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Malaysia Dietary Supplement Market: RM5.48 Billion and the Road to 2030 | MADSA

29 June 2026

A market built by clever consumers, held back by complex regulation — and where MADSA is fighting for change.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Malaysia’s dietary supplement market reached RM5.48 billion in 2025 (≈ USD 1.1bn) and is projected to hit RM6.5 billion by 2030.
  • The market grew at ~8% CAGR from 2020–2025, but year-on-year growth is slowing.
  • About 50% of Malaysians now take supplements regularly — up from 30% pre-COVID, but still behind Taiwan (~70%) and developed economies (70–80%).
  • Supplements are regulated like drugs, with registration taking 4–18 months — the industry’s single biggest pain point.
  • MADSA is campaigning for supplement tax relief, action on counterfeits, and lighter-touch regulation on the road to 2030.

Most Malaysians would be surprised to learn just how large their dietary supplement market has become. Ask a room full of industry professionals to guess its value and the answers scatter wildly — some imagine a modest niche, others wildly overshoot. The reality sits firmly in between, and the story behind that number tells us a great deal about where the industry is headed.

In a recent address, MADSA shared a clear-eyed view of the market: its true scale, the forces driving its growth, the regulatory headwinds that frustrate operators daily, and the road the industry must travel to reach its 2030 potential. Here are the key takeaways.

Malaysia Supplement Market Size 2025: RM5.48 Billion - Growing, But Slowing

Malaysia’s dietary supplement market was valued at RM5.48 billion in 2025 — roughly USD 1.1 billion at a 4.5 exchange rate. Widen the lens to total consumer health, which includes over-the-counter products for eye care, wound care and similar categories, and the figure climbs to RM8.7 billion.

BY THE NUMBERS

RM5.48bn  Market value, 2025  (≈ USD 1.1bn)

RM6.5bn  Projected value by 2030

~8%  CAGR, 2020–2025 (with year-on-year growth declining)

The growth trajectory carries a caution. The market is projected to reach RM6.5 billion by 2030, but that is a relatively modest jump in dollar terms — and year-on-year growth has been declining since 2020. The pandemic year itself saw the strongest surge, with growth hitting 12% as consumers reached for immunity-boosting products. Tellingly, that spike was driven by consumers educating themselves, not by industry marketing. Malaysian consumers are sophisticated enough to research and choose products on their own.

The Malaysian Consumer: Clever, Price-Driven, and Female

Around 50% of Malaysians now consume supplements regularly — up sharply from just 30% before COVID. Yet this still trails far behind comparable markets: roughly 70% in Taiwan, and 70–80% across developed economies such as Australia, the US, the UK and Europe. The gap is largely a function of income levels, and it represents significant headroom for growth.

Three consumer truths stand out:

  • It is a price-driven market. Promotions move product — and not only through discounts. Bundling is just as powerful a lever, and pharmacies run these offers regularly.
  • Women decide. For most supplement categories, marketing to men is largely wasted effort. Women drive the purchasing decisions in the household.
  • Pharmacists are trusted more than doctors. MADSA research confirms Malaysians prefer supplement advice from their pharmacist — a pattern echoed in US findings, where pharmacists rank among the most trusted professions.

The children’s segment is one of the strongest growth markets, reflecting how readily Malaysian parents spend on their children — particularly for products linked to memory and academic performance. At the other end of life, healthy aging is underserved, complicated by a structural challenge: with a retirement age of 60 and life expectancy around 80, many Malaysians face two decades of retirement without income to fund their health.

Top Categories and a Shifting Retail Landscape

The perennial bestsellers remain Vitamin C, multivitamins and omega-3, with vitamin D, zinc, probiotics and collagen all gaining ground — several boosted by the pandemic’s lasting focus on immunity. Growth is propelled by the COVID legacy, the children’s market, healthy aging, and the rise of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, heart disease and cancer.

Where Malaysians buy has changed dramatically. A decade ago, MLM and direct sales commanded around 55% of the market. Today that share has fallen to roughly 30%, while pharmacies and health stores together now hold more than 50%. E-commerce remains modest at about 7% — dominated by Shopee and Lazada — but it is growing fast, and it is the channel that worries members most, given the volume of unregistered product sold online.

