Stop wondering if your prenatal is enough.
The prenatal with all four active forms — folate, B12, B6, iron — and 450mg of choline.
I'm 19 weeks. Switched from the prenatal my OB gave me at 14 weeks because the iron was wrecking my stomach. The first thing I noticed was the smell — there isn't one. The second thing was at week 16 my constipation was gone. I didn't expect that. My OB asked what I switched to. I told her.
Stop wondering if your prenatal is enough.
The prenatal with all four active forms — folate, B12, B6, iron — and 450mg of choline.
The four active forms your body uses directly:
Plus 450mg VitaCholine choline (matches the daily recommendation), 200mg algae DHA, and 11 other vitamins and minerals.
Two capsules each morning with breakfast.
Take them with food and water. The whole routine takes 30 seconds. No fishy smell, no metallic burps, no aftertaste.
Drugstore prenatals — including the brand most OBs hand out — use synthetic forms of folate, B12, B6, and iron. Your body has to convert each one before it can use it.
Avolei uses the active forms directly. The price difference reflects ingredient cost. Methylated folate alone runs 5-10x more to source than folic acid. That's why most prenatals don't use it.
No fishy smell, no metallic burps, no aftertaste. We made it for the trimester when nothing smells right.
The chelated iron form (Ferrochel) shows roughly 50% less constipation than ferrous sulfate.
You order. You take it for up to 30 days. If your stomach can't tolerate it, if the smell triggers nausea, if anything about it isn't right — return the bottle for a full refund. Even if it's empty. No questions, no return shipping fee.
If you've been feeling like your prenatal isn't quite enough — you're not wrong.
Now you know what was missing.
You take your prenatal every morning. Your OB said your labs look fine. But something in the back of your head won't quite go quiet.
You're not overthinking it.
If active forms are the better choice — and they are — the natural question is why most prenatals don't use them.
The honest answer is structural. Active forms cost more to source. Most prenatal formulations on shelves today were designed before active forms were widely available, before choline guidance was updated, before the gene variant that affects folate absorption was widely understood.
The FDA doesn't require brands to upgrade — it just requires them to hit the daily value, regardless of which form delivers it.
None of this is evil. It's just inertia. The category hasn't caught up to the research, and most brands haven't had a reason to change.
This isn't theoretical. The medical literature on what happens when conversion-dependent nutrients fall short during pregnancy is decades old and unambiguous
Folate.
Most prenatals use folic acid. About 60% of women can't fully convert it.
Insufficient folate, weeks 3-4: neural tube defects.
The window doesn't reopen.
B12.
Most prenatals use cyanocobalamin. Your body converts it using folate.
Already-low folate, plus B12 stealing more of it: cumulative deficiency.
Both nutrients short, neither working.
Iron.
Most prenatals use ferrous sulfate. Absorbed at 10-15% efficiency.
Borderline iron at 12 weeks. Anemic by 24.
Linked to preterm birth. Linked to low birth weight.
Choline.
Most prenatals deliver 0-200mg. The recommendation is 450mg.
Third trimester is when fetal brain development accelerates.
Choline insufficiency in pregnancy: measurable cognitive differences in offspring.
Tap any nutrient to see why the form on the label matters.
What's on most labels: Folic acid.
What's on this one: L-5-Methyltetrahydrofolate (L-5-MTHF), 600mcg DFE.
The form your body uses without conversion. About 60% of women carry a variant of the MTHFR gene that makes folic acid conversion inefficient. Methylated folate skips that step entirely.
It costs roughly 5-10x more to source than folic acid. That's why most prenatals don't use it.
What's on most labels: Cyanocobalamin.
What's on this one: Methylcobalamin, 2.8mcg.
The form your nervous system uses directly. Pregnancy demand for B12 increases by roughly 50% to support fetal nerve and red blood cell development. B12 deficiency is also rising in plant-based diets, where the natural sources of bioavailable B12 are limited.
Methylcobalamin is the form your body uses without conversion — regardless of how much B12 you're getting from food. Cyanocobalamin (the synthetic form most prenatals use) has to be converted, and that conversion isn't 100% efficient under pregnancy demand.
What's on most labels: Pyridoxine HCl.
What's on this one: P5P (Pyridoxal-5-Phosphate), 2mg.
The active form. The same form your OB recommends taking with Unisom for morning sickness — already in your daily prenatal.
What's on most labels: Ferrous sulfate or ferrous fumarate.
What's on this one: Ferrous Bisglycinate Chelate (Ferrochel), 27mg.
The chelated form. Research suggests roughly 50% less constipation than ferrous sulfate. Better absorption, too.
Two products, ingredient by ingredient.
Two products, ingredient by ingredient.
Same choline. Same DHA. Two pills a day, just like Nature Made + Choline. The difference is the four active forms — folate, B12, B6, iron — in the forms your body uses directly. The labels look similar at a glance. They're not.
If your current prenatal already has all four active forms and you tolerate it well, you don't need to switch. We built this for women whose drugstore prenatal isn't enough — or whose premium prenatal is making them sick.
