100% vegan, which is exactly why it suits plant-based men who struggle to get D3 and K2 from diet.
Why is there no iron — and is that right for men?
It's deliberate, and yes — it's the right default for most men. Adult men generally meet their iron needs from diet, and iron-overload is a genuine, often-silent risk in men because they have no monthly iron-loss pathway. A daily iron-containing multivitamin can push iron stores up over years. Keeping this formula iron-free avoids that. The exceptions — vegan men with low ferritin, endurance athletes, frequent blood donors, or men with diagnosed iron-deficiency anaemia — should use a targeted product such as Men's Iron, and only after a blood test confirms the need.
What makes it “whole food”?
The vitamins are delivered through plant and food sources rather than purely synthetic isolates: vitamin C via Amla, beta-carotene from Blakeslea trispora, and a B-complex blend from Tulsi, sunflower, papaya, lemon peel, Sesbania and Spirulina. Honest framing: whole-food sourcing makes the formula fully vegan and brings co-occurring plant compounds — it doesn't, by itself, make the vitamins clinically superior to standardised forms. The 100% RDA dosing is what delivers the benefit.
Should I take this or Men's Iron?
For most men, this iron-free multivitamin is the right daily choice — it covers the 13 vitamins without adding iron you probably don't need. Men's Iron is a targeted product for the specific situations where iron supplementation is justified (documented low ferritin, endurance athletes, frequent blood donors, diagnosed anaemia). They're alternatives, not a stack: don't add iron unless a blood test says you need it. If you genuinely need both broad vitamin cover and iron, separate them by timing and test your iron status first.
When and how should I take it?
Two capsules daily, post-lunch, with a glass of water. After-meal dosing helps the fat-soluble vitamins (A, D3, E, K2) absorb alongside dietary fat. Consistency day-to-day matters more than the exact time. Do not exceed the recommended dose.
Does it contain any allergens?
It contains soy — the vitamin E is derived from soya oilseed. It is free from dairy, sugar, nuts, gluten, artificial colours, fillers and preservatives. If you have a soy allergy, avoid this product.
I already take a separate D3 / K2 / B-complex — is that a problem?
It can be, if you don't account for it. This formula already supplies 100% RDA of D3, K2 and the full B-complex. If you stack a standalone product on top without summing the totals, you may exceed what you need — particularly for the fat-soluble vitamins. Add the daily amounts together and keep the total at or near RDA.
Why only 100% RDA and not a high-potency formula?
Because a daily multivitamin should meet your requirement, not megadose it. Excess water-soluble vitamins (B and C) are simply excreted — you pay for them and pass them out. Excess fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) can accumulate. 100% of the ICMR RDA is the evidence-aligned target for a maintenance multivitamin: enough to close gaps, not so much that it pushes any nutrient toward its upper limit.
Will it boost my energy?
Honestly — it removes a brake rather than adding a stimulant. Several B vitamins are cofactors in energy metabolism, so if you were short on them, correcting that can lift fatigue. But a multivitamin won't create energy in someone who's already well-nourished, and it contains no caffeine or stimulants. If you're persistently tired, it's worth testing vitamin D, B12 and — even in men — ferritin, rather than assuming a multivitamin alone will fix it.