Apple Cider Vinegar
INCI: Apple Cider Vinegar (powdered)
Apple Cider Vinegar (ACV) is a fermented food product made from apple juice, containing acetic acid as its principal characterised active. In gummy formats it is one of the most commercially significant 'functional food' SKU categories globally, typically positioned within weight & metabolism or daily-wellness ranges. ACV itself has no EU-authorised health claim under Reg. 432/2012; substantiated claim wording is derived from co-formulated nutrients such as Chromium or B-vitamins.
- Weight & metabolism
- Daily wellness
- Functional foods
At a glance
- Definition
- Apple Cider Vinegar (ACV) is a fermented food product made from apple juice, containing acetic acid as its principal characterised active. In gummy formats it is one of the most commercially significant 'functional food' SKU categories globally, typically positioned within weight & metabolism or daily-wellness ranges. ACV itself has no EU-authorised health claim under Reg. 432/2012; substantiated claim wording is derived from co-formulated nutrients such as Chromium or B-vitamins.
- Common positionings
- Weight management / lifestyle metabolism
- Daily wellness
- Beauty / detox-positioned
- Functional foods
- Energy support (when paired with B-vitamins)
- Format suitability
- Reviewed for gummies and sachets — confirmed per project.
Where this ingredient fits in the DAT Supply catalogue
Every format chip links through to its manufacturing hub and to the private-label catalogue for that format. The category chip routes to the matching vertical hub on the categories index.
- Digestive & gut
- Browse all ingredients
What it is
Apple Cider Vinegar is one of the oldest fermented foods in human culinary tradition — produced by fermenting apple juice first to cider (ethanol) and then by acetic-acid bacteria to vinegar. Its characterised active constituent is acetic acid, typically present at 5–6% in liquid commercial ACV and concentrated proportionately in spray-dried powdered forms used for supplements.
For private-label brands, ACV has become one of the largest gummy SKU categories globally over the past five years — driven by consumer interest in weight management, metabolism, and 'natural' functional foods. The strategic challenge is EU regulatory framing: ACV itself has no authorised health claim under Reg. 432/2012, so all substantiated claim wording in EU pack copy must derive from co-formulated nutrients (Chromium, B-vitamins, Folate) rather than from ACV itself. DAT's standard approach is to position ACV gummies within a 'metabolism stack' where the substantiated claim hook is Chromium or B-vitamins, with ACV as the consumer-recognised lead ingredient.
Origin and history
Vinegar production from fermented fruit and grain is among the oldest food-preservation techniques in human history, with archaeological evidence dating to at least 5000 BCE in Babylonia. Apple Cider Vinegar — vinegar made specifically from fermented apple juice — has been a traditional food in apple-growing regions of Europe and North America for centuries, used in cooking, food preservation, and traditional folk wellness practices.
The contemporary supplement category for ACV emerged through the 2000s and accelerated through the 2010s, with the gummy format arriving in the late 2010s as a more palatable alternative to liquid ACV consumption. Powdered ACV — produced by spray-drying liquid ACV onto a carrier such as maltodextrin — enabled the gummy and capsule formats. ACV with 'the mother' (a cellulose-and-bacterial-culture sediment from incomplete filtration) is a premium positioning for liquid ACV but is less common in gummies due to particulate-handling complexity at manufacturing scale.
Scientific overview
The characterised active constituent of Apple Cider Vinegar is acetic acid, present at approximately 5–6% in liquid ACV. Small- scale human studies have explored acetic acid's effects on post-prandial glycaemic response, satiety, and gastric emptying, with mixed-magnitude results that have not been considered sufficient by EFSA to substantiate any specific health claim under Reg. 432/2012.
ACV also contains trace amounts of polyphenols, organic acids (malic, citric, lactic), and — in unfiltered preparations — a sediment of cellulose and bacteria known as 'the mother'. None of these constituents has an authorised EU health claim. The commercial gummy category for ACV has grown despite this regulatory absence because consumer recognition of the ingredient is strong and positioning around 'weight & metabolism' is achieved through co-formulated nutrients with substantiated claims rather than through ACV itself.
For gummy formulation, ACV powder is operationally straightforward. The spray-dried form is heat-stable, soluble in the sugar matrix, and the tart-and-tangy flavour is a feature rather than a defect — consumers expect it. Typical dose is 500 mg ACV powder per gummy (roughly equivalent to half a teaspoon of liquid ACV), with most commercial ranges running at one or two gummies per daily serving.
Why brands use Apple Cider Vinegar
Apple Cider Vinegar is one of the most familiar and commercially understood functional-food ingredients across EU and US markets, and the gummy format has unlocked consumer access for a category that liquid-ACV consumers found palatability-limiting. Weight-and- metabolism ranges typically pair 500 mg ACV powder with 30–80 µg Chromium (carrying the authorised blood-glucose claim) and a selection of B-vitamins (carrying the authorised energy-metabolism claims). Daily-wellness ranges often include lower-dose ACV (250 mg) alongside a broader functional profile.
From a formulation standpoint, ACV gummies are one of the simpler manufacturing propositions. The powdered raw material is heat- stable, soluble, and the tart flavour pairs well with apple, lemon, or berry flavour systems. Pectin-base gummies handle the acidity well; gelatin-base requires more careful pH management. Typical SKUs run at 500–1,000 mg ACV per serving.
For pack-copy, brand owners should avoid 'aids weight loss', 'burns fat', 'speeds metabolism', or 'detoxifies' as definitive claims in EU consumer-facing copy. 'Weight & metabolism' is acceptable as a positioning category; substantiated claim wording derives from co-formulated Chromium or B-vitamins. The acceptable US positioning under DSHEA is broader (structure-function claims) and several common ACV-gummy claims — 'supports healthy metabolism', 'supports digestion' — fall within US permissible structure- function language. DAT reviews final pack copy per project against the authorised list and target-market guidance before production.
Formats this ingredient is reviewed for
DAT Supply covers gummy, capsule, softgel, tablet, powder, oral strip, liquid drop, shot, jelly and pet formats. The list below reflects every format this ingredient is reviewed for — chips link through to the manufacturing hub for each format. Final compatibility, dose and matrix are confirmed per project.
Formulation notes
