Perricone MD

Perricone MD Omega 3 Supplements

A wild Alaskan salmon oil softgel with a meaningful EPA and DHA yield, but a more beauty-and-weight-positioned framing than most serious fish oil products.

Perricone MD Omega 3 Supplements
690 mg omega-3Salmon oilMSC sourcing

Score

7.5

Strong

Substance
2.5
Trust
2.0
Dose
1.7
Formulation
1.3

Our View

A useful salmon oil product on dose and sourcing, but the weight-management and beauty framing makes it less clean than a more straightforward EPA and DHA supplement.

Details

Each softgel provides wild Alaskan salmon oil with 255 mg EPA, 270 mg DHA, and 690 mg total omega-3. The recommended maintenance use of one capsule three times daily creates a meaningful omega-3 input, while the weight-loss use case is not something I would treat as the core reason to choose the product.

This is a real omega-3 product.

It is also wrapped in a lot of Perricone positioning.

The underlying dose is solid. Each softgel provides wild Alaskan salmon oil with 255 mg EPA, 270 mg DHA, and 690 mg total omega-3. At the normal maintenance direction of one capsule three times daily, that becomes a meaningful EPA and DHA intake rather than a token fish oil dose.

The source story is also reasonable. Perricone positions the oil as wild caught Alaskan salmon oil from a Marine Stewardship Council certified Alaskan salmon fishery. That helps the trust case, especially because fish oil quality depends heavily on source, handling, and contaminant control.

The trust profile is still not top tier. The product page says it exceeds U.S. and international potency and purity standards for omega-3 supplements, but it does not present the same kind of visible IFOS, USP, or NSF certification signal that would make the quality case easier to score.

The formulation is simple enough. Salmon oil, a fish gelatin softgel, glycerin, purified water, and natural lemon flavor. That is not a complicated stack, and the lemon flavor makes sense for a fish oil softgel.

The main issue is framing. The page connects the product to healthy heart support, skin hydration, mood, body weight, and weight-loss use. Some of that is category-adjacent marketing rather than a clean reason to take this specific fish oil. I would evaluate the product on EPA, DHA, sourcing, and transparency, not on broad beauty or weight claims.

This is a good salmon oil if someone wants a meaningful EPA and DHA dose and is comfortable with the Perricone MD positioning. It is less compelling than a more plainly verified fish oil when the priority is third-party testing clarity.