Eight Trends Shaping the Next Five Years

  • Combination supplements — convenience drives demand, though Malaysian rules permit only extracts, not whole-herb formulations.
  • Healthy aging — Malaysia becomes an aging society by 2030 and an aged society by around 2050.
  • Mood, sleep, mental health and memory — with memory products especially resonant in the children’s market.
  • Probiotics — surging on new formats (sachets, nanoparticles) and clinical evidence linking gut health to brain and immune function.
  • Beauty and collagen — a proven growth driver, led by female consumers.
  • Influencers — TikTok in particular is generating remarkable sales for members who use it well.
  • AI — a double-edged force: helping companies design better products, while empowering consumers to self-select supplements from their own blood-test data.
  • Personalization — promising but unproven, and inherently more costly than mass production. Subscription models may be the practical path.

The Regulatory Reality: Treated Like Drugs

If you ask any operator about their biggest headache, the answer is regulation. In Malaysia, supplements are regulated like drugs — they must be registered as such, a process that can take anywhere from four to eighteen months and requires a free sale certificate from the country of origin. The pain points compound:

  • Modern claims — disease risk-reduction claims are now possible, but only with genuine clinical data, which demands real investment.
  • Advertising approval — every advertisement must clear the Malaysian Advertisements Board (MAB) before going live, often a three-month process, at a cost.
  • Tax discrimination — Sales and Service Tax applies to supplements but not to drugs, a distinction MADSA considers discriminatory.
  • HS code ambiguity — the absence of a dedicated code for supplements has left members facing back-dated duties running into millions of ringgit.
  • Illegal and counterfeit products — from unregistered online sellers to outright fakes using members’ brand names, leaving consumers unprotected.

There is a powerful counter-example to the value of evidence: one member with a probiotic product has completed sixteen clinical trials, enabling claims around post-colon-cancer-surgery recovery, commanding premium pricing and opening export markets in the Middle East. Investment in data pays.

What MADSA Is Doing About It

MADSA’s advocacy agenda is focused and practical:

  • Income tax relief — campaigning to add supplements to Malaysia’s RM2,000 annual lifestyle relief. Research suggests this could save the government an estimated RM25 million to RM140 million per year in hospitalization costs.
  • A war on fake products — members are convening to coordinate a proactive response and control the narrative ahead of incoming legislation.
  • Annual dialogue with the NPRA — working to shape regulation in favour of a healthy, growing industry.
  • Engagement with the MAB — making the advertising approval process easier for everyone.

The Road to 2030

Reaching the market’s full potential will rest on three priorities:

  • Investing in R&D — not only product innovation, but clinical trials that unlock credible claims and premium positioning.
  • Embracing digitization and AI — to guide product development and run smarter, better-targeted clinical research.
  • Growing MADSA’s voice — the association’s influence grows with its membership. A larger, more unified industry body speaks with greater authority to government and regulators alike.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the size of Malaysia’s dietary supplement market?

Malaysia’s dietary supplement market was valued at RM5.48 billion in 2025 (approximately USD 1.1 billion at a 4.5 exchange rate), and is projected to reach RM6.5 billion by 2030. Total consumer health, which includes over-the-counter products, stands at RM8.7 billion.

How fast is the Malaysian supplement market growing?

The market grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of about 8% between 2020 and 2025. Growth peaked at 12% during the 2020 pandemic year, but year-on-year growth has been gradually declining since.

What percentage of Malaysians take supplements?

Around 50% of Malaysians consume dietary supplements regularly, up from 30% before COVID. This still trails Taiwan (~70%) and developed economies such as Australia, the US and the UK (70–80%).

Are supplements regulated like drugs in Malaysia?

In Malaysia, dietary supplements must be registered like pharmaceutical drugs, requiring a full registration file and a free sale certificate from the country of origin. The process can take anywhere from four to eighteen months, making it the industry’s single biggest operational challenge.

Is it legal to buy supplements online in Malaysia?

Supplements must be registered before they can be sold in Malaysia. Unregistered products purchased from local and overseas online sellers are considered illegal under Malaysian law, and consumers who buy them have no legal protection if something goes wrong.

What are the top-selling supplements in Malaysia?

The perennial bestsellers are Vitamin C, multivitamins and omega-3, with vitamin D, zinc, probiotics and collagen all gaining ground — several boosted by the pandemic’s lasting focus on immunity.

Join the conversation — and the cause.

MADSA is stronger with every member. If you operate in Malaysia’s dietary supplement industry and want a seat at the table on regulation, advocacy and market intelligence, we invite you to get in touch. Visit madsa.org.my to learn more — no pressure, just a conversation.

Malaysian Dietary Supplement Association

Tower Level 3, Axis, 2, Jalan 51a/223, Seksyen 51a, 46100 Petaling Jaya, Selangor.

  +6017-885-9156

  info@madsa.org.my


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