Nutrition & Supplements
The Best Prenatal Vitamins With DHA Built In
A registered dietitian's focused round-up of prenatals that include adequate DHA in the same product — so you don't have to buy a separate omega-3.
Clinically reviewed · June 2026
Most prenatal vitamins do not include DHA, leaving you to buy a separate omega-3 softgel. A handful of well-formulated products — Ritual Essential Prenatal, Nature Made Prenatal + DHA, and Perelel's trimester packs — do include 200–350 mg of DHA per day in a single product, meeting ACOG's 200–300 mg guidance without an add-on purchase.
The average pregnant American woman gets roughly 60 mg of DHA per day from food alone — a fraction of the 200–300 mg that the National Institutes of Health recommends. The gap is real, consistent, and consequential: a 2023 meta-analysis in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology MFM found omega-3 supplementation during pregnancy reduced early preterm birth risk by approximately 42%. If your prenatal does not include adequate DHA, you need a second product to fill the gap.
This guide focuses specifically on prenatals that include DHA in the same package — evaluated on DHA dose and source, overall nutrient completeness, cost, and third-party certification. It is written as general nutrition information; please discuss your individual supplement plan with your prenatal care provider or registered dietitian.
Which prenatal vitamins actually include enough DHA in the formula?
The DHA bar for this comparison is 200 mg per daily serving — the low end of ACOG guidance. Products below that threshold are not meaningfully covering your omega-3 needs from a single prenatal; they may list DHA on the label as a marketing feature without actually meeting the clinical target.
| Brand | DHA per day | DHA source | Iron included | Choline | Folate form | Monthly cost (approx.) | Cert. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ritual Essential Prenatal | 350 mg | Microalgae (Schizochytrium sp.) | Yes (18 mg chelated) | 55 mg | Methylfolate | ~$39 | NSF |
| Nature Made Prenatal + DHA | ~200 mg | Wild-caught cod (fish oil) | Yes | None | Folic acid (800 mcg) | <$5 | USP |
| Perelel 1st Trimester Pack | 250 mg DHA + 100 mg EPA | Wild-caught fish | Yes (16 mg Ferrochel) | 120 mg | Methylfolate | ~$50 | Third-party tested |
| Nordic Naturals Prenatal DHA (standalone add-on) | 480 mg DHA + 205 mg EPA | Anchovy & sardine (rTG form) | No (omega-3 only) | None | N/A (DHA-only product) | ~$25–30 | Third-party purity & oxidation tested |
| Thorne Basic Prenatal | None | — | Yes | 25 mg | Methylfolate | ~$32 | NSF Certified for Sport |
| FullWell Prenatal | None | — | No | 300 mg | L-5-MTHF + calcium folinate | ~$45–50 | Proprietary lot testing |
Note: Thorne and FullWell are included for context — both are excellent multi-nutrient prenatals that require a separate omega-3 purchase. Nordic Naturals Prenatal DHA is a standalone omega-3 supplement, not a complete prenatal; it pairs with whichever multi you choose. Prices as of mid-2026; check current pricing before purchasing.
What makes Ritual's all-in-one DHA formula stand out — and where does it fall short?
Ritual Essential Prenatal ($39/month on subscription, 2 capsules/day) earns its place as the most discussed all-in-one prenatal with DHA for several reasons. The 350 mg of DHA comes from microalgae (Schizochytrium sp.), making it fully vegan and the only major premium prenatal brand to integrate algae-derived DHA directly into the multivitamin formula. The product uses methylfolate rather than synthetic folic acid, chelated iron at 18 mg, and holds NSF certification — a meaningful third-party quality credential.
Ritual also holds a practical distinction: the brand conducted a 24-week, randomized, double-blind clinical trial on the formula itself, which is rare in the prenatal supplement market. At Costco, a 60-day supply runs approximately $48.99 (~$0.82/day), making it one of the more accessible premium options.
Where it falls short: choline is only 55 mg per serving — roughly 12% of the 450 mg pregnancy Adequate Intake established by the NIH. A May 2025 study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus found that nearly all prenatal vitamins significantly under-dose choline. Women using Ritual will likely need dietary choline from eggs (two large yolks provide approximately 250–300 mg choline) or a standalone choline supplement to approach adequacy. Vitamin B6 — relevant to first-trimester nausea control — is also absent from the base formula.
