Scam or legit

Is it a scam? The honest answer for 370 supplements people search for.

Almost every "is [product] a scam" search ends up on a sales page disguised as a review. This index does the opposite. For every product below, we answer the same question — is it a scam — using the same buyer-protection lens: refund mechanics, marketing red flags, formula transparency, and what the checkout actually does to your card. Pick a name to get the verdict.

  • 0Recommend
  • 79Conditional
  • 182Skeptical
  • 109Avoid

How we answer "is it a scam"

  1. The refund test. Every supplement on this list is sold through a third-party checkout that enforces a 60-day money-back guarantee independent of the seller. If you cannot reach a human at the processor and get refunded inside 60 days, that's a scam signal — but it's also rare on this network.
  2. The marketing teardown. Stock-photo testimonials, unnamed scientists, countdown timers that reset, "doctor endorsements" with no PubMed footprint. We score these and surface the worst three to five on each product's page.
  3. The formula plausibility check. Is the active ingredient disclosed at a clinical dose, hidden inside a proprietary blend, or present in trace amounts? This is usually where "not a scam, but not worth it either" verdicts come from.
  4. The price-per-dose math. If the same active ingredient is available for one-tenth the price from a commodity brand at a verified clinical dose, the supplement is rarely a scam — but it's often a bad buy.

Pick a product for the verdict