Verified formulation reference across the formats this ingredient is reviewed for — the Supported formats section lists every product format this active is approved for, and the per-format Considerations section below covers matrix-specific guidance. Final formulation, dose and on-pack copy are confirmed per project.
- Gummy fit
- `Good` (In Powdered / Dehydrated Form)
- Soluble in matrix
- Yes
- Cost tier
- Low
Forms available
- Apple Cider Vinegar powder (typically 6–10% acetic acid, spray-dried on maltodextrin)
- Apple Cider Vinegar with 'the mother' (less common in gummy due to particulate-handling complexity)
Dosage reference
Commercial ACV gummies typically position at 500 mg of ACV powder per piece — equivalent to approximately 50 mg acetic acid (the active constituent). Liquid-ACV consumer references suggest 1–2 tablespoons per day (≈15–30 ml), but no minimum effective dose is established under the EU regulatory framework. Daily-positioned gummy ranges run at 500–1,000 mg ACV powder per serving (one or two gummies).
Taste & sensory
Apple Cider Vinegar powder retains the characteristic tart, acidic flavour of liquid ACV. At 500 mg per gummy the tartness is consumer-acceptable and well-suited to apple, lemon, or berry flavour systems. At higher doses the acidic note becomes more pronounced and requires more aggressive flavour masking. ACV gummies are a market category where the tart taste is a feature, not a defect — consumers expect it.
Manufacturing notes
ACV gummies have become one of the largest gummy SKU categories globally over the last five years. The strategic decision points are dose level, taste-masking, and EU regulatory framing. The tart-and-tangy flavour profile is well-tolerated and often anchors the consumer experience of the product. Vegan / kosher / halal positioning depends on the selected raw material and supplier documentation — confirmed per project. ACV with 'the mother' is less common in gummies due to particulate-handling complexity but available for premium-positioned ranges.
Per-format formulation notes
Safe-baseline considerations for each format this ingredient is reviewed for. Final formulation, dose and on-pack copy are confirmed per project.
Gummies
- Taste masking and aroma load against the cooked-base flavour — confirmed per project.
- Heat exposure during cooking; coated or encapsulated forms may be required — confirmed per project.
- Matrix choice (pectin vs gelatin) and its effect on ingredient stability — confirmed per project.
- Per-gummy dose and serving count needed to hit the label claim — confirmed per project.
Sachets
- Powder flow and dose accuracy at single-serve sachet weights — confirmed per project.
- Barrier requirements (oxygen, moisture) for the active — confirmed per project.
- Reconstitution behaviour when the sachet is dosed into water — confirmed per project.
EU-authorised health claims
EU-authorised wording for this ingredient is reviewed per project against Reg. 1924/2006 and the authorised list under Reg. 432/2012. No final claim wording is implied by this page.
Authorised at ≥15% NRV per daily serving. Claim wording must appear verbatim on consumer packaging. DAT reviews final pack copy per project against EU 1924/2006 and the authorised list under EU 432/2012.
Wording to avoid on pack copy
- No disease claims — do not state or imply that Apple Cider Vinegar cures, prevents, or treats diabetes, obesity, gastrointestinal conditions, or any other disease.
- Avoid 'aids weight loss', 'burns fat', 'speeds metabolism', 'detoxifies', or similar definitive claims in EU consumer-facing copy unless reviewed case-by-case. 'Weight & metabolism' is acceptable as a positioning category; specific health-effect language is not authorised.
- Avoid 'balances blood sugar' as a definitive ACV claim. The authorised claim for blood-glucose support is on Chromium, not on ACV — wording must be attributed correctly to Chromium when present in the formula.
- Avoid 'cleanse' and 'detox' as definitive health-effect terms; these are not authorised claims under Reg. 1924/2006.
- No certification promises (vegan / kosher / halal / organic) on pack until per-project and per-batch supplier documentation is confirmed.
- No guaranteed shelf-life on pack until confirmed per project with stability data.
- Spray-dry carrier (typically maltodextrin from wheat, corn, or rice) requires allergen disclosure where applicable.
Apple Cider Vinegar as an ingredient has no authorised health claims under Reg. 432/2012. Substantiated 'weight & metabolism' or 'energy' messaging in an ACV gummy is achieved by co-formulating with Chromium (for blood-glucose claims) and B-vitamins (for energy-metabolism claims), and using their authorised wording — attributed correctly to those nutrients, not to ACV itself. Marketing positioning around 'weight & metabolism' or 'daily wellness' is permissible provided no explicit health-effect language is used outside the authorised list. DAT reviews wording per project against Reg. 1924/2006 and the authorised list under Reg. 432/2012.
Studies & evidence
External peer-reviewed sources and regulatory opinions. Citations only — DAT does not endorse the publishers.
Johnston CS, Steplewska I, Long CA, Harris LN, Ryals RH·Annals of Nutrition & Metabolism·2010
Kondo T, Kishi M, Fushimi T, Ugajin S, Kaga T·Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry·2009
Beheshti Z, Chan YH, Nia HS et al.·BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine·2012
Hadi A, Pourmasoumi M, Najafgholizadeh A, Clark CCT, Esmaillzadeh A·BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies·2021
European Commission·EUR-Lex·2012
Product concepts featuring Apple Cider Vinegar
Private-label product concepts where Apple Cider Vinegar appears in the formula. Each opens to a product brief and quote route.
ACV Metabolic Daily Pack Sachets
ACV Metabolic Daily Pack Sachets is a white-label sachet-based supplement concept for brands building a digestive & gut range. Final positioning, claims and documentation are reviewed per project and target market.
Apple Cider Vinegar Gummies
ACV gummy with B-vitamins and pomegranate.
Synergies & conflicts
Pairs well with
Pairs naturally with Chromium picolinate (which carries the authorised claim 'contributes to the maintenance of normal blood glucose levels') for metabolism positioning; with B-vitamins (B6, B12, Niacin, Pantothenic Acid) for energy positioning; with Folic Acid for women's wellness positioning; with Pomegranate or Beetroot extract for premium positioning.
Care when combining with
Acidic — may cause mild gastric discomfort in sensitive individuals at high doses. Liquid ACV is associated with dental enamel erosion at undiluted use, though powdered gummy doses are not a meaningful enamel concern. May interact with diuretic medication and insulin — disclose 'consult your doctor if on medication for diabetes or blood pressure' on pack at high-dose positioning.
Similar ingredients
Ingredients that frequently sit alongside this one in private-label supplement briefs.

