The UK supplement market is full of collagen products making big claims. Most of them aren't worth your money.
The reality is that most collagen supplements fail men in one of three ways: wrong type for their goals, underdosed serving sizes hidden behind impressive-looking packaging, or unnecessary extras that dilute the collagen content itself. Knowing what to look for cuts through all of it.
This guide covers the four things that actually determine whether a collagen supplement works for men — so you can choose based on substance, not marketing.
Shop Revayo CollagenGet the Right Type for Your Goals
Not all collagen types do the same job. There are over 28 types of collagen in the human body, but for men focused on joints, training recovery, and connective tissue health, two types matter most.
Type I collagen is the most abundant in the body — found in tendons, ligaments, bones, and skin. It's the primary structural collagen for everything load-bearing. Type III collagen works alongside Type I in connective tissue and plays a role in tissue elasticity and gut lining integrity.
The best collagen for most men contains both Type I and III — which is why hydrolysed bovine collagen is the most practical choice. Marine collagen provides Type I only and is better suited to skin-focused goals. Our breakdown of marine vs bovine collagen covers this in detail.
The Dose Has to Actually Mean Something
This is where most UK collagen supplements fall short — and where men get most misled. A product can look premium, have great branding, and charge a high price while delivering a collagen dose that's too small to produce meaningful results.
Human studies investigating collagen peptides for joint and connective tissue benefits consistently use daily doses of 10–15g. Many products on the market provide 2–5g per serving — often buried in a "blend" alongside other ingredients. At those doses, you're unlikely to see the results the research supports.
Always check the actual collagen content on the nutrition label — not just what's on the front of the pack. Revayo Prime provides 14.77g of hydrolysed bovine collagen per serving — clearly stated, no blends, nothing hidden.
Supporting Nutrients — What Actually Helps
Some ingredients genuinely support collagen's effectiveness. Others are just there to make the ingredient list look impressive while diluting the collagen content.
Vitamin C is the one supporting nutrient worth prioritising. It's an essential cofactor in collagen synthesis — required for the hydroxylation of proline and lysine that stabilises the collagen structure. Without sufficient Vitamin C, newly formed collagen fibres are weaker and less stable. Including it alongside collagen is well-supported by the science.
Everything else — hyaluronic acid, biotin, exotic botanicals — may have their own benefits, but they're not what drives collagen's structural effects. Be cautious of products that lead with these extras while quietly reducing the collagen dose to accommodate them.
Revayo Boost is designed as a complement to Prime — adding targeted micronutrients without compromising the collagen dose in either product.
Formulated for What Men Actually Need
Most collagen products are still formulated with women's beauty goals as the primary use case — skin, hair, and nails. The marketing is evolving, but the formulations often haven't. A product repositioned for men with new packaging but the same 5g dose isn't meaningfully different.
What active men need from a collagen supplement is straightforward: a meaningful daily dose of the right collagen types, clean formulation with no unnecessary fillers, and a format easy enough to take consistently every day without thinking about it.
Unflavoured powder that dissolves in anything — coffee, water, a shake — removes all the friction from daily use. Flavoured products or capsules often make consistency harder, not easier.
Your collagen checklist:
Ticks Every Box.
Revayo Prime — 14.77g hydrolysed bovine collagen + Vitamin C. No fillers. Made in the UK.
Shop Revayo Prime →Further reading: Marine vs bovine collagen — The science of collagen for men