
Choosing how your supplements get made is one of the highest-leverage decisions a brand owner will ever face — and the contract manufacturing vs. private label question is where that decision starts. Pick the wrong model and you can lose control of your formula, your margins, and the one thing that makes your brand worth buying. Pick the right one and you build a product the market can’t copy off a catalog.
This guide breaks down both models for founders who intend to own what they sell.
Private label means buying a manufacturer’s existing, pre-formulated product and selling it under your own label. The formula already exists; you are renting access to it. Contract manufacturing (also called custom or full-service manufacturing) means a manufacturer builds a product to your specification — your formula, your dose, your delivery format — and the finished intellectual property is yours.
Both get a product on your shelf. Only one gives you something a competitor can’t order from the same catalog next week.
A supplement brand’s value sits in two places: the equity in its name and the defensibility of its product. Private label gives you the first and almost none of the second. When your formula is a stock SKU that fifty other labels also sell, you compete on price, packaging, and ad spend — a race that favors whoever can lose money longest.
The category is big enough that this matters. The global nutraceutical contract manufacturing market is projected to grow from roughly $215 billion in 2026 to $420 billion by 2034. In a market that large and that crowded, a differentiated formula is not a luxury — it is the moat.
Private label is not a mistake. For testing a market, launching fast, or filling a gap in a line, it can be the right call. Just go in clear-eyed about the trade.
Contract manufacturing asks more of you up front — a real formulation brief, a development cycle, stability testing — and returns a product that is yours to defend, improve, and protect. It is why more than 70% of new supplement brands now outsource production, with roughly 65% choosing turnkey partners that handle formulation, packaging, and compliance under one roof.
| Factor | Private Label | Contract Manufacturing |
|---|---|---|
| Formula ownership | Manufacturer’s | Yours |
| Exclusivity | None | Full |
| Speed to launch | Fastest | Moderate (development cycle) |
| Upfront cost | Low | Higher |
| Differentiation | Limited to label & price | Formula, dose, format |
| Margin durability | Erodes as SKU spreads | Protected by exclusivity |
| Best for | Market tests, line fillers | Brands building a moat |
Here is the detail that costs brands the most: even in custom manufacturing, ownership is not automatic. Without a written intellectual-property assignment, relying on a manufacturer’s in-house R&D can mean the factory legally owns the final formulation — the exact thing you thought you were paying to own.
Before development starts, get IP assignment in writing, and pair it with a quality agreement that spells out specifications, testing, and who is responsible when something is out of spec. A serious contract manufacturer will welcome both documents. A private-label catalog can’t offer either.
Use a simple test. Lean private label when:
Choose contract manufacturing when:
Up front, yes — private label has lower minimums and no formulation cost. Over the life of a brand, contract manufacturing often wins, because exclusive formulas protect the margins that private-label SKUs steadily erode.
Yes, and many brands do. Use private label to validate demand, then move to a custom formula once you know the product has a market. Plan the transition early so you don’t lose momentum during development.
You should — but only if it is in writing. Always secure an intellectual-property assignment before development begins, or the manufacturer may retain rights to the formulation they helped create.
Building a brand you intend to own? UniWell Labs partners with brand owners on custom, full-service nutraceutical manufacturing — your formula, your IP, your standard. Talk to our team about what you’re building.