Astaxanthin
Astaxanthin is a naturally occurring carotenoid pigment sourced from the microalgae Haematococcus pluvialis. It is used in food supplements for its antioxidant properties. Under EU Regulation 432/2012, astaxanthin has no authorised health claims; any claim coverage on pack must come from co-formulated nutrients.

Chlorophyll
Chlorophyll is the green pigment found in plants, responsible for photosynthesis. In gummy manufacturing, it is used primarily as a natural green colour and for general wellness positioning. It has no EFSA-authorised health claims under Reg. (EU) 432/2012, so claim coverage must come from co-formulated nutrients.

Collagen
Collagen is the most abundant structural protein in the human body and the foundation of skin, joint, and connective-tissue architecture. In gummy formats it is most commonly positioned within a beauty stack alongside Vitamin C, which carries the EU-authorised health claim for normal collagen formation for the normal function of skin. Collagen itself has no authorised health claim under Regulation 432/2012.

CoQ10
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is a fat-soluble quinone naturally produced in the body and essential for mitochondrial ATP synthesis. It also functions as a lipid-soluble antioxidant in cell membranes. In the EU, CoQ10 has no authorised health claims under Reg. 432/2012, so brands typically position it for cellular energy and heart function support, or co-formulate with nutrients that carry authorised claims.

Omega-3 (Fish Oil)
Omega-3 fish oil provides the long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid), sourced from marine fish. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood gummy actives across EU and US markets. Under EU Regulation 432/2012, authorised claims include contributions to normal heart function, brain function, vision, and blood triglyceride levels.
Adjacent reading
Pairings, resource guides and blog notes most often associated with Apple Cider Vinegar on DAT Supply briefs.
Common pairings
Ingredients that frequently co-formulate with Apple Cider Vinegar.
Develop a formula featuring Apple Cider Vinegar
A ready white-label formula exists — open a product brief, or talk to our team to align the launch plan.