Targeted supplements for unsexy problems.
Bloat that won't quit. Sleep that won't come. The 3pm crash no coffee fixes. Luvia is a small, clinically dosed line built for the days your body isn't playing along — formulated for women, tested at third-party labs, shipped from a facility in Utah.
A small shelf, chosen carefully.
Not sure where to start?
Answer six short questions about how you sleep, how you feel, and what you want to change. We'll build a routine of one to three products that makes sense for you — no upsell, no guessing.
Find your LuviaClinically studied doses. Nothing you can't pronounce.
We build every formula from the study, not the marketing deck. If a clinical trial used 600mg of KSM-66 ashwagandha, our capsule contains 600mg. If a dose was only tested at 100mg, we don't round it up to 500mg to look impressive on the label.
Each SKU is third-party tested twice — once at our manufacturer and once at an independent lab — for heavy metals, microbial contamination and active-ingredient identity. The Certificates of Analysis are public.
Read the ingredient index →The bar is honest reviews from people who stayed.
The Sage Green is the first ashwagandha that actually evened out my evenings. I'm not wired, I'm not groggy — I just feel like the volume knob got turned down half a turn.
I've tried every collagen on the shelf. Peach Sorbet is the only one I've re-ordered without thinking — it doesn't taste like anything, which is exactly what I want in my coffee.
Love the quiz — I'm not a supplement person and it didn't try to sell me five bottles. Got the magnesium, that's it. Sleeping better in a week, not making it weird.
I built Luvia because I couldn't find a supplement line that treated my body like a grown-up's. Everything was pink, sweet, and under-dosed — or brown, joyless, and priced for Wall Street. I wanted something in between.
Every formula here started as a spreadsheet of clinical trials and ended as a capsule you can actually stomach in the morning. That's it. That's the whole pitch.
Stay in touch.
A short, thoughtful email — maybe once a month. New formulas, ingredient research, the occasional rejected prototype. No discounts disguised as news.