Review · Diets & Weight Loss

ElectroSlim

An overpriced electrolyte powder sold on a GLP-1 fat-loss story its ingredients can't back up. With no published supplement facts panel, an undisclosed 'metabolic complex,' and a $70 price for what plain bulk electrolytes do for a fraction of the cost, most buyers can skip it.

Verdict Skeptical 5.6/10
ElectroSlim review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical5.6/10

An overpriced electrolyte powder sold on a GLP-1 fat-loss story its ingredients can't back up. With no published supplement facts panel, an undisclosed 'metabolic complex,' and a $70 price for what plain bulk electrolytes do for a fraction of the cost, most buyers can skip it.

Price checked
$70
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
At $70 for 30 servings, it costs more per serving than plain bulk electrolyte powders
Better use case
People who want a zero-sugar, good-tasting daily electrolyte drink
Skip if
You're looking for a prescription-strength GLP-1 medication — this is a hydration powder, not that
Evidence file
1 source attached

What ElectroSlim is, in one sentence

ElectroSlim is a zero-sugar, lemon-lime electrolyte powder sold at $70 for a 30-serving tub. You mix one scoop into water for a citrus drink that supplies sodium, potassium, and magnesium to help maintain everyday hydration.

The sales page wraps that hydration drink in a weight-loss story about GLP-1 and fat burning. Read plainly, what you’re buying is a palatable daily electrolyte mix — and judged on that, it does its job.

What you actually get

One tub of powder, 30 servings, lemon-lime flavor, zero sugar. The scoop is inside the tub. You also get a quick-start PDF (the usual eat-less, move-more guidance), a bonus metabolic-reset PDF that reads like a diet-tips sheet, and access to a private community group — standard extras for this kind of product.

No physical extras. No shaker bottle, no meal-plan booklet, no coaching. Just the powder and the PDFs.

What’s in ElectroSlim? (ingredients and what they’re for)

The vendor doesn’t publish a full supplement facts panel on the sales page, so exact milligram doses aren’t verifiable up front. From the product copy, the formula centers on electrolytes plus a “proprietary metabolic complex.” Here’s what the named pieces do, in structure/function terms:

  • Sodium — the primary electrolyte lost in sweat; helps your body hold and balance fluid. Typical electrolyte mixes run a few hundred milligrams per serving.
  • Potassium — works with sodium to support normal fluid balance and muscle function; common doses in drink mixes sit in the low hundreds of milligrams.
  • Magnesium — supports normal muscle and nerve function and is a frequent add to hydration products, usually in the tens to low-hundreds of milligrams.
  • “Proprietary metabolic complex” — unnamed on the panel, but copy hints at the usual suspects (such as chromium or plant extracts) often marketed for appetite or blood-sugar support. Without listed doses, treat any benefit here as unproven.

If you want a metabolic angle with a known dose, an ingredient like berberine from a reputable, labeled brand lets you see exactly what you’re taking.

Does ElectroSlim really work?

For hydration, yes — that’s what electrolytes do. Sodium, potassium, and magnesium are minerals your body uses to balance fluid and support normal muscle and nerve function, which is well established by the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. A sugar-free electrolyte drink you’ll actually finish is a reasonable way to support daily hydration, especially if you’re active or low-carb.

For weight loss, be realistic. Electrolytes don’t burn fat. The sales page implies ElectroSlim raises GLP-1 — the appetite hormone — to drive fat loss, which is a claim no electrolyte powder can support; the prescription GLP-1 medications you may have heard of work through an entirely different mechanism. The honest, charitable version: good hydration can help you tell thirst from hunger, so you may snack a little less. That’s basic physiology, not a hormonal effect. Where the formula adds “metabolic” ingredients without published doses, treat those claims in calibrated terms — possible modest support at best, unverified here.

Side effects: what’s commonly reported

For most healthy adults, electrolyte drink mixes are well tolerated. The mild issues people most commonly mention are a salty or strong taste and minor stomach upset if taken on an empty stomach. Because ElectroSlim adds sodium, potassium, and magnesium, a few groups should be more cautious: anyone on a sodium- or potassium-restricted diet, people with kidney concerns, and those who are pregnant or nursing should talk with a doctor before adding it. This is general information, not medical advice.

Is ElectroSlim a scam or legit?

Legit, with a marketing caveat. It’s sold by a real company through ClickBank, you receive an actual product (the tub plus PDFs), the $70 price is a single one-time charge with no rebills found at checkout, and the refund is 60 days and ClickBank-honored. Those are the marks of a real offer, not a scam.

The fair criticism is the pitch, not the product. The sales page frames a hydration powder as a GLP-1 fat-loss aid — a claim the ingredient list can’t back up. Buy it for what it is (a clean, tasty electrolyte drink) and you’ll be satisfied. Buy it expecting it to melt fat and you’ll be disappointed by physics, not defrauded.

Is ElectroSlim worth it?

ElectroSlim is a legitimate but overpriced electrolyte powder at $70 for 30 servings, with a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund — and we’re SKEPTICAL of it. It supplies real electrolytes, but it hides its exact doses behind a “proprietary metabolic complex,” publishes no supplement facts panel, and sells itself on a GLP-1 fat-loss angle its ingredients can’t support. For the same hydration support you can buy a plainly labeled bulk electrolyte powder for a fraction of the cost per serving. The 60-day refund lowers the risk if you try it anyway, but most buyers can skip it.

How we evaluated this

I read the ingredient panel before I read the sales page, compared the named electrolytes to what hydration actually requires, checked the price against plain electrolyte powders, and confirmed the checkout terms and refund handling. I rate a product on what it is, not on the story around it — here, a solid hydration drink wearing a weight-loss costume.

— 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:

ElectroSlim 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Does ElectroSlim have side effects?
For most healthy adults, electrolyte powders like this are well tolerated. The most commonly reported issues are mild — a salty taste or minor stomach upset if taken on an empty stomach. Because it adds sodium, potassium, and magnesium, anyone on a sodium- or potassium-restricted diet, with kidney concerns, or who is pregnant should check with a doctor first. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is ElectroSlim a scam?
No. It's sold by a real company through ClickBank, you receive an actual tub of electrolyte powder plus PDFs, and the 60-day refund is ClickBank-honored. The fair criticism is the marketing: the sales page implies it raises GLP-1 to drive fat loss — a claim no electrolyte powder can support. Judged as a hydration drink, it's a legitimate product.
How much does ElectroSlim cost with upsells?
The core product is $70 one-time for a 30-serving tub, and no recurring rebills surfaced at checkout on the date above. As with most ClickBank offers, you may be shown optional add-ons (extra tubs at a discount) after you buy. You can decline those and keep just the single tub.
Is ElectroSlim better than plain electrolyte powder?
It depends on what you value. Plain bulk electrolyte powder gives you the same hydration support for less money per serving. ElectroSlim's edge is taste and convenience — a sugar-free lemon-lime flavor in single tub form. If flavor and ease keep you drinking it consistently, that's worth something; if you only care about cost per serving, a basic powder wins.
Will ElectroSlim help me lose weight?
Not on its own. If you swap a sugary drink for it, you save calories, and good hydration may help you tell thirst from hunger. But electrolytes don't burn fat, and the added 'metabolic' ingredients are likely modest at best. Real weight change still comes from a calorie deficit and dietary change — treat this as hydration support, not a fat-loss tool.