
The global feed vitamins market is expanding steadily as livestock and aquaculture producers focus more on balanced nutrition, animal health, and productivity. Feed vitamins — micronutrients added to animal feed to support growth, immunity, metabolism, and reproductive performance — are increasingly seen as essential components of modern animal diets rather than optional additives. The market was valued at approximately USD 1.85 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 2.45 billion by 2030, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of about 5.7 % over this period.
Growth is driven by rising demand for healthier, performance‑oriented animal feeds in poultry, swine, ruminants, and aquaculture operations as producers seek better feed efficiency and stronger immunity in livestock.
Asia Pacific is expected to be the fastest‑growing regional market, fueled by rapid expansion in poultry, swine, and fish farming in countries such as China, India, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia. Water‑soluble vitamins (e.g., B‑complex, vitamin C) are projected to grow the fastest globally due to their role in energy metabolism, stress management, and immune support. Dry vitamin forms dominate the market due to their stability, longer shelf life, and ease of blending in large‑scale feed production.
Major global players — including ADM, BASF SE, dsm‑firmenich, Nutreco, and Adisseo — are strengthening their positions through innovation, scale, and distribution reach, while regional and niche specialists focus on species‑specific solutions. Feed formulations are becoming more precise, with nutrient consistency and performance nutrition taking center stage for high‑intensity farming systems.
Feed vitamins play a crucial role in modern animal farming by enhancing growth rates, improving immunity, and optimizing feed conversion efficiency — especially as global demand for animal protein continues to rise. The shift toward structured, performance‑centric feeding practices positions feed vitamins as key drivers of market growth through 2030 and beyond.
