Melatonin
INCI: Melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine)
Melatonin is a hormone naturally produced by the pineal gland that regulates circadian rhythm and sleep onset. In food-supplement gummy formats it is the most commonly requested sleep-onset active, with two EU-authorised health claims under Reg. 432/2012 at 1 mg (sleep onset) and 0.5 mg (jet lag) per portion. Above these doses, EU classification typically shifts to medicinal product — Member State verification is required per project.
- Sleep onset
- Jet lag
- Sleep-and-calm stacks
At a glance
- Definition
- Melatonin is a hormone naturally produced by the pineal gland that regulates circadian rhythm and sleep onset. In food-supplement gummy formats it is the most commonly requested sleep-onset active, with two EU-authorised health claims under Reg. 432/2012 at 1 mg (sleep onset) and 0.5 mg (jet lag) per portion. Above these doses, EU classification typically shifts to medicinal product — Member State verification is required per project.
- Authorised wording (summary)
- 3 authorised statements — see "US structure-function statements" below.
- Common positionings
- Sleep onset (≤1 mg, EU food supplement positioning)
- Jet lag (0.5 mg, EU)
- US sleep-aid (1–10 mg, DSHEA)
- Kids' sleep (very limited markets, requires explicit regulatory clearance)
- Format suitability
- Reviewed for gummies, sachets and softgels — 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.
- Sleep & mood
- Browse all ingredients
What it is
Melatonin is a hormone produced naturally in the human pineal gland in response to darkness. It regulates the circadian rhythm — the biological clock that signals sleep onset — and its production declines with age and is suppressed by exposure to artificial light at night. As a food supplement, exogenous melatonin has become one of the most commercially significant sleep-onset actives in the EU and US markets, particularly within gummy formats where its sublingual-friendly, kid-style delivery sits well with consumer preference.
For private-label brands, the strategic complexity is regulatory. The EU permits melatonin as a food supplement at ≤1 mg per portion with two authorised health claims (sleep onset and jet lag). Above 1 mg per portion, classification typically shifts to medicinal product, and Member State authorisations are required individually. The US permits melatonin as a dietary supplement under DSHEA with no statutory dose ceiling, and consumer norms run from 1 mg to 10 mg. The same physical gummy formulation cannot move between EU and US markets without regulatory adaptation; DAT formulates EU gummies at ≤1 mg as the operational default unless project-specific Member State authorisation supports otherwise.
Origin and history
Melatonin was first isolated and characterised in 1958 by dermatologist Aaron Lerner at Yale, working from bovine pineal extracts in a study aimed at understanding skin pigmentation (melatonin's name derives from its early-observed lightening effect on amphibian skin). Its role in regulating circadian rhythm and sleep onset was established through the 1970s and 1980s. The characterisation of melatonin receptors (MT1, MT2) in the 1990s clarified the molecular basis of its action.
Commercial melatonin is produced by total chemical synthesis from indole and tryptamine precursors. The synthetic form is chemically identical to the endogenous hormone. Regulatory classification has evolved unevenly: the US classified melatonin as a dietary supplement under DSHEA (1994), while EU Member States have taken varied positions — some treating it as a food supplement at low dose, some as a medicinal product across all doses. The EFSA authorisation of the 1 mg sleep-onset claim in 2010 (codified in Reg. 432/2012) established a clearer EU food-supplement pathway, but Member State classifications still vary and remain a project-specific verification.
Scientific overview
Melatonin acts via two G-protein-coupled receptors (MT1 and MT2) expressed in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus — the master circadian clock — and in peripheral tissues. Activation of these receptors shifts circadian phase, reduces nocturnal core body temperature, and promotes sleep onset. Plasma melatonin rises in response to darkness, peaks around 02:00–04:00, and declines toward morning; exposure to short-wavelength (blue) light suppresses endogenous melatonin production.
Exogenous oral melatonin has a short plasma half-life (30–50 minutes for immediate-release formulations) and is metabolised primarily by hepatic CYP1A2 to 6-sulphatoxymelatonin, excreted in urine. Onset of the sleep-promoting effect occurs roughly 30–60 minutes after oral intake. The EFSA NDA Panel's substantiation of the sleep-onset claim (2010, codified 2012) is based on randomised controlled trials demonstrating reduction in sleep-onset latency at 1 mg taken close to bedtime. The jet-lag claim is substantiated at 0.5 mg, with specific timing conditions related to travel direction and arrival.
For gummy formulation, melatonin is operationally one of the simplest actives — sub-milligram dosing, tasteless, heat-stable, soluble. The manufacturing decisions revolve around dose level (constrained by target market regulation), conditions-of-use disclosure on pack, and microencapsulation for extended-release positioning if required.
Why brands use Melatonin
Melatonin is one of the most familiar and commercially understood sleep-onset actives across EU and US markets, and the gummy format suits its delivery profile particularly well — sublingual contact, fast onset, pleasant taste, and an evening-routine ritual that fits consumer behaviour. Sleep-positioned EU gummies typically include 1 mg melatonin per serving (the maximum food-supplement dose and the EFSA-authorised claim dose), paired with L-theanine, lemon balm, magnesium, or chamomile for a 'sleep & calm' stack. Jet-lag- positioned ranges run at 0.5 mg per serving. US sleep-aid gummies commonly run at 3–5 mg per serving under DSHEA, sometimes higher for adult ranges.
