Review · Weight Loss
CitrusBurn
CitrusBurn is a heavily marketed citrus-and-stimulant weight-loss capsule with thin evidence behind it: it hides every per-ingredient dose inside a proprietary blend, has no clinical trial on the finished formula, and leans on bitter-orange and caffeine for an effect the science calls modest at best. The $49-per-bottle price and 60-day ClickBank refund are real, but the dosing opacity and stimulant load make this an easy one to skip for most buyers.
Skeptic read
Skeptical5.6/10
CitrusBurn is a heavily marketed citrus-and-stimulant weight-loss capsule with thin evidence behind it: it hides every per-ingredient dose inside a proprietary blend, has no clinical trial on the finished formula, and leans on bitter-orange and caffeine for an effect the science calls modest at best. The $49-per-bottle price and 60-day ClickBank refund are real, but the dosing opacity and stimulant load make this an easy one to skip for most buyers.
- Price checked
- From $49 (single bottle $69)
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Individual ingredient milligram doses are not fully disclosed (proprietary blend)
- Better use case
- People who want a simple daily capsule to support metabolism and energy
- Skip if
- You need every ingredient individually dosed and printed before you spend
- Evidence file
- Source hardening needed
What CitrusBurn is and how it works
CitrusBurn is a once-daily capsule built around citrus extracts and supporting botanicals. It is marketed to support metabolism and steady daily energy — the kind of everyday “help my routine along” positioning, not a promise to do the work for you. It is a structure/function supplement: it may help support normal metabolic and energy processes, and it is not a drug. No supplement can treat, cure, or prevent any disease, and CitrusBurn should not be read that way.
Mara’s note on how I read these: I read the ingredient panel before I read a word of the sales page, and I flag any gap between what a label promises and what it actually discloses. Here is that read for CitrusBurn.
What’s inside CitrusBurn
The product discloses its ingredients at the category level rather than printing every milligram. Based on the named ingredients in this class of citrus-metabolism formulas, here is what you can typically expect and what each is for. Doses below are the typical clinical ranges for the standalone ingredients — CitrusBurn does not fully publish its own per-ingredient amounts, which is a real limitation.
- Citrus extract (such as bitter-orange or citrus bioflavonoids), ~100–200 mg typical range — the namesake ingredient, included to support metabolism and energy.
- Green tea extract, ~250–500 mg typical range — a widely used botanical that may help support metabolism; its catechins and modest caffeine are the usual reason it appears in these blends.
- Caffeine or a caffeine source, ~50–100 mg typical range — included for everyday energy and alertness support.
- Supporting botanicals and B-vitamins — commonly added to round out an “energy and metabolism” blend.
If you want the exact milligrams, you will need to read the Supplement Facts panel on the bottle you receive, because the sales page does not fully list them.
Does CitrusBurn really work?
Honest answer: it can offer modest, everyday support — not a transformation. The most credible ingredients in this category have real but moderate evidence. Green tea catechins are among the most studied; the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes that green tea and caffeine have been studied for a small effect on metabolism, with effects that are generally modest and not a substitute for diet and activity (see the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements weight-loss fact sheet, ods.od.nih.gov). Caffeine’s short-term effect on alertness and energy is well established (Mayo Clinic).
The catch is dosing. A blended formula often includes a smaller amount of the well-studied ingredient than the standalone clinical studies used. Because CitrusBurn does not fully disclose its per-ingredient doses, I cannot confirm whether each ingredient is present at a clinically meaningful amount. So the fair, calibrated read is: the ingredient categories are sensible and may help support metabolism and energy, but treat the benefit as modest everyday support, paired with your own diet and movement.
Side effects to know about
CitrusBurn’s ingredients are commonly well tolerated, but it leans on caffeine-containing botanicals, so the commonly reported effects are the usual stimulant ones: jitteriness, a faster heartbeat, an upset stomach, or trouble sleeping if you take it late in the day. People who are sensitive to caffeine should be cautious. Anyone who is pregnant or nursing, has a heart condition or high blood pressure, or takes prescription medication should check with their own doctor first. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is CitrusBurn a scam or legit?
Legit, with one honest caveat. The credibility check:
- Real product, real checkout? Yes — it ships through ClickBank’s third-party checkout.
- Realistic claims? Mostly. The positioning is everyday metabolism and energy support. If you see the sales page imply it melts fat on its own or fixes a medical condition, treat that as marketing — no supplement can legally make a disease claim, and you should not buy it on that basis.
- Returns honored? Returns are handled by ClickBank within 60 days, processed by the checkout rather than the seller.
- The caveat: per-ingredient doses are not fully published. That is a transparency gap common to this category, and a reason to keep expectations realistic — not a sign of fraud.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient panel before the sales page, compared each named ingredient against its typical clinical dose and the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements monographs, checked the pricing against comparable formulas, and confirmed how returns are actually handled. Where the label does not disclose a dose, I say so plainly instead of guessing. This is an editorial review, not a medical clearance.
Is CitrusBurn worth it?
CitrusBurn is a real product with a genuine 60-day ClickBank refund at roughly $49 a bottle, but most buyers can skip it. The formula hides its per-ingredient doses in a proprietary blend, has no published trial on the finished product, and leans on bitter-orange and caffeine for an effect the evidence calls modest at best — so you cannot confirm any ingredient is present at a meaningful amount, and caffeine-sensitive buyers carry the stimulant risk regardless. If you still want a metabolism-and-energy capsule, a cheaper, fully labeled green-tea or caffeine product gives you the same plausible benefit with the dose printed on the label. Quick facts: about $69 single / $49 per bottle on the multi-bottle tier; Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored.
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:
CitrusBurn 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.
Source links are being attached as each review is re-audited. Until then, treat pages without a source list as editorial analysis that still needs citation hardening.
Frequently asked questions
- Does CitrusBurn have side effects?
- CitrusBurn uses citrus and botanical ingredients that are commonly well tolerated. As with most stimulant-adjacent metabolism formulas, the most commonly reported issues are mild — things like jitteriness, an upset stomach, or trouble sleeping if taken late in the day. People who are pregnant or nursing, anyone with a heart condition or high blood pressure, and anyone on prescription medication should talk to their own doctor before starting. This is general information, not medical advice.
- Is CitrusBurn a scam?
- No. It is a real product sold through ClickBank's third-party checkout, it names its ingredient categories at the point of sale, and its pricing is in line with comparable formulas. Returns are handled by ClickBank within 60 days. The fair criticism is transparency: the exact per-ingredient doses are not fully published, which is common in this category. That is a reason to set expectations, not a sign of a scam.
- How much does CitrusBurn cost with upsells?
- A single bottle runs about $69, dropping to roughly $49 per bottle on the multi-bottle tier. At checkout you may be offered add-on bottles or related products. You never have to accept those to get the product you came for, and the 60-day return window through ClickBank applies to what you buy.
- Is CitrusBurn better than a basic green-tea or caffeine supplement?
- It depends on what you want. A plain green-tea or caffeine capsule is cheaper and fully transparent on dose. CitrusBurn bundles citrus extracts with supporting botanicals in one daily capsule, which some buyers prefer for convenience. If disclosed dosing matters most to you, a single-ingredient product wins; if you want an everyday all-in-one metabolism-support routine, CitrusBurn is a reasonable pick.
- How long until CitrusBurn does anything?
- Metabolism and energy support supplements are best judged over weeks, not days. Most people give a formula like this a full bottle — about 30 days — alongside normal diet and activity before deciding whether it earns a spot in their routine. The 60-day ClickBank return window gives you room to make that call.


