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May 20, 2026 · 4 min

How a supplement interaction checker app should work

A supplement interaction checker should explain researched pairs, unknown pairs, confidence, and what to do with timing.

The problem with basic tracking

A red warning without context is not enough. Users need to know whether a pairing is a caution, an avoid signal, neutral, or potentially helpful.

That is why supplement tracking needs to be built around decisions, not just lists.

What the app needs to handle

The app should normalize supplement names, check researched pairings, cite sources, and separate low-confidence claims from the actual stack score.

The best structure is simple enough to use every day and detailed enough to explain what changed when the routine changes.

How Stackhero approaches it

Stackhero shows researched pairs, synergies, cautions, and neutral pairings so the stack feels explainable instead of mysterious.

The result is a supplement routine that can be followed, reviewed, and improved without pretending the app is a doctor.

Sources

Medical note

Stackhero is a supplement tracking and research organization tool, not medical advice. Review supplements, dose changes, and medication interactions with a qualified professional.