Calculate when your tablet medications, capsules, and vitamin supplements expire. Enter the manufacturing date and shelf life to get the exact expiry date immediately.
Tablets and capsules are the most commonly used dosage forms of pharmaceutical products worldwide. Understanding their shelf life and expiry dates is crucial for both safety and therapeutic effectiveness. An expired tablet may have reduced potency, meaning you are not getting the intended dose, or in rare cases, degraded compounds may cause harm.
The shelf life of tablets and capsules depends on the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), the formulation, packaging, and storage conditions. Generally, most tablet medications have a shelf life of 2–5 years from manufacture.
| Tablet / Supplement Type | Typical Shelf Life | Storage Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Standard tablets (paracetamol, ibuprofen) | 3–5 years | Cool, dry place |
| Enteric-coated tablets | 2–4 years | Away from moisture |
| Effervescent tablets | 1–2 years | Sealed container, dry |
| Capsules (hard gelatin) | 2–4 years | 15–30°C, low humidity |
| Soft gel capsules | 1–3 years | Cool, away from light |
| Multivitamin tablets | 2–3 years | Cool, dark, dry place |
| Vitamin C tablets | 2 years | Sealed container |
| Herbal tablets (Ayurvedic) | 3–5 years | Cool, dry place |
| Antibiotics (tablets) | 2–3 years | Original packaging |
Proper storage significantly affects how long a tablet remains potent and safe:
Most expired tablets become less potent rather than outright dangerous. However, some exceptions exist. Tetracycline antibiotics, for instance, can degrade into compounds that cause kidney damage. Nitroglycerin for heart conditions loses potency rapidly. Insulin and other biologics can become ineffective or harmful. Always err on the side of caution and discard expired tablets.