Supplement Packaging
Supplement packaging: bottles, cartons and labels.
A supplement sells on the carton and the label together. We size the box to the bottle, print the label to wrap clean, and leave room for the facts panel.
- Carton sized to your bottle
- Wrap-around bottle labels
- Supplement facts and compliance space
- Tamper-evident options
Tamper-evidence and serialization can be built in.
“The valve bags keep our roast fresh and the print quality is better than bags we paid twice as much for. Reorders take one email.”
“Low minimums were the whole reason we tried them. 250 pouches to test a flavor, then 5,000 when it took off — same bag, same print, no drama.”
The carton and label are one design job
A supplement bottle almost never appears alone: the shrink of a shelf means the carton does the selling and the label does the compliance, and both have to carry the same design language or the product looks off-brand at the pharmacy counter. We build the pair together, sized so the bottle sits snug in the carton, with the label templated to wrap the curve without distorting the type.
Splitting the job across two suppliers is where most supplement packaging goes wrong; a 2 mm mismatch between label height and carton window is invisible in a proof and glaring on a shelf.
Compliance is layout, not decoration
The supplement facts panel, ingredient list, allergen lines, batch code and expiry all have required positions and minimum type sizes. We hold those zones in the template from the first draft, so the design never has to be retrofitted around a panel that would not fit. Tamper-evident features, a sealed carton flap, a shrink band, a breakable label perforation, can be built in, and serialization space is reserved when your market requires unit-level codes.
Cartons run on pharma-grade board with high-opacity white inside, so nothing shows through under pharmacy lighting.
Formats across a product line
Bottles, pouches for powders, and blister cartons each have their own build; our dietary supplements packaging page covers the pouch end, and pharmaceutical boxes covers stricter regulated work. Lines look strongest when every SKU shares one grid: same panel positions, same type scale, colors rotating by product. We template that grid once and every new SKU drops into it.
Can you print small first runs?
Yes. Digital cartons and labels run from a few hundred units, which suits a brand validating its first two SKUs before committing to volume.





