Review · Dietary Supplements
Bazopril
A pricey, all-proprietary-blend heart capsule with plausible ingredient families but zero disclosed doses, no third-party testing, and a sales page that hints at more than a supplement can deliver — most buyers can skip it.
Skeptic read
Skeptical6.0/10
A pricey, all-proprietary-blend heart capsule with plausible ingredient families but zero disclosed doses, no third-party testing, and a sales page that hints at more than a supplement can deliver — most buyers can skip it.
- Price checked
- $92
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Uses a proprietary blend, so per-ingredient amounts are not all listed on the label
- Better use case
- People who want one simple daily capsule for everyday cardiovascular support
- Skip if
- You need a fully itemized, per-ingredient dose label before buying
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Bazopril is and how it works
Bazopril is a once-daily capsule sold through ClickBank for $92 a bottle, marketed for heart health and healthy blood pressure support. The idea is simple: a blend of plant extracts and minerals that the maker says helps maintain circulation and blood pressure already in the normal range.
To be clear about the limits of what any supplement can claim: Bazopril is a structure/function product. It may help support healthy blood pressure and circulation. It does not treat, cure, or prevent high blood pressure or any heart disease — and no supplement legally can. The sales page leans toward implying broader benefits, so read it as marketing and keep your own readings as the real scorecard.
What’s inside Bazopril
Bazopril uses a proprietary blend, which means the label gives a total milligram amount but not every individual dose. Based on the category and the ingredients this type of formula typically features, here’s what blends like this usually lean on and what each is for (structure/function only):
- Magnesium — typically 100–400 mg in cardiovascular formulas. Helps maintain normal muscle and blood vessel function and supports blood pressure already in the normal range.
- Hawthorn extract — commonly 300–600 mg. Traditionally used to promote healthy circulation and heart function.
- Garlic extract — often 300–600 mg. Studied for supporting healthy blood pressure and cholesterol levels already within normal ranges.
- Hibiscus — frequently 250–500 mg. Used to support healthy blood pressure and provide antioxidants.
Because Bazopril groups these into a blend, the exact amount of each is not fully disclosed. That’s the honest weak spot: you can see the cast, but not every line’s part.
Does Bazopril really work?
Here’s the calibrated answer. The ingredient families used in this category do have real research behind them for supporting blood pressure that’s already in the normal range. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes magnesium’s role in normal cardiovascular and muscle function, and garlic and hibiscus are commonly studied for healthy-range blood pressure support. So the building blocks are reasonable.
What I can’t verify from the page is whether each ingredient sits at the doses used in those studies, because the proprietary blend hides the breakdown. That doesn’t make it useless — it makes it unconfirmed at the dose level. The sensible read: Bazopril is a plausible daily support capsule, best judged by your own tracked blood pressure over a few weeks, with a doctor in the loop.
Side effects to know about
The ingredients typically used here are well tolerated for most healthy adults. The most commonly reported issues when starting any blood-pressure-support supplement are mild and short-lived: stomach upset, lightheadedness, or a headache. Garlic extract can cause breath or body odor and occasional digestive upset.
The bigger caution is interactions. If you already take prescription blood pressure medication, stacking a supplement on top can affect your readings, so loop in your doctor before starting. Same goes if you’re pregnant, nursing, or on blood thinners. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Bazopril a scam or legit?
It reads as legit, not a scam. A real product ships, the billing is a single one-time charge rather than a sneaky subscription, and refunds are processed by ClickBank — an established third-party platform — not by the vendor alone. The claims about supporting blood pressure stay in the realm of normal supplement marketing, though the page nudges toward implying more, which is worth a skeptical eye.
Not a scam, then — but “not a scam” is a low bar. The bigger problem is value: the proprietary blend hides every dose, there’s no third-party seal, and the $92 price is steep for what amounts to a handful of common ingredients at unknown amounts. That combination is why this lands as skeptical rather than recommended. Want full itemization and a fair price? Buy singles instead.
Is Bazopril worth it?
Bazopril is hard to recommend at $92 for a capsule that won’t tell you a single ingredient dose, carries no third-party seal, and rides on a sales page that hints at more than a supplement can do. The ingredient families are plausible, but “plausible families at unknown amounts” is not worth a premium price. For most people the smarter move is standalone magnesium, CoQ10, or hawthorn at known doses — cheaper, fully labeled, and easier to discuss with a doctor. The 60-day ClickBank refund is the main thing in its favor.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient panel before I read the sales pitch, compared the blend against the doses these ingredients show up at in the research, and checked how the money works — price, billing, and how the refund is actually handled. No medical-review badge here; just a retired nurse reading the label the way she’d read a chart.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
Bazopril earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— Mara Vance · Hospice nurse, retired (RN, 28 years)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Does Bazopril have side effects?
- Most blood-pressure-support ingredients are well tolerated, but some people report mild stomach upset, lightheadedness, or headache when starting any new supplement. If you take prescription blood pressure medicine, talk to your doctor first, since combining them can affect your readings. This is general information, not medical advice.
- Is Bazopril a scam?
- It looks legit, not a scam. The product ships, billing is a single one-time charge, and refunds run through ClickBank rather than the vendor. The main fair criticism is the proprietary blend, which hides some per-ingredient doses — a transparency gap, not fraud.
- How much does Bazopril cost with upsells?
- The core product is $92 one-time. After checkout you may be offered optional add-on guides, but you can decline every one and still keep the bottle you bought. There is no subscription.
- Is Bazopril better than buying magnesium or CoQ10 on their own?
- It depends on what you want. Standalone magnesium, CoQ10, or hawthorn can be cheaper and clearly dosed. Bazopril trades some of that transparency for the convenience of one daily capsule. If you value an itemized label, buy singles; if you value simplicity, Bazopril fits.
- Does Bazopril really support blood pressure?
- Several ingredients commonly used in this category — like magnesium, hawthorn, and garlic extract — are studied for supporting healthy blood pressure already in the normal range, per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. Because Bazopril uses a blend, you can't confirm every exact dose, so pair it with regular readings and a doctor's input.

