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PCOS Supplements: What the Research Actually Supports

PCOS supplements range from well-studied (inositol, vitamin D, omega-3) to overhyped. Here's what the research supports, dosing, and what to skip.

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PCOS Supplements: Evidence-Based Guide to What Works
Last updated on May 19, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on May 19, 2026.

PCOS supplements are a massive market — partly because conventional treatment is limited (mostly hormonal contraception, metformin, anti-androgens) and partly because the syndrome is complex enough that many women want additional tools. The evidence base ranges from genuinely strong (inositol) to plausible (vitamin D, omega-3, NAC) to weak (most “PCOS support” blends).

PCOS Supplements: Evidence-Based Guide to What Works

This guide covers the supplements with the most evidence, the right doses, what to skip, and how supplements fit into the broader PCOS management picture.

Quick answer — the evidence tiers

A 2023 systematic scoping review of nutraceutical and micronutrient supplementation for PCOS identified 41 different supplements studied across 344 articles.1 The most-studied with the strongest evidence:

SupplementEvidence qualityPrimary benefit
Inositol (myo + d-chiro)StrongInsulin sensitivity, ovulation
Vitamin DModerate (if deficient)Insulin sensitivity, mood
Omega-3 (EPA + DHA)ModerateInflammation, lipid profile
N-acetylcysteine (NAC)ModerateInsulin sensitivity, ovulation
MagnesiumModerateInsulin sensitivity, mood
ChromiumModerateGlucose metabolism
BerberineModerateGlucose, lipids (metformin-like)
Spearmint teaLimited but specificAndrogen reduction
CarnitineLimitedInsulin sensitivity
ResveratrolLimitedAndrogens, inflammation

Practical baseline stack for PCOS:

Beyond this, add specific supplements for specific symptoms.

The strongest evidence: inositol

Inositol — particularly the myo-inositol + d-chiro-inositol combination in a 40:1 ratio — has the most consistent randomized trial evidence in PCOS. It improves:

A 2021 RCT compared myo-inositol + d-chiro-inositol combination (550 + 150 mg, 3.6:1 ratio) versus combined oral contraceptive in young women with PCOS. The inositol combination produced spontaneous menses in 84.85% of women, with sustained cycles in 85.71% three months after stopping treatment — comparable to OCs but with more sustained effects post-treatment.2

Inositol has so much PCOS-specific evidence that it gets its own dedicated guide: inositol for PCOS. For general inositol use beyond PCOS, see inositol benefits and dosage.

Dose: 4 g myo-inositol + 100 mg d-chiro-inositol daily, split into 2 doses (40:1 ratio). Allow 3 months for clear effects.

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Vitamin D

Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent in women with PCOS — studies estimate 67–85% have insufficient levels. Correction has been associated with improvements in insulin sensitivity, mood, and reproductive outcomes.

The evidence:

Dose:

Take with a meal containing fat for better absorption. Pair with magnesium and vitamin K2 if you want to be optimal.

Get tested first. Empirical supplementation without testing is reasonable at lower doses (1,000 IU) but if you’re going higher, knowing your baseline matters.

Omega-3 fatty acids (EPA + DHA)

Omega-3 supplementation in PCOS has moderate evidence for:

Dose for PCOS:

For form selection and sources: omega-3 supplement guide, high omega-3 foods, and daily omega-3 intake.

Suggested read: Berberine Benefits: 7 Effects Backed by Research

N-acetylcysteine (NAC)

NAC has surprisingly good evidence in PCOS:

Dose: 600 mg × 3 daily (1,800 mg/day total) is the most commonly studied protocol. Allow 8–12 weeks for visible effects.

Side effects: Mild GI upset, sometimes sulfur-y smell. Don’t take if asthmatic without doctor input.

NAC is increasingly being studied as an alternative or adjunct to metformin. If metformin doesn’t agree with you, NAC is a reasonable conversation with your doctor.

Magnesium

Magnesium has multiple benefits for PCOS:

Dose: 200–400 mg of elemental magnesium daily, ideally glycinate or citrate forms. Take in the evening. Skip magnesium oxide (poor absorption). For form selection: types of magnesium and magnesium glycinate.

For magnesium overlap with menstrual cycle symptoms: magnesium for PMS.

Chromium

Chromium picolinate has been studied for glucose regulation in PCOS with moderate evidence:

Dose: 200–400 mcg daily. Generally well tolerated.

Effects are modest. Not a foundational supplement but a reasonable addition for women whose insulin resistance isn’t responding to other interventions.

Suggested read: Endometriosis Natural Treatment: Evidence-Based Approaches

Berberine

Berberine is a plant alkaloid (from goldenseal and other plants) with metformin-like effects:

A 2012 study found berberine comparable to metformin for some PCOS metabolic markers, though with somewhat different side effect profile.

Dose: 500 mg 2–3 times daily with meals. Allow 8–12 weeks for visible effects.

Side effects: GI upset is the main concern. Start at lower dose and titrate up.

Caveats:

Berberine isn’t quite a “casual” supplement — its effects are pharmaceutical-level and so are the interactions.

Spearmint tea

Spearmint has specific anti-androgen evidence in PCOS. A 2010 randomized controlled trial of spearmint herbal tea twice daily for 30 days in 42 women with PCOS-related hirsutism showed:

Objective hirsutism scores (Ferriman-Gallwey) didn’t change in 30 days, but that’s likely because hair follicle cycles take longer than 30 days to respond.3

Dose: 2 cups of spearmint herbal tea daily, made with 1 tablespoon dried spearmint leaves per cup, steeped 5–10 minutes.

See spearmint tea for PCOS for the deeper dive. For general use: health benefits of spearmint.

Other supplements with some evidence

Carnitine

Resveratrol

CoQ10

Folic acid / folate

Cinnamon

What to skip (mostly)

A few things commonly recommended for PCOS that don’t have strong evidence:

Suggested read: Natural PMS Remedies: What the Evidence Actually Shows

How to actually start

If you’re new to PCOS supplementation, a sensible 3-month trial:

Month 1:

Month 2:

Month 3:

After 3 months you should have a clearer picture of what’s helping you specifically. PCOS is heterogeneous — what works varies between women.

Realistic expectations

Supplements can meaningfully help PCOS, but:

For the dietary side: PCOS diet. For the cause picture: what causes PCOS. For broader weight management: how to lose weight with PCOS.

Bottom line

The PCOS supplements with the strongest evidence are inositol (especially the 40:1 myo-to-d-chiro combination), vitamin D (if deficient), omega-3 fatty acids, NAC, and magnesium. Berberine has metformin-like effects and is worth considering for insulin resistance not responding to other interventions. Spearmint tea has specific anti-androgen evidence. Skip the multi-ingredient “PCOS support” blends — individual evidence-based supplements at studied doses are a better use of money. Give any supplement 3 months of consistent use before judging. Supplements complement diet, exercise, and medical care; they don’t replace them.


  1. Scannell N, Mantzioris E, Rao V, et al. Type and Frequency in Use of Nutraceutical and Micronutrient Supplementation for the Management of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: A Systematic Scoping Review. Biomedicines. 2023;11(12):3349. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

  2. Kachhawa G, Senthil Kumar KV, Kulshrestha V, et al. Efficacy of myo-inositol and d-chiro-inositol combination on menstrual cycle regulation and improving insulin resistance in young women with polycystic ovary syndrome: A randomized open-label study. International Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics. 2021;158(2):278-284. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

  3. Grant P. Spearmint herbal tea has significant anti-androgen effects in polycystic ovarian syndrome. A randomized controlled trial. Phytotherapy Research. 2010;24(2):186-8. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

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