What I can recommend (and what I can’t)
I can’t responsibly name a single “best” low-sodium supplement brand without knowing what product type you mean (electrolytes, magnesium, protein powder, vitamins, capsules, etc.) and your dietary goal (e.g., “as low as possible,” “under 50 mg per serving,” or “no added sodium”). Brands vary a lot by ingredient form and serving size.
How to choose a genuinely low-sodium supplement brand
Look for labels that clearly state sodium content per serving (not just “no salt” on the front). In practice, the safest way to compare brands is to check:
- “Sodium” in mg per serving on the Supplement Facts (or Nutrition Facts).
- Whether it contains salt/sodium salts (common ones include sodium bicarbonate, sodium chloride, sodium phosphate, and “branded electrolyte” blends that add sodium).
- Serving size. Some “low sodium” claims still end up high once you take the full suggested dose.
If you tell me the supplement type and your target sodium limit per serving, I can suggest what to look for and help you filter options.
Common places sodium sneaks into supplements
These product types are more likely to contain meaningful sodium than plain vitamins/minerals:
- Electrolyte powders and “sports” hydration drinks
- Effervescent tablets (often use sodium bicarbonate)
- Pre-workouts with sodium-based ingredients
- Some protein powders or meal replacements (depending on flavoring and additives)
- Certain magnesium products (some forms use sodium-containing salts)
If you want, I’ll recommend specific brands—send these details
Reply with:
1) What supplement you want (electrolytes, magnesium, vitamin D, multivitamin, protein, etc.)
2) Any medical condition or why you need low sodium (hypertension, heart failure, kidney disease, etc.)
3) Your target: under how many mg sodium per serving (or per day)
4) Preferred format (capsule, powder, liquid, tablet) and taste preferences (if applicable)
Then I can narrow it to low-sodium brands that match your requirements.
Sources
No sources were used because you asked for a specific recommended brand, and the provided information doesn’t include product details to verify sodium content.