Identify gaps in your horse's nutrition program to optimize their well-being.
Omneity® Pellets
All-In-One Vitamin & Mineral Pellet
Discover detailed nutrition information and ingredient labels for vitamin supplements in the Mad Barn Equine Feed Database. Compare options for the best commercial vitamin products for horses.
Vitamins are essential nutrients in a horse’s diet required for normal metabolism, immune function, tissue maintenance, reproduction, and nerve and muscle function. They help enzymes and cells carry out basic physiological processes, but they must be supplied in the right amounts because both deficiency and oversupplementation can cause problems. Horses obtain some vitamins from fresh forage and some B-vitamins from hindgut microbes, but the diet does not always provide enough to meet needs. This is especially relevant when horses are eating stored hay, restricted pasture, or diets that are not fully balanced.
Horses typically benefit from a broad range of vitamins in supplementation, especially when the base diet relies heavily on stored forage or small amounts of fortified feed. Vitamin E is one of the most important vitamins to assess because fresh pasture is the horse’s main natural source, and levels decline substantially after grass is harvested and stored as hay. As a result, horses consuming mostly hay often do not get enough vitamin E from forage alone. Vitamin A can also become limiting when horses have no access to fresh pasture for long periods, since beta-carotene in forage decreases over time. B-vitamins are usually produced in the hindgut, but supplementation may be useful in horses under stress, in hard work, or with impaired digestive function. For many horses, a complete vitamin and mineral supplement such as Mad Barn’s Omneity® provides daily support to maintain optimal health and performance.
When comparing vitamin supplements for horses, look for a product that provides meaningful amounts of the vitamins most likely to be lacking in the diet, especially vitamin E, along with full B-vitamin fortification and useful levels of biotin. It is also important to check whether the supplement includes trace minerals, because vitamin supplementation should be evaluated in the context of the whole diet rather than as isolated nutrients. The feeding rate matters as much as the label, since some products appear comprehensive but do not provide enough nutrients at the recommended serving to make a meaningful contribution to daily requirements. Mad Barn’s Omneity® is a comprehensive vitamin and mineral that provides complete B-vitamin fortification, 20 mg of biotin, a full serving of vitamin E, and other essential nutrients that support hoof health, coat quality, post-exercise recovery and more.
A horse usually cannot meet all of its vitamin requirements from hay alone, especially when the forage has been stored for an extended period. Hay loses vitamin content over time, particularly vitamin E and beta-carotene, which is the precursor to vitamin A. As a result, horses eating mostly stored forage are more likely to fall short in important vitamins than horses with regular access to fresh pasture. Hay can provide energy and fibre, but it is not a reliable source of all of the essential micronutrients that horses need. For horses on forage-based diets, a comprehensive vitamin and mineral supplement such as Mad Barn’s Omneity® is one of the best ways to help balance the diet and supply nutrients that hay may not provide in adequate amounts.
Vitamin requirements for horses vary based on body weight, age, workload, reproductive status, and overall health. These requirements are typically estimated from NRC guidelines and are intended to prevent deficiency, but they do not replace the need to evaluate the actual diet being fed. In practice, vitamin intake also depends on forage quality, pasture access, and how much fortified feed the horse is actually consuming. A horse can appear to be receiving a balanced diet on paper but still fall short if hay has lost vitamin value over time or fortified feeds are not fed at the recommended rate.
Horses do not always require B-vitamin supplements to prevent deficiency, because healthy horses with good forage intake and normal hindgut function can synthesize many B-vitamins through microbial fermentation in the large intestine. However, that does not mean supplemental B-vitamins are not beneficial. B-vitamins support energy metabolism, red blood cell production, appetite, nerve function, and other processes related to performance and overall health. Biotin, which is one of the B-vitamins, is a good example because horses often benefit from 20 mg per day to support hoof quality even though there is no established dietary requirement for that level. For horses in hard work, under stress, after illness, or with impaired hindgut function, supplementation with a product that provides full B-vitamin fortification, such as Mad Barn’s Omneity®, can help support both daily needs and optimal health.
An equine vitamin supplement should provide enough vitamin E per serving to make a meaningful contribution to daily intake, typically at least 1,000 IU per day for adult horses. This is especially important for horses on hay with little or no pasture access, because fresh grass is the main natural source of vitamin E and levels decline after forage is harvested and stored. Horses in work, breeding horses, and horses with muscle or neurological concerns may require more than this depending on the rest of the diet and their individual needs. Mad Barn’s Omneity®, for example, provides 1,000 IU of vitamin E per serving as part of a complete diet balancing formula.
To support hoof health in horses, a biotin supplement should provide 20 mg of biotin per day. This is the amount that has been shown in research to improve hoof growth and hoof horn quality when fed consistently over time. Because hooves grow slowly, supplementation usually needs to be maintained for several months before the full benefit is visible. Biotin also works best when the rest of the diet is balanced for protein, copper, zinc, and other nutrients involved in keratin and connective tissue formation. Mad Barn’s Omneity® and AminoTrace+ both provide 20 mg of biotin per serving, and the same dosage is used in Mad Barn’s Biotin supplement for horses that need targeted hoof support.
The best multivitamin supplement for horses is one that helps balance the full ration and provides meaningful amounts of the nutrients most likely to be lacking in the diet. In addition to key vitamins such as vitamin E and the B-vitamins, it should also supply trace minerals and other nutrients commonly missing from hay-based diets or from diets built around small amounts of fortified feed. Many horses are not fed enough commercial feed to obtain the intended vitamin and mineral fortification from that product alone. For many horses, Mad Barn’s Omneity® is the best choice because it provides full B-vitamin fortification, 1000 IU vitamin E, 20 mg of biotin, and balanced trace minerals in one concentrated supplement.
The best vitamin supplement for metabolic horses is one that provides concentrated nutrition without adding excess sugar, starch, or calories. Metabolic horses still need adequate vitamins, trace minerals, amino acids, and antioxidants, but these nutrients often need to be supplied within a low-NSC feeding program based on forage and controlled intake. This is especially important because many metabolic horses are fed soaked hay, rationed forage, or only small amounts of carrier feed, which can reduce total nutrient intake. For these horses, Mad Barn’s AminoTrace+ is the recommended choice because it is formulated to provide concentrated vitamin and mineral support in a low-calorie pellet.
The best vitamin supplement for exercising horses is one that helps balance the full diet while supporting the higher nutritional demands of training, competition, and recovery. Horses in work use more antioxidants and B-vitamins, and they also have greater losses of electrolytes through sweat, which can affect hydration, muscle function, and post-exercise recovery. Vitamin E is particularly important for protecting muscle cells from oxidative stress, while B-vitamins support energy metabolism and red blood cell production during exercise. A good performance supplement should also provide trace minerals and other nutrients needed for hoof quality, topline maintenance, and immune function. For many horses in work, Mad Barn’s Omneity® is the ideal option because it provides full B-vitamin fortification, 1,000 IU of vitamin E, 20 mg of biotin, and balanced trace minerals in one concentrated formula. Horses in moderate to heavy work may also need a separate electrolyte supplement to replace sweat losses and support recovery after exercise.
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