Review · Other Supplements

Bridport Health Liver Support

A liver support supplement that hides its ingredient list behind a $91 paywall. No label, no doses, no way to verify if it does anything — and that makes it a hard pass until the vendor publishes the formula.

Verdict Skeptical 3.2/10
Bridport Health Liver Support review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.2/10

A liver support supplement that hides its ingredient list behind a $91 paywall. No label, no doses, no way to verify if it does anything — and that makes it a hard pass until the vendor publishes the formula.

Price checked
$91
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
The sales page shows zero ingredient names, let alone doses — you don't know what you're swallowing
Better use case
No one — not until the ingredient list is public. If you're willing to gamble $91 on an unknown formula and can afford to lose it, the refund window technically gives you an out, but you'll likely eat the cost.
Skip if
You want to know what you're putting in your body — the sales page hides everything
Evidence file
1 source attached

What the sales page promises

Bridport Health Liver Support is positioned as a targeted liver aid for people who drink alcohol. The pitch: if you’re worried about what drinking is doing to your liver, this supplement was designed for you. That’s the entire value proposition — a product tailored to alcohol-related liver stress.

It’s a smart angle. Alcohol metabolism produces acetaldehyde, depletes glutathione, and triggers inflammation. A well-formulated supplement could theoretically support those pathways. The problem is that the sales page doesn’t tell you how this product does any of that. Not a single ingredient name, not a single dose, not a single mechanism. You’re asked to trust a promise with no evidence.

What you actually get (and what’s missing)

One bottle of capsules arrives in the mail. The count isn’t stated on the sales page — 30? 60? 90? You won’t know until you open the package. There’s no digital guide, no meal plan, no community access. Just the bottle.

What’s missing is the label. A legitimate supplement company leads with the Supplement Facts panel. It’s the first thing a skeptical buyer looks for, because it lets you cross-check doses against clinical literature. Bridport Health hides that panel behind the buy button. That’s not an oversight — it’s a choice. And it means you can’t answer the most basic question: “Is there enough of anything in here to matter?”

The price and the ClickBank refund

At checkout, you’ll pay $91 one-time. No recurring billing surfaced on the date we checked. That’s a high price for a single bottle of any liver supplement, especially when the label is a mystery. For comparison, a transparent, high-dose milk thistle product (standardized to 80% silymarin) runs $15–$25. A well-dosed NAC supplement costs under $20. If Bridport Health contains a proprietary blend of common liver ingredients, $91 is a markup you can’t justify without seeing the doses.

The 60-day ClickBank refund window applies, but refunds on physical supplements work differently than on digital products. You’ll likely need to return the bottle — even if opened — and the vendor may deduct shipping costs. ClickBank processes the refund, but the vendor sets the return policy. We’ve seen supplement refunds get hung up on “product must be unopened” clauses. The sales page doesn’t clarify this, and that ambiguity is a risk. If you’re counting on a no-questions-asked refund, confirm the return terms before ordering.

The ingredient problem

Liver support supplements typically lean on a few well-studied ingredients:

  • Milk thistle (silymarin): The most researched botanical for liver health. Clinical doses range from 200–400 mg of a standardized extract (70–80% silymarin) taken 2–3 times daily. Underdosing is common in cheap formulas.
  • N-acetyl cysteine (NAC): A glutathione precursor. Effective doses start at 600 mg and often go to 1,200–1,800 mg daily. It’s used in hospital settings for acetaminophen overdose, but for everyday liver support, the evidence is mixed.
  • Artichoke leaf extract: Some data on bile flow and antioxidant effects. Typical doses: 300–640 mg.
  • Dandelion root, turmeric, alpha-lipoic acid: Less consistent evidence, but plausible.

Without the label, we can’t tell you whether Bridport Health includes any of these, let alone at doses that match the literature. The sales page doesn’t cite a single clinical trial or even hint at the mechanism. It relies entirely on the emotional weight of “you drink, your liver needs help” — and that’s not enough to justify $91.

There’s a real risk here: if the doses are too low, you’re paying for a placebo. If the formula includes something you’re allergic to or that interacts with medications (NAC can interact with nitroglycerin, for example), you won’t know until after you’ve swallowed it. The opacity isn’t just inconvenient — it’s medically irresponsible.

Who should buy, who should skip

Skip this if you have any standard for supplement transparency. If you won’t buy a product without reading the label, this one disqualifies itself immediately. Also skip it if you’re looking for a clinically dosed, affordable liver support — there are dozens of transparent options at a third of the price.

Only consider this if you’ve exhausted free liver health basics (hydration, reducing alcohol, dietary improvements) and are willing to gamble $91 on an unknown formula with a refund process that may not be frictionless. That’s a very small group. And even then, I’d wait until the vendor publishes the Supplement Facts panel. There’s no reason to buy blind.

The honest read

Bridport Health Liver Support is a $91 bet on a bottle with no label. The marketing angle is specific enough to catch a worried drinker’s attention, but the execution is a black box. In the supplement industry, hiding ingredients is almost always a sign that the formula wouldn’t stand up to scrutiny — either the doses are too low, or the ingredients are too common to justify the price.

I would not buy this. Not because liver support is a bad idea, but because you can’t assess whether this product does anything at all. If the vendor published a label with properly dosed milk thistle, NAC, and artichoke, I’d be willing to run the numbers. Until then, $91 is too much to pay for hope.

— Mara Vance

Here's what I'd actually do

If you opened this at 11 pm and the page made the supplement look like an answer to something larger:

Close this tab. Bridport Health Liver Support is in the band where the marketing is doing the heavy lifting and the formula is not. There are evidence-based versions of every promise on that sales page, and most of them cost a third of the price with full label transparency.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you have a diagnosed condition that this product is implicitly addressing. See a clinician. A $69 bottle does not replace a $0-with-insurance lab panel.

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.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

Does Bridport Health Liver Support actually work?
There's no way to answer that because the ingredient list isn't published on the sales page. Common liver-support ingredients like milk thistle and NAC have some clinical backing, but only at specific doses. Without a label, you're betting $91 on a mystery blend.
Is the 60-day refund real on supplements?
ClickBank's 60-day refund policy is real and applies to all purchases. However, supplement vendors often require you to return the product — even opened bottles — to process the refund, and they may deduct shipping. It's not the frictionless 'just email us' refund you get with digital products.
What's in Bridport Health Liver Support?
We don't know. The sales page describes the product as 'specially created to support those who drink alcohol' but doesn't list a single ingredient. That's a red flag. Any legitimate supplement company leads with the formula.
Why is it so expensive?
At $91 per bottle, it's priced like a premium, high-dose, multi-ingredient formula with clinical backing. But since the label is hidden, you can't compare it to alternatives. Many transparent liver supplements with milk thistle, NAC, and artichoke cost $20–$40.