No single capsule-format prenatal currently delivers both adequate DHA (200+ mg) and adequate choline (near 450 mg) in the same product. If you are prioritizing both nutrients, the most practical approach is a prenatal with built-in DHA — such as Ritual — paired with a targeted standalone choline supplement or consistent daily intake from egg yolks.
How does the budget option, Nature Made Prenatal + DHA, actually compare on quality?
Nature Made Prenatal Folic Acid + DHA costs under $5 per month — and for budget-constrained pregnancies, it covers the DHA gap from a single softgel that also delivers iron, calcium, magnesium, and vitamins D3, E, and B12. The product is USP Verified, one of the most rigorous third-party certification seals available for over-the-counter supplements, and its convenience (one softgel per day) removes any adherence friction.
Its meaningful limitations are worth understanding. The folate form is synthetic folic acid at 800 mcg — adequate by the ACOG/CDC standard for neural tube defect prevention, but not in the bioavailable methylfolate form preferred for women with MTHFR gene variants that impair folic acid conversion. Choline is completely absent. The DHA dose from fish oil (cod-sourced) is lower than Ritual's algae-derived 350 mg, sitting closer to the minimum ACOG guideline range. The gelatin capsule also excludes vegetarians.
For women without specific nutrient concerns or MTHFR history, on a tight budget, or simply needing a reliable starting point in early pregnancy while they research further, Nature Made remains a clinically defensible choice — its USP verification and iron+DHA combination in one affordable product still outperform most gummy prenatals, which routinely omit both nutrients entirely.
What about prenatals that deliberately separate DHA into a paired add-on?
Several high-quality prenatal systems — Thorne Basic Prenatal, FullWell Prenatal Multivitamin, and Needed Prenatal Multi — intentionally exclude DHA from the core multivitamin. This is a deliberate formulation choice, not an oversight: DHA is an oil that can oxidize inside a capsule alongside solid vitamins and minerals, and separating it allows each component to be optimized independently.
The trade-off is real cost and complexity. Thorne Basic Prenatal ($32/month) is frequently recommended by functional medicine physicians for its active methylcobalamin, methylfolate, and fully chelated mineral forms — but adding a quality omega-3 like Nordic Naturals Prenatal DHA brings total monthly spend to $57–62. FullWell ($45–50/month) delivers 300 mg choline and 4,000 IU vitamin D3 but similarly requires a separate DHA purchase, and its eight-capsule-per-day serving burden is a documented barrier during nausea-prone first-trimester weeks.
If you choose one of these modular systems, Nordic Naturals Prenatal DHA is the most commonly recommended paired omega-3. Each softgel delivers 480 mg DHA and 205 mg EPA in re-esterified triglyceride (rTG) form — an absorption-optimized format backed by longer research track records than ethyl ester fish oil. It is third-party tested for both purity (heavy metals, PCBs) and oxidation levels, sourced from wild-caught anchovies and sardines, and contains added vitamin D3.
Perelel's trimester-phased system ($49.95/month on subscription) deserves specific mention as the closest thing to a genuinely all-in-one solution for women who want DHA, iron, methylfolate, choline, and trimester-specific nutrients in a single subscription. Each daily sachet delivers 250 mg DHA + 100 mg EPA from wild-caught fish, 16 mg of Ferrochel chelated iron, 120 mg choline, and methylfolate — with the formula automatically transitioning to 2nd and 3rd trimester formulations based on your entered due date. The $49.95/month price is all-in; no required add-ons. Its choline content, at 120 mg, is higher than Ritual's but still well below the 450 mg pregnancy AI, so dietary choline remains important regardless.
A note on supplement quality and safety: a May 2025 University of Colorado study examining 47 prenatal vitamins found heavy metals — including lead (in 68.1% of products) and cadmium (in 61.7%) — in nearly all products tested, though none exceeded USP safety limits. This finding reinforces the importance of choosing brands with meaningful third-party verification rather than relying on label claims alone. NSF, USP, and Clean Label Project certification are the three most credible seals to look for in the prenatal category.
This article is general nutrition information intended to help you ask better questions, not to replace individualized guidance from your prenatal care provider or registered dietitian. Supplement needs vary by diet, health history, and lab results. Please discuss your prenatal supplement plan with your provider before making changes.
Frequently asked
How much DHA does a prenatal vitamin need to actually make a difference?