From a formulation standpoint, melatonin at sub-milligram doses has no measurable effect on gummy texture, taste, colour, or cook behaviour. The supply form is straightforward (synthetic USP/EP grade); accurate dose-uniformity at sub-milligram levels is managed via triturate dilution and standard mixing protocols. Microencapsulated extended-release forms are available for projects positioning around 'stay asleep' rather than 'fall asleep', though most consumer demand sits on the sleep-onset side.
For pack-copy, EU-market gummies must respect the dose ceiling (≤1 mg for sleep-onset positioning, 0.5 mg for jet lag) and include the conditions-of-use wording for the authorised claim ('close to bedtime'). Pregnancy, medication, and under-18 contraindications must be disclosed. US-market gummies operate under DSHEA structure- function rules. The same physical gummy formulation cannot move between EU and US markets without regulatory adaptation; DAT confirms Member State / market strategy per project before formula lock.
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` At Low Dose (≤1 Mg); `Limited` At Higher US-Style Doses Where Bulk-Tolerance Still Applies But Is Workable
- Soluble in matrix
- Yes
Forms available
- Synthetic melatonin (USP/EP grade)
- Microencapsulated / extended-release melatonin (project-specific)
Dosage reference
EU: maximum 1 mg per portion for sleep-onset positioning (Reg. 432/2012 authorised claim); 0.5 mg for jet-lag claim. Above these doses, classification typically shifts to medicinal product (varies by Member State). US: typical dietary-supplement doses range 1–10 mg under DSHEA. DAT formulates EU gummies at ≤1 mg unless explicit regulatory authorisation supports a higher dose for the target Member State.
Taste & sensory
Effectively tasteless at typical gummy doses. Sub-milligram weight per gummy means no measurable impact on texture or flavour.
Manufacturing notes
EU positioning at ≤1 mg per gummy is operationally straightforward — the active is tasteless, soluble, and heat-stable at gummy-batch doses. US positioning at 3–5 mg per gummy is equally straightforward but legally distinct: the same physical formulation cannot move between markets without regulatory adaptation of pack copy and serving guidance. Vegan / kosher / halal positioning depends on the selected raw material and supplier documentation — confirmed per project. Microencapsulated forms for extended-release positioning are available as a project-specific option.
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.
Softgels
- Oil solubility or dispersibility in the fill carrier — confirmed per project.
- Fill compatibility with the gelatin/non-gelatin shell — confirmed per project.
- Oxidation profile and antioxidant load — confirmed per project.
US structure-function statements
- Melatonin supports the body's natural sleep cycleStructure-function (DSHEA)
- Melatonin supports a restful night's sleepStructure-function (DSHEA)
- Melatonin helps with occasional jet lagStructure-function (DSHEA)
Structure-function statements must appear with the FDA disclaimer in the same field of vision on the label. % Daily Value (DV) based on FDA 21 CFR 101.9.
Wording to avoid on pack copy
- No disease claims — do not state or imply that Melatonin cures, prevents, or treats insomnia, sleep apnoea, depression, or any other disease.
- Structure-function claims must be accompanied by the FDA disclaimer in the same field of vision on the label.
- Disclose: 'May cause drowsiness — do not drive or operate machinery after taking'.
- Disclose: 'Consult your doctor before use if pregnant, breastfeeding, taking medication, or giving to children'.
- Children's products require explicit positioning and dose-rationale; consumer-facing copy should disclose 'consult your paediatrician'.
- No certification promises (vegan / kosher / halal / organic / non-GMO) 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.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Structure-function claims are permitted under DSHEA (21 USC §343(r)(6)). There is no FDA- established Daily Value for melatonin and no statutory dose ceiling under DSHEA; consumer-facing serving guidance is determined by brand positioning and is reviewed per project.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Studies & evidence
External peer-reviewed sources and regulatory opinions. Citations only — DAT does not endorse the publishers.
EFSA NDA Panel·EFSA Journal·2011
EFSA NDA Panel·EFSA Journal·2010
Auld F, Maschauer EL, Morrison I et al.·Sleep Medicine Reviews·2017
Herxheimer A, Petrie KJ·Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·2002
European Commission·EUR-Lex·2012
Product concepts featuring Melatonin
Private-label product concepts where Melatonin appears in the formula. Each opens to a product brief and quote route.
Deep Sleep Melatonin Sachets
Private label deep sleep melatonin sachets for supplement brands. Pectin-based, target-market reviewed manufacturing.
Melatonin (2 mg) Gummies
Private label melatonin (2 mg) gummies for supplement brands. Pectin-based, target-market reviewed manufacturing.
Sleep & Skin Recovery Gummies
Private label sleep & skin recovery gummies for supplement brands. Pectin-based, target-market reviewed manufacturing.
Synergies & conflicts
Pairs well with
Pairs naturally with L-Theanine, Lemon Balm, Magnesium, Chamomile, Passionflower, and 5-HTP (where regulation permits) for sleep-and-calm stacks. For jet-lag positioning, often a standalone or paired with low-dose B-vitamins.
Care when combining with
Caution in combination with sedative medication, blood-pressure medication, immunosuppressants, and certain anticoagulants — disclose 'consult your doctor if on medication' on pack. Not recommended for pregnancy, breastfeeding, or children under 18 in most EU markets. May cause drowsiness — disclose 'do not drive or operate machinery after taking' on pack.
Similar ingredients
Ingredients that frequently sit alongside this one in private-label supplement briefs.

