Review · Other Supplements
ElectroSlim
A $70 electrolyte powder with a GLP-1 pitch that the ingredient label won't back up. You're paying for marketing, not a meaningful metabolic effect.
Skeptic read
Avoid3.8/10
A $70 electrolyte powder with a GLP-1 pitch that the ingredient label won't back up. You're paying for marketing, not a meaningful metabolic effect.
- Price checked
- $70
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- At $70 for 30 servings, you're paying $2.33 per serving for an electrolyte mix — a tub of unflavored electrolyte powder costs pennies per serving
- Better use case
- No one — at $70, it's not the best option for any use case
- Skip if
- You're looking for a real GLP-1 agonist — this is not even in the same universe as semaglutide or tirzepatide
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What ElectroSlim Is, in One Sentence
A lemon-lime electrolyte powder sold at $70 for a 30-serving tub, marketed as a GLP-1-optimizing weight-loss aid. The sales page talks about hormones and fat-burning; the tub mostly contains sodium, potassium, and magnesium — the same stuff you’d get from a $10 electrolyte mix at any supplement shop.
The disconnect between the GLP-1 pitch and the ingredient reality is the entire story here. If you buy it as a hydration powder, you overpaid by $60. If you buy it for the metabolic claims, you’re betting on a proprietary blend that the vendor won’t even show you.
What You Actually Get
One tub of powder, 30 servings, lemon-lime flavor. Zero sugar. The scoop is inside — you’ll need to dig for it. Along with the tub, you get a quick-start PDF (eat less, move more, drink the powder) and a bonus metabolic-reset PDF that reads like a repurposed diet tip sheet. There’s also access to a private Facebook group, which is standard for this type of funnel and about as useful as any Facebook group full of strangers drinking the same overpriced powder.
No physical extras. No shaker bottle, no meal plan booklet, no coaching. Just the powder and the PDFs.
The Ingredient Problem
The vendor doesn’t publish a supplement facts panel on the sales page. That’s not illegal — they’re not required to list it there — but it’s a red flag when the whole product is built on a metabolic claim. From the marketing copy, we can piece together that it contains electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium) and a “proprietary metabolic complex.” The complex is where the GLP-1 magic is supposed to live, but without a label, you can’t check doses.
Let’s be direct: there is no electrolyte blend on earth that meaningfully raises GLP-1 in humans at supplement doses. GLP-1 agonists are prescription peptides that work through a completely different mechanism. The ingredients commonly thrown into these “metabolic” blends — berberine, chromium, green tea extract — have at best weak, mixed evidence for modest effects on insulin sensitivity or appetite. At the doses a proprietary blend allows, they’re almost certainly underdosed. The vendor is counting on you not knowing the difference between a hormone and a hydration aid.
How It’s Supposed to Work (According to the Sales Page)
The VSL frames ElectroSlim as a way to “optimize GLP-1” — the hormone that regulates appetite and insulin. It suggests that the electrolyte formula triggers your body to produce more of it, leading to reduced cravings and fat burning. The reality: electrolytes help your nerves fire and your muscles contract. They’re critical for hydration, not hormonal signaling. If you’re dehydrated, you might mistake thirst for hunger, and fixing that could help you eat less. That’s the most charitable read. But that’s not a GLP-1 effect; that’s basic physiology you can get from a glass of water with a pinch of salt.
Pricing and the Refund Reality
$70 one-time. No recurring charges surfaced at checkout on the date above. Shipping is extra — typically $7–10 for domestic orders, based on similar ClickBank supplement offers. The 60-day refund window is real and handled through ClickBank, but for a physical consumable, the vendor requires you to return the bottle (even if empty) and you pay return shipping. The original shipping cost isn’t refundable. So your “full refund” is actually a refund of the product price minus two-way shipping, which usually nets you about $50 back after losing $20 in postage. That’s not a scam, but it’s not the risk-free trial the VSL implies.
Where the Marketing Oversells
Three specific claims to flag:
“EPC $3+” and “massive commissions” — These are affiliate recruitment lines. They tell you the funnel converts well for affiliates, not that the product works for customers. The two things are not the same, and the sales page wants you to confuse them.
“Premier electrolyte formulation for fat-burning” — Electrolytes don’t burn fat. They’re essential minerals. Calling them “fat-burning” is like