Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expired Posted by BBQchicken | Staff • 6d ago
expired Posted by BBQchicken | Staff • 6d ago

60-Count Nature Made Omega 3 1400mg Fish Oil Minis Softgels

w/ Subscribe & Save

$4.60

$20

77% off
Amazon
17 Comments 11,136 Views
Visit Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Amazon has 60-Count Nature Made Omega 3 1400mg Fish Oil Minis Softgels for $4.82 - 5% when you checkout via Subscribe & Save = $4.58. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+

Thanks to Deal Hunter BBQchicken for finding this deal.

Note: You have the flexibility to manage your Subscribe & Save subscription at any time after your order ships. View Subscribe & Save filler items and our current Subscribe & Save Frontpage deals to unlock up to extra 15% savings when you have 5 or more items in your current monthly subscription.

Product Details:
  • 1400mg Fish Oil per 2-softgel serving.
  • Mini softgels are purified to remove mercury and are specially made to reduce fishy burps, and be easier to swallow.
  • These gluten free Omega 3 mini Fish Oil softgels have no color added, no milk and no shellfish

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff

Original Post

Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 60-Count Nature Made Omega 3 1400mg Fish Oil Minis Softgels for $4.82 - 5% when you checkout via Subscribe & Save = $4.58. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+

Thanks to Deal Hunter BBQchicken for finding this deal.

Note: You have the flexibility to manage your Subscribe & Save subscription at any time after your order ships. View Subscribe & Save filler items and our current Subscribe & Save Frontpage deals to unlock up to extra 15% savings when you have 5 or more items in your current monthly subscription.

Product Details:
  • 1400mg Fish Oil per 2-softgel serving.
  • Mini softgels are purified to remove mercury and are specially made to reduce fishy burps, and be easier to swallow.
  • These gluten free Omega 3 mini Fish Oil softgels have no color added, no milk and no shellfish

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff

Original Post

Community Voting

Deal Score
+27
Good Deal
Visit Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: Nature Made Extra Strength Omega-3 Fish Oil Minis Softgels - 1400 mg, 60 ct

Deal History 

Sale Price
Slickdeal
  • $NaN
  • Today
Leave a Comment
To participate in the comments, please log in.

17 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

6d ago
620 Posts
Joined May 2013
6d ago
ChiragC
6d ago
620 Posts
No longer available?
1
6d ago
314 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
6d ago
Thenitro
6d ago
314 Posts
Worked good for me!
6d ago
72 Posts
Joined Jun 2009
6d ago
olivelawn
6d ago
72 Posts
Cannot replicate. Maybe because I don't have prime? Happy to get a $35 minimum order in, but shows $26.99 for me.
6d ago
449 Posts
Joined May 2017
6d ago
KetoTonic
6d ago
449 Posts
Is this good price? 1 month supply seems little
6d ago
245 Posts
Joined Mar 2020
6d ago
LilDipper
6d ago
245 Posts
$4.33 here w/ S&S and 15% off. Thanks OP!
6d ago
1,339 Posts
Joined Nov 2008
6d ago
gordgeck
6d ago
1,339 Posts
In November 2018, a study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine found that omega-3 fatty acid supplements did nothing to reduce heart attacks, strokes, or deaths from heart disease in middle-age men and women without any known risk factors for heart disease. Earlier research reported in the same journal in 2013 also reported no benefit in people with risk factors for heart disease.
1
Pro
6d ago
2,097 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
6d ago
MasterRigger
Pro
6d ago
2,097 Posts
Quote from gordgeck :
In November 2018, a study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine found that omega-3 fatty acid supplements did nothing to reduce heart attacks, strokes, or deaths from heart disease in middle-age men and women without any known risk factors for heart disease. Earlier research reported in the same journal in 2013 also reported no benefit in people with risk factors for heart disease.

And it's fat soluble so all the toxins remain your body

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

5d ago
5,103 Posts
Joined Sep 2006
5d ago
xpeng
5d ago
5,103 Posts
Costco is cheaper, different product though.
5d ago
2,622 Posts
Joined Dec 2010
5d ago
radars
5d ago
2,622 Posts
Has fish oil helped lowering your blood pressure?
5d ago
596 Posts
Joined Dec 2003
5d ago
madoka
5d ago
596 Posts
Quote from gordgeck :
In November 2018, a study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine found that omega-3 fatty acid supplements did nothing to reduce heart attacks, strokes, or deaths from heart disease in middle-age men and women without any known risk factors for heart disease. Earlier research reported in the same journal in 2013 also reported no benefit in people with risk factors for heart disease.
It depends as this subsequent Harvard study explains. Plus fish oil is "an approved and effective treatment for people with high blood triglyceride levels." https://www.health.harvard.edu/bl...1307126467
5d ago
38 Posts
Joined Feb 2019
5d ago
Aviator27J
5d ago
38 Posts
I always appreciate that they want you to take fish pills with water. Makes sense.
1
4d ago
1,737 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
4d ago
Milk4Ever
4d ago
1,737 Posts
Quote from xpeng :
Costco is cheaper, different product though.
Costco's nature made has preservatives.
*edit* sorry, that is Nature bounty. Nevertheless, Fish oil should ideally be kept in refrigerator.
4d ago
18,924 Posts
Joined Sep 2003
4d ago
beowulf7
4d ago
18,924 Posts
Quote from gordgeck :
In November 2018, a study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine found that omega-3 fatty acid supplements did nothing to reduce heart attacks, strokes, or deaths from heart disease in middle-age men and women without any known risk factors for heart disease. Earlier research reported in the same journal in 2013 also reported no benefit in people with risk factors for heart disease.
Are you implying that fish oil is snake oil?
4d ago
18,924 Posts
Joined Sep 2003
4d ago
beowulf7
4d ago
18,924 Posts
Quote from madoka :
It depends as this subsequent Harvard study explains. Plus fish oil is "an approved and effective treatment for people with high blood triglyceride levels." https://www.health.harvard.edu/bl...1307126467
The last paragraph of that article:
"If you are taking them on your own because you believe they are good for you, it's time to rethink that strategy. If you don't eat fish or other seafood, you might benefit from a fish oil supplement. Also, you can get omega-3s from ground flaxseed or flaxseed oil, chia seeds, walnuts, canola oil, and soy oil. One to two servings per day can help you avoid a deficiency of omega-3s."

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

4d ago
1,737 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
4d ago
Milk4Ever
4d ago
1,737 Posts
Quote from beowulf7 :
The last paragraph of that article:"If you are taking them on your own because you believe they are good for you, it's time to rethink that strategy. If you don't eat fish or other seafood, you might benefit from a fish oil supplement. Also, you can get omega-3s from ground flaxseed or flaxseed oil, chia seeds, walnuts, canola oil, and soy oil. One to two servings per day can help you avoid a deficiency of omega-3s."
Those other sources of Omega-3 have a different composition. They are mostly ALA rather than EPA and DHA

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All