Chondroitin Sulfate
Chondroitin sulfate is a naturally occurring glycosaminoglycan found in cartilage and connective tissue. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood joint health actives across EU and US markets. Chondroitin sulfate has no authorised health claims under Reg. (EU) 432/2012, so brands typically position it alongside co-formulated nutrients such as Vitamin C (for collagen formation) or Vitamin D (for normal bone function). It is not suitable for gummy formats due to poor solubility and high molecular weight, and is typically delivered in sachet formats.
Coenzyme Q10
Coenzyme Q10 is used in private-label supplement manufacturing. Sourcing, dose anchors and target-market documentation are reviewed per project.

Dihydroberberine
Dihydroberberine is a reduced form of berberine, a naturally occurring alkaloid found in plants such as Berberis aristata and Coptis chinensis. It is used in dietary supplements for metabolic wellness and blood sugar balance positioning. As a botanical-derived compound on the EU on-hold list, it has no authorised health claims under Reg. (EU) 432/2012.

Glucosamine Sulfate
Glucosamine is a naturally occurring amino sugar that is a structural component of cartilage and synovial fluid. In supplement form (sulfate or hydrochloride), it has been used for decades in joint-positioned ranges. Glucosamine itself has no authorised EU health claim under Reg. 432/2012; in gummy formats it is most commonly positioned for 'joint comfort' alongside co-formulated nutrients that carry authorised claims.

Lutein
Lutein is a carotenoid pigment found naturally in green leafy vegetables and egg yolks. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood gummy actives across EU and US markets, primarily positioned for eye and macular health. Lutein has no authorised health claim under Reg. (EU) 432/2012; any claim coverage relies on co-formulated nutrients.

NMN
NMN (nicotinamide mononucleotide) is a nucleotide derivative and a direct precursor to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), a coenzyme central to cellular energy metabolism and DNA repair. In the EU, NMN is currently under novel food assessment and does not carry authorised health claims under Reg. (EU) 432/2012. Brands use NMN for healthy-ageing and cellular-energy positioning in markets where it is permitted (UK, US, and select non-EU markets).
Adjacent reading
Pairings, resource guides and blog notes most often associated with Melatonin on DAT Supply briefs.
Common pairings
Ingredients that frequently co-formulate with Melatonin.
Develop a formula featuring Melatonin
A ready white-label formula exists — open a product brief, or talk to our team to align the launch plan.