S4626Referred to Committee

A bill to amend title 10, United States Code, to direct the Secretary of Defense to publish a list of dietary supplement ingredients prohibited for use by members of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes.

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Introduced
In Committee
3
Passed One Chamber
4
Passed Both
5
Signed into Law
119th
Congress
2026-05-21
Introduced
0
Cosponsors
S
Type

Sponsor

Mike Lee
Mike Lee
Republican · UT · Senator
Votes with party: 35.0% (314 recorded votes)

Full profile: /officials/L000577

Source: Congress.gov · FEC

Cosponsors (0)

Members who have signed on to support this bill since introduction. Source: Congress.gov.

No cosponsors on record. Bills can pass without cosponsors — this often means the sponsor introduced the bill alone, either because it's a messaging bill, a chairman's mark, or simply early in the legislative cycle.

Latest Action

The most recent step in the bill's legislative path. Committee Activity below shows referrals and reports; the full action-by-action history including floor proceedings lives at Congress.gov →

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.

2026-05-21

Source: Congress.gov

Committee Activity

Currently in

Plain-English Summary

The Department of Defense would be required to create and publish an official list of dietary supplement ingredients that military members are not allowed to use, helping service members know which supplements could get them in trouble or affect their health and readiness. This would give the military a clear way to communicate which ingredients are banned due to safety concerns, performance-enhancing drug policies, or other military standards. The rule would apply to all active duty, reserve, and National Guard members.

AI-assisted summary generated from the official bill metadata (title, subjects, actions) sourced from Congress.gov. Cached and reviewed. Always verify against the official text linked below.

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