Fish don't actually make omega-3. They accumulate it from algae - either by eating algae directly (small fish like sardines and anchovies) or by eating smaller fish that ate algae. Algae is the original source.
This means algae oil isn't a compromise or an alternative. It's literally the same source. The question is whether there are practical differences in the final product that should influence your choice.
What Both Supplements Provide
Both fish oil and algae oil provide EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) - the two forms of omega-3 with the strongest health evidence. For a full explanation of what these do, see what are omega-3 fatty acids.
The key comparison: ALA from plant foods (flaxseed, chia, walnuts) converts to EPA and DHA poorly - typically under 15% conversion to EPA, under 1% to DHA. Both fish oil and algae oil provide preformed EPA and DHA that don't require conversion.
Bioavailability: Are They Equally Absorbed?
The most important question for efficacy is whether algae oil raises blood EPA and DHA levels as effectively as fish oil.
A 2010 study in Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids directly compared DHA from algal oil vs DHA from cooked salmon. The DHA from both sources raised plasma DHA levels equivalently - bioavailability was statistically indistinguishable.
A 2012 study in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association compared algae DHA supplements to cooked salmon in vegetarian subjects over 8 weeks. Again, equivalent increases in plasma DHA.
A 2014 randomised crossover trial in healthy adults found no significant difference in plasma EPA and DHA levels between algae oil and fish oil supplementation at equivalent doses.
Verdict: bioavailability is equivalent. Algae oil is not a weaker alternative to fish oil for raising blood omega-3 levels.
EPA vs DHA Content: An Important Difference
Traditional fish oil supplements contain both EPA and DHA in varying ratios (often 3:2 EPA:DHA or higher EPA). This matters because EPA has the strongest evidence for anti-inflammatory and cardiovascular effects (the REDUCE-IT trial used pure EPA).
Many early algae oil supplements were DHA-heavy with little EPA - because the algae strains used (primarily Schizochytrium sp.) produce more DHA than EPA. This created a legitimate practical difference: fish oil supplements often had more EPA per capsule.
This has changed. Newer algae oil formulations specifically cultivate high-EPA algae strains or combine EPA-producing and DHA-producing algae. Many current algae omega-3 products now provide similar EPA:DHA ratios to fish oil.
Check the label for EPA content specifically, not just total omega-3. If your goal is anti-inflammatory effects or cardiovascular risk reduction (where EPA has the most evidence), choose a product with meaningful EPA alongside DHA.
Purity and Contaminants
This is where algae oil has a genuine advantage.
Fish accumulate not just omega-3 but also environmental contaminants: methylmercury, PCBs, dioxins, and microplastics that build up through the food chain (bioaccumulation). Larger fish higher in the food chain (tuna, salmon) accumulate more than smaller fish (sardines, anchovies).
Quality fish oil manufacturers purify their oil through molecular distillation to remove these contaminants. A good fish oil supplement tested by third-party labs (IFOS, GOED certified) has very low or undetectable contaminant levels.
Algae is grown in controlled land-based environments and doesn't accumulate environmental contaminants. The contamination issue doesn't exist.
For most people buying quality fish oil, the contamination risk is low. For pregnant women, children, or people who prefer additional certainty, algae oil is cleaner without needing to verify a brand's testing.
Sustainability
This is the environmental case for algae oil.
Approximately 75-80% of global fish oil production comes from small pelagic fish (anchovies, sardines, herring, menhaden) caught specifically for reduction into fish meal and oil. These "forage fish" are also critical as food sources for larger predators in marine ecosystems.
Algae omega-3 is produced in fermentation tanks on land, using minimal water and no ocean resources. The environmental footprint per gram of EPA+DHA is significantly lower.
For people who factor sustainability into purchasing decisions, algae oil is the clearly better choice.
Cost Comparison
Fish oil is cheaper - typically significantly. A month's supply of quality fish oil (1g EPA+DHA daily) from a reputable brand runs approximately £10-20/month. Quality algae oil providing equivalent EPA+DHA is typically £20-35/month.
The cost premium for algae oil reflects the more complex production process. For budget-conscious supplementation without other reasons to prefer algae oil, fish oil from a tested, certified brand is a practical choice.
Who Should Choose Each
Choose algae omega-3 if:
- You're vegan or vegetarian
- You're pregnant and want to avoid any contamination risk
- You're supplementing for a child
- You have a fish allergy
- Sustainability is a priority
- You prefer a product that doesn't have a fish aftertaste (algae oil is typically flavourless)
Choose fish oil if:
- You want the most cost-effective option
- You eat fish and have no particular concerns about the fish-derived source
- You want access to a wider range of EPA:DHA ratios and concentrations
- You prefer the larger evidence base specifically in fish oil trials
What to Look for in Either Product
Fish oil:
- Total EPA and DHA per serving (not total fish oil weight)
- Third-party testing certification: IFOS (International Fish Oil Standards) or GOED certification
- Triglyceride form vs ethyl ester form - triglyceride form is better absorbed (~50% better) but more expensive; ethyl ester is common and acceptable
- Oxidation: rancid fish oil is both less effective and potentially harmful. Check for a fresh, mild smell (not strong fish odour). Enteric coating helps prevent fishy burps and oxidation.
Algae oil:
- EPA + DHA content (not just DHA)
- Third-party testing for omega-3 content and purity
- Form: most algae oils come as softgels with triglyceride-form omega-3
For both: Target 500-1,000mg of combined EPA+DHA daily for general health; up to 2,000-4,000mg for cardiovascular risk reduction (the latter requires medical consultation).
Comparison Table
| Feature | Fish Oil | Algae Oil |
|---|---|---|
| EPA and DHA content | Both present, high EPA options | DHA-dominant traditionally; EPA options now exist |
| Bioavailability | High | Equivalent to fish oil |
| Contamination risk | Low (quality brands), higher unprocessed | Minimal |
| Sustainability | Moderate concern | Low environmental impact |
| Vegan-friendly | No | Yes |
| Cost | Lower | Higher |
| Aftertaste | Fish burps possible | Typically none |
| Evidence base | Extensive (decades) | Growing, currently equivalent on bioavailability |

