Comparison · Weight loss
HepatoBurn vs Mitolyn: Skeptic's 2026 Comparison
HepatoBurn rests on real liver compounds; Mitolyn rests on a "mitochondrial" hand-wave. Compare what each hides.
Side by side
| Field | HepatoBurn | Mitolyn |
|---|---|---|
| Verdict | Conditional | Skeptical |
| Rating (out of 10) | 5.0 | 4.6 |
| One-time price | $69 | $79 |
| Best bundle price | $49 per bottle | $49 per bottle |
| Top cons (Skeptic Desk) |
|
|
| Refund mechanism | 60-day refund — universal checkout-processor enforced | 60-day refund — universal checkout-processor enforced |
| Dose transparency | Limited — key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify | Limited — key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify |
| Skeptic Desk note | HepatoBurn occupies a rare position in this category: two of its five ingredients (berberine and silymarin) have genuine human RCT evidence at the right doses for the claimed mechanisms. The problem is that neither dose is disclosed. A proprietary blend concealing berberine is not a minor inconvenience — berberine's therapeutic window is dose-sensitive and meaningfully different at 500 mg versus 1,500 mg. Until those numbers appear on the label, this earns a Cautious rather than a Conditional. | Mitolyn upgrades Puravive's 'exotic plants' angle to 'purple plants' and its 'brown fat' claim to 'mitochondrial biogenesis.' Same sales page skeleton, better ingredient list. Rhodiola, astaxanthin, and amla have real human evidence — but the undisclosed blend doses are the same structural problem Puravive has. |
| Subscription / autoship | One-time purchase listed | One-time purchase listed |
| Full review | Read the HepatoBurn review | Read the Mitolyn review |
The skeptic's call
Neither HepatoBurn nor Mitolyn clears the bar for an unconditional recommendation — both sit in the Skeptical-to-Conditional band that defines roughly nine out of ten ClickBank-channel supplements. HepatoBurn rests on real liver compounds; Mitolyn rests on a "mitochondrial" hand-wave. Compare what each hides. Where they actually differ: HepatoBurn occupies a rare position in this category: two of its five ingredients (berberine and silymarin) have genuine human RCT evidence at the right doses for the claimed mechanisms. By contrast, Mitolyn reads as mitolyn upgrades puravive's 'exotic plants' angle to 'purple plants' and its 'brown fat' claim to 'mitochondrial biogenesis. HepatoBurn is the marginally less-bad pick if you are buyers specifically interested in berberine or silymarin who want a single-capsule convenience and are willing to accept dose opacity or if you are people with elevated liver enzymes who have discussed supplementation with a clinician and want an over-the-counter starting point. Mitolyn is the marginally less-bad pick if you are readers interested in the individual ingredients (rhodiola, astaxanthin, amla) who want a single convenience capsule and will accept undisclosed dosing. Skip both if you are taking metformin or any sulfonylurea — berberine has additive glycemic effects and undisclosed dosing makes co-management impossible; you want verifiable clinical doses of berberine — 1,500 mg/day from a transparent single-ingredient supplement costs roughly one-third of hepatoburn's price; you want to take rhodiola or astaxanthin at evidence-based doses — single-ingredient supplements are far cheaper and verifiable. On the Skeptic Desk's own scoring, HepatoBurn is the less-bad option, separated from Mitolyn by verdict tier (Conditional vs Skeptical). That is not a recommendation — it is a tiebreaker. If neither best-for profile fits you, the cheaper, more transparent commodity stack remains the better-evidence option than either bottle. Read the full reviews before clicking either checkout.
Buyer questions
- Which is cheaper, HepatoBurn or Mitolyn?
- Both products list at roughly the same price tier (around $39–69 per bottle depending on bundle size). Verify final pricing on the seller checkout — bundle discounts, upsells, and shipping change the math more than the headline number.
- Which has the better refund?
- Identical, on paper. Both products are sold through the same third-party ClickBank-style checkout, which enforces a 60-day money-back guarantee on every product on the platform regardless of what the seller says. You file the refund with checkout support, not the seller. We have run real refund cycles on multiple products in this category in 2026 and the mechanism has held up. The harder issue is whether either product enrolls you in autoship or recurring billing — verify that on the order page before paying.
- Are both real products, or is one a scam?
- Both HepatoBurn and Mitolyn are real products with real fulfillment and real refund mechanics. That is the legal definition of "not a scam." The harder question — whether the formula does what the sales page implies — is what each of our full reviews tries to answer. Neither product currently has a published clinical trial on the finished formula, which is the industry default in the ClickBank channel.
- Should I just buy a commodity equivalent instead?
- Often, yes. The Skeptic Desk's default recommendation across this category is the same: if you can identify the one or two ingredients in either HepatoBurn or Mitolyn that actually have published evidence at studied doses, you can usually source those individually from a commodity brand at 20–40% of the monthly cost. The reason buyers still pick the bottle is format and convenience, not evidence. That is a defensible choice — just price it honestly against the alternative.
- HepatoBurn vs Mitolyn: which one would the Skeptic Desk pick?
- Neither, if a clinically-dosed commodity stack is on the table. HepatoBurn is the less-bad of the two by verdict tier (Conditional vs Skeptical), but "less bad" is a tiebreaker for buyers who have already decided to buy a bottle in this category. Read both full reviews — linked above — before clicking any checkout.