ACOG recommends at least 200–300 mg of DHA per day during pregnancy, and the NIH's 2024 updated fact sheet endorses at least 250 mg combined DHA+EPA daily, with an extra 100–200 mg DHA specifically during pregnancy. A prenatal that lists only 50–100 mg DHA is not meeting these targets — that dose may look meaningful on a label but falls well below the guidance range. When evaluating a prenatal's DHA content, look for at least 200 mg per daily serving, ideally 300–500 mg. If a product lists DHA in milligrams of fish oil rather than milligrams of actual DHA, divide by roughly three to approximate the DHA fraction. Talk to your provider about your individual needs, particularly if you eat little or no seafood.
Is algae-sourced DHA just as good as fish oil DHA?
Yes — bioavailability is clinically equivalent. Marine fish accumulate DHA by eating microalgae, so algal oil is simply the original source. Both forms deliver DHA to fetal brain and retinal tissue with comparable efficiency, as confirmed by absorption studies reviewed in the supplement literature. The practical differences are: fish oil typically provides both DHA and EPA in higher concentrations per softgel, which may confer additional preterm birth risk reduction; algal oil is fully vegan and carries zero mercury risk by construction. Molecularly distilled, triglyceride-form fish oil from reputable third-party-certified brands also carries no meaningful mercury exposure. Women following vegetarian or vegan diets should choose algal oil. Women who eat a conventional diet may benefit from the higher combined DHA+EPA doses available from quality fish oil.
Can I just take a prenatal with DHA and skip the separate omega-3 entirely?
If the DHA dose in your prenatal reaches 200–300 mg per day, a separate omega-3 supplement is not strictly necessary for most pregnancies — that is exactly the appeal of an all-in-one product. Products like Ritual Essential Prenatal (350 mg DHA from algae) and Nature Made Prenatal + DHA (fish-derived DHA) clear that bar in a single daily dose. Where you still may want to consider an add-on: if your prenatal's DHA is at the low end (under 200 mg), if you eat no seafood at all, or if your provider has identified low omega-3 status on a blood test. A 2023 meta-analysis in AJOG MFM found omega-3 supplementation reduced early preterm birth risk by approximately 42% — strong motivation to ensure your total daily DHA intake is genuinely adequate, from whatever combination of food and supplements fits your situation. This is general nutrition information, not a substitute for advice from your own prenatal care provider.
Why do most prenatal vitamins leave DHA out?
DHA is an oil, and oils are chemically incompatible with many capsule formats. Enclosing liquid DHA alongside solid vitamins and minerals requires a separate softgel shell or a dedicated compartment — adding manufacturing complexity and cost. Some brands sidestep this by selling DHA as a paired add-on rather than integrating it. Gummy prenatals almost universally omit DHA because oils oxidize rapidly in a gummy matrix, producing rancidity within weeks; a Minnesota WIC program review (updated February 2025) confirmed that gummy prenatals commonly contain zero DHA and recommended standalone omega-3 supplements for participants relying on gummies. Capsule and softgel formats remain the most practical delivery vehicle for a prenatal that genuinely includes DHA at a meaningful dose.
Does the timing of DHA supplementation during pregnancy matter?
Yes — starting earlier matters more than most people realize. The NIH explicitly notes that DHA supplementation is most beneficial when begun before conception or in early pregnancy, not just in the third trimester when fetal DHA accumulation peaks. Mean dietary DHA intake among pregnant American women is approximately 60 mg per day — far below the 200–300 mg target — meaning most women start pregnancy already in deficit. DHA status in the first trimester influences placental function and early neural development, even before the rapid third-trimester brain growth phase that gets most of the attention. Beginning a prenatal with adequate DHA as soon as you start trying to conceive — or as soon as you confirm pregnancy — gives you the longest runway for building adequate maternal stores. Consult your healthcare provider if you have concerns about your omega-3 status.
What should I look for beyond DHA when choosing an all-in-one prenatal?
Beyond DHA, the nutrients most commonly under-dosed in combined prenatals are choline and folate form. A May 2025 study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus found only 26% of 47 prenatal vitamins listed any choline content — and the pregnancy Adequate Intake is 450 mg per day, a target almost no single prenatal meets. Folate form matters if you have an MTHFR variant: look for L-methylfolate (5-MTHF) rather than synthetic folic acid if your provider has tested or suspects reduced MTHFR enzyme activity. Third-party certification (NSF, USP, or Clean Label Project) is non-negotiable in a supplement you will take daily through all three trimesters. Use this information as a starting point for a conversation with your dietitian or provider, not as a replacement for personalized clinical guidance.