Bulk Complete Multivitamin Review — Is It Worth It? supplement
7/10

Bulk

Bulk Complete Multivitamin Review — Is It Worth It?

7/10
£9.99
This review may contain affiliate links. See our disclosure.

Bulk Complete Multivitamin is the lowest-priced comprehensive multivitamin in this comparison, and for a category where the active compounds are identical across brands, the budget choice is harder to argue against than most supplement categories.

What Is It?

Complete Multivitamin is Bulk's everyday multivitamin and mineral complex, designed to cover nutritional bases for active adults. Bulk's approach to this category is identical to their supplement philosophy generally: good ingredients, transparent labelling, low margin, low price.

Ingredients & Nutrition

bulk complete multivitamin

Per 2-tablet serving: vitamin D3 (1000 IU), vitamin C (180mg), full B vitamin complex, zinc (10mg), magnesium (75mg), iron (7mg), selenium (55mcg), chromium (50mcg), manganese, molybdenum, and iodine. No calories.

Notably, Bulk includes the D3 form (cholecalciferol) rather than cheaper D2, despite the budget price point. The magnesium at 75mg is slightly higher than Alpha Men's 50mg, though still well below optimal supplementation doses. The selenium and iodine inclusions are thoughtful additions that are often missing from basic multivitamins — both relevant for thyroid function and overall metabolic health.

Taste & Mixability

Tablets — standard format. Take 2 with food. No functional taste difference from any other multivitamin tablet. Bulk's tablet quality is consistent and the coating prevents the eggy smell common with some cheaper vitamin products.

Effectiveness

The formula comprehensively covers common micronutrient gaps for active UK adults. The vitamin D3 at 1000 IU is the most important inclusion for the UK market. The full B vitamin complex supports energy metabolism and nervous system function, which are genuinely relevant during periods of heavy training. Selenium and iodine add functional value for thyroid and metabolic health.

Value for Money

At £9.99 for 60 tablets (30 servings at 2 tablets), you're paying approximately £0.33 per serving — the cheapest in this comparison. The formula is competitive with Alpha Men at a lower price, making it difficult to justify the premium unless the additional compounds in Alpha Men (CoQ10, lycopene) are specifically desired.

Pros

    Cons

      Verdict

      Bulk Complete Multivitamin delivers comprehensive micronutrient coverage at the lowest price in this comparison. For the vast majority of gym-goers, it does everything a multivitamin needs to do — no CoQ10 or lycopene won't change your training outcomes. This is the rational budget choice in a category where active compound costs are similar across all brands.

      Rating: 7/10

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