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Avolei Prenatal DHA
All four active forms
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Nature Made + Choline
Drugstore default
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Methylated folate (L-5-MTHF)
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Methylcobalamin B12 (not cyanocobalamin)
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P5P — active B6
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Chelated iron (Ferrochel) — easier on stomach
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450mg choline + 200mg algae DHA
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Third-party tested every batch
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Avolei 3-Bottle Bundle
$29.99 $39.99
Purchased on February 12th, 2026
Avolei 3-Bottle Bundle
$29.99 $39.99
Purchased on January 30th, 2026
Avolei 3-Bottle Bundle
$29.99 $39.99
Purchased on March 4th, 2026
Avolei Single Bottle
$29.99 $39.99
Purchased on February 24th, 2026
Same as your morning vitamins. No fishy smell, no metallic burps, no aftertaste. Made for the trimester when nothing smells right.
Methylated folate, methylcobalamin B12, P5P, chelated iron. No conversion required. Plus 450mg choline and 200mg algae DHA.
Don't think about it again until tomorrow. The 30-day tolerability guarantee covers you if it doesn't work — even on empty bottles.
Trying to conceive?
Start three months before. Folate timing matters most in the first 4-6 weeks of pregnancy, usually before you know you're pregnant.
Subscribe-and-save makes the cost predictable across the preconception window. Most general multivitamins use folic acid — switching to L-5-MTHF three months before trying is the move.
If your stomach can't tolerate it, send it back. Even empty. Take it for 30 days. If the smell doesn't work for you, if your stomach rejects it, if it's making your morning sickness worse — return the bottle. Even if it's empty. No questions, no return shipping fee. The reason we make this guarantee specifically on tolerability: we know what most prenatals smell like. If we got that wrong for you, that's our problem to fix.
Try It Risk-FreeIf your stomach can't tolerate it, send it back. Even empty. Take it for 30 days. If the smell doesn't work for you, if your stomach rejects it, if it's making your morning sickness worse — return the bottle. Even if it's empty. No questions, no return shipping fee. The reason we make this guarantee specifically on tolerability: we know what most prenatals smell like. If we got that wrong for you, that's our problem to fix.
Try It Risk-Free
What it looks like when you stop second-guessing it.
Six months from now, you're at your 28-week appointment. The labs come back. Your iron is at the high end of range. Your B12 is solid. Your OB asks what you're taking. You say the brand name without hesitation.
Your sister asks what's on your nightstand. You hand her the bottle. You're not the woman with three different prenatals at the bottom of the drawer anymore.
You found the one. You can finally think about something else.
Honest answers, before you switch.
Standard prenatal labs check broad markers — total iron, total B12, total folate. They don't measure how much synthetic-form folate or B12 your body is converting versus eliminating unused. "Fine" on basic labs is a low bar. Many women report feeling meaningfully different on active forms even after a "fine" result on synthetic forms. If you have the option to use the form your body uses directly, that's an upgrade worth taking.
Drugstore prenatals — including the brand most OBs hand out — use synthetic forms of folate, B12, B6, and iron. Your body has to convert each one before it can use it. Avolei uses the active forms directly. The price difference reflects ingredient cost. Methylated folate alone costs 5-10x more to source than folic acid.
If your current prenatal has the four active forms — methylated folate, methylcobalamin, P5P, chelated iron — and you tolerate it well, you don't need to switch. The buyers we built this for: women on a drugstore brand starting to wonder if it's enough, and women on a premium brand that's making them sick. If neither sounds like you, your current prenatal is doing its job.
The recommended daily intake for pregnant women is 450mg per day. Most prenatals fall well short — many have none at all, even most premium prenatals deliver 50-200mg. Choline matters specifically for fetal brain and spinal cord development. We didn't see a reason to deliver less than the actual recommendation.
The FDA doesn't approve supplements like it approves drugs. They're regulated, but in a different way. What matters is whether the bottle actually contains what the label claims, in the doses listed, free of contaminants. Every batch of Avolei is third-party tested.
Starting now is better than not starting. The first three to six weeks are the highest-leverage window for folate, but the entire first and second trimester benefit from active forms. Switching at 12 weeks with active forms is closer to optimal than continuing on synthetic forms for nine months.
Yes — start three months before you start trying. Folate timing matters specifically for neural tube formation, which happens in the first 4-6 weeks of pregnancy, usually before pregnancy is detected. Most general multivitamins use folic acid, not L-5-MTHF. Subscribe-and-save makes the cost predictable across the preconception window.
Take it for 30 days. If your stomach can't tolerate it, if the smell triggers nausea, if anything about it isn't right — return the bottle for a full refund. Even if it's empty. No questions, no return shipping fee.
Drugstore prenatals — including the brand most OBs hand out — use synthetic forms of folate, B12, B6, and iron. Your body has to convert each one before it can use it. Avolei uses the active forms directly. The price difference reflects ingredient cost. Methylated folate alone costs 5-10x more to source than folic acid.
The recommended daily intake for pregnant women is 450mg per day. Most prenatals fall well short — many have none at all, even most premium prenatals deliver 50-200mg. Choline matters specifically for fetal brain and spinal cord development. We didn't see a reason to deliver less than the actual recommendation.
Starting now is better than not starting. The first three to six weeks are the highest-leverage window for folate, but the entire first and second trimester benefit from active forms. Switching at 12 weeks with active forms is closer to optimal than continuing on synthetic forms for nine months.
Take it for 30 days. If your stomach can't tolerate it, if the smell triggers nausea, if anything about it isn't right — return the bottle for a full refund. Even if it's empty. No questions, no return shipping fee.