About VitaminsForMen.com
VitaminsForMen.com is an independent editorial publication focused on men’s health supplementation, hormone health, and emerging wellness therapies. It is operated by the VFM Research Desk — a team of researchers and writers with no affiliation to any supplement brand, pharmaceutical company, or healthcare provider.
This domain is a new editorial operation. It has no affiliation with any prior entity or business that may have previously used this domain name. We are not a medical practice. We do not sell supplements directly. We are a content and research publication.
What We Actually Do
We research and write about men’s health supplements, telehealth platforms, and therapeutic approaches across five core areas: testosterone and hormone health, prostate health, sexual health and male enhancement, peptides, and foundational vitamins and minerals.
For every product we cover, we pull the official product page, read the supplement facts panel, check the pricing, verify the refund policy, and look at the underlying ingredient research. We document what we verified and when. We note when claims in marketing copy don’t match what’s on the label. We flag when evidence for an ingredient is preliminary, mixed, or absent.
We don’t write articles to support a predetermined conclusion. If a product’s formula is underdosed, we say so. If the refund policy has conditions that matter to buyers, we include them. If the evidence for a category of supplements is generally weak, we say that up front rather than burying it.
Who We Write For
Men who want accurate information before spending money or making health decisions. Men who are tired of reading roundups that all recommend the same affiliate-optimized products in the same order. Men who want to know what the research actually shows — not a marketing summary of it.
Most of our readers are between 35 and 65, dealing with the real physiological changes that come with that life stage: gradual testosterone decline, changing prostate function, lower energy, questions about what supplements are actually worth taking and which are a waste of money.
Our Editorial Standards
Every factual claim on this site must be traceable to a verified source — a peer-reviewed study, an official product page, an FDA document, or a comparable authoritative reference. When we can’t verify a claim, we say so explicitly rather than repeating it as fact.
We apply consistent DSHEA-compliant framing to all supplement content: supplements support healthy physiological function — they are not treatments, cures, or diagnostic tools for any medical condition. When a category of supplements has limited clinical evidence in healthy adults, we state that. When prescription-level approaches (TRT, GLP-1, peptide therapy) are relevant, we explain what they are, how they’re accessed, and why they differ from over-the-counter options.
For peptide content specifically: the regulatory environment is evolving rapidly. We note the FDA approval status of every peptide we cover and link to current regulatory guidance. We do not provide sourcing guidance for unregulated products.
Affiliate Relationships
VitaminsForMen.com earns affiliate commissions from some of the products and services we cover. If you purchase through a link on this site, we may receive a commission at no additional cost to you. This revenue supports the editorial operation.
Affiliate relationships do not determine what we write or how we evaluate products. Products we cover negatively may have affiliate programs. Products we cover positively may not. Our methodology is explained in full on our How We Review page.
Medical Disclaimer
VitaminsForMen.com is an editorial publication, not a medical practice. Nothing on this site constitutes medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. The VFM Research Desk does not include licensed physicians, registered dietitians, pharmacists, or other licensed healthcare providers in an advisory or review capacity at this time.
Before starting any supplement, hormone support program, or therapeutic approach — particularly if you have an existing medical condition or take prescription medications — consult a qualified healthcare provider. If you are experiencing symptoms that may indicate a hormonal or physiological condition, seek professional evaluation rather than self-treating with supplements.
Dietary supplements discussed on this site have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.