VitaminQuick sells vitamins you inject into yourself. Not tablets, not gummies, but B12 and B-complex formulations packaged for intramuscular or intravenous self-administration at home. That is an unusual thing to buy off a UK website, and it is the single fact that should shape how a shopper reads everything else on the site, because the delivery method changes the stakes of the whole purchase. A missed chewable is nothing; a self-administered injection is a different order of responsibility.
On the storefront the range carries a second brand name, VIAVQ Vitamin, so the VitaminQuick site and the product labelling do not quite line up. The pitch targets health-conscious buyers chasing more energy, weight management, immune support, and anti-aging results, which is a broad audience for a fairly clinical set of products. The tone is wellness-shop friendly even though the contents belong closer to a treatment room than a health-food aisle.
A syringe instead of a tablet
The self-injection model is the entire proposition, and it is worth stating flatly before anything else. Every product here is delivered by needle, IM or IV, which shifts a real responsibility onto the buyer to know what they are doing with it. This is not a supplement you leave on the kitchen counter and forget about.
That is the line VitaminQuick has to hold, because a self-administered injectable asks far more of a customer than a multivitamin ever does. The site is selling a method as much as a molecule, and a first-time buyer needs to be honest with themselves about whether they have the training, or the steady hand, for it. For anyone who does, the appeal is plain enough: clinic-style dosing without the clinic appointment or the clinic markup.
The core injectables
The line-up is coherent for what it is. Vitamin B12 Methylcobalamin is pitched for energy and mood, Lipotropic B-Complex as a fat burner and metabolism aid, Vitamin C for immunity and energy, NAD+ for cellular energy and healthy aging, D3 Cholecalciferol for bone health and immunity, and Biotin for hair, skin, and nails. Combo Packs bundle several together for buyers who want more than one at a time.
It is a tidy catalogue that maps neatly onto the wellness trends driving demand right now, and VitaminQuick has plainly built the range around what people are already searching for rather than around a single clinical niche.
Each product carries a clear intended benefit, which at least keeps the shopping straightforward, even where the science behind the claims sits well outside the site's own power to prove. NAD+ and the lipotropic B-complex are the two riding the strongest current wellness hype, and a buyer chasing anti-aging or fat-loss results should weigh that intended-use language as a seller's pitch, not as a settled medical claim.
What backs the claims
The trust signals sit lighter than a product category involving needles really warrants. There is confidence in the copy, and rather less in the way of hard, checkable backing behind it.
VitaminQuick states that its suppliers are 9001 certified and that products go through quality checks, and the tagline promises top-quality vitamins, people-first service, and prices that make sense. As marketing, it is friendly and clear. As reassurance for someone about to inject a substance, it stays surface-level, and a cautious buyer will notice the space between the warmth of the language and the thinness of the evidence sitting under it.
Certification claims
The 9001 reference points toward an ISO quality-management standard applied to the supplier, which counts for something. It is, though, a claim VitaminQuick makes about itself and its own supply chain, not an independent certificate a shopper can click through and verify on the spot. For an injectable, a careful buyer might reasonably want more than a number: batch documentation, clearer sourcing, explicit dosing guidance, some visible sign of pharmacist or clinical oversight.
What is published stays high-level, and it asks for a fair amount of trust up front from a customer with no easy way to check any of it.
Getting hold of them
Contact runs through a Contact Us page at the /pages/contact-us path, with a newsletter signup on the homepage, but the homepage and about-page content pulled up no direct phone number, email, or physical address. Reaching a human means clicking through to the form.
For a company selling something a customer puts into their own muscle or vein, thicker and more visible contact detail would go a long way, and its absence is a fair mark against VitaminQuick on the transparency front. A buyer who runs into trouble mid-course wants a number to call, not a web form and a wait.
A reputation that lives on another domain
This is the part that needs the most care, and it is easy to get wrong. Almost every third-party review that surfaces in a search is attached to a related domain, vitaminquick.com, a US operation listed out of Miami, Florida, and not to the vitaminquick.co.uk site under review here.
The distinction is not pedantic. Credit or blame aimed at the wrong domain would hand a UK shopper a false picture of the site they are really buying from. VitaminQuick, as a name, spans at least two web addresses, and only one of them is the subject here.
Reviews for the .com, not the .co.uk
On that American domain, Trustpilot shows roughly nine or ten customer reviews, Glassdoor carries six employee reviews for the Miami operation, Smart.Reviews lists a 3.7 out of five drawn from two reviews, and Scamadviser's automated check reads the site as very likely legitimate rather than a scam. Taken together that is mildly reassuring, yet none of it can be cleanly assigned to the UK storefront. Nothing in the search trail settles whether the .co.uk site is the same operator, a licensed regional counterpart, or an unrelated business trading on a similar name and identical product line.
Crediting the UK arm with the American domain's record would be guesswork dressed up as evidence, and a responsible buyer should treat the two as separate until told otherwise. A short message to the contact form asking who operates the .co.uk store, and where its stock ships from, would clear up most of this in a single reply, and it is a reasonable thing to ask before a first order goes in.
So the verdict has to stay guarded. The VitaminQuick catalogue is clear and internally consistent, the pricing message is friendly, and the underlying idea will land with a specific, self-directed buyer who already knows their way around injections. Against that sit three real gaps: the contact trail runs shallow, the quality assurances rest on the company's own word, and the reassuring reviews belong to a different domain, so VitaminQuick has not yet earned that reputation under its own UK name.
A buyer comfortable self-injecting and prepared to do their own homework on sourcing may still find the range useful, but independent proof of this specific storefront's standing simply is not there yet, and that absence is harder to shrug off for something delivered by needle instead of swallowed as a tablet.
Business address
VitaminQuick
1160 NE 191st St,
Miami,
FL
33179
United States
Contact details
Phone: (305) 570-7777