Dietary Supplement Listing Bill Returns to U.S. Senate
By Nutranexa News |
A CRN-backed U.S. Senate proposal would create a federal dietary supplement registry, keeping market attention on listing, traceability, and product-file readiness.
What Was Reintroduced
The Council for Responsible Nutrition said on January 15, 2026 that the Dietary Supplement Listing Act of 2026 had been reintroduced in the U.S. Senate.
CRN described the proposal as part of a long-running effort to establish a federal dietary supplement registry and modernize marketplace oversight.
Why Documentation Matters
A registry model would increase pressure on brand owners and their suppliers to keep ingredient identity, manufacturer information, and product records organized in a form that can be listed and updated efficiently.
That matters for PS and phospholipid buyers because traceability gaps often show up first in source documentation, specification history, and manufacturer naming consistency.
Buyer Takeaway
Even before any bill becomes law, buyers can use the proposal as a checklist prompt: confirm exact ingredient naming, plant and packer details, and the completeness of each document pack tied to a finished SKU.
Suppliers that can support cleaner listing-style records are likely to create fewer downstream compliance delays.
Fontes
Este relatório resume as informações públicas citadas. Produtos e organizações de terceiros não endossam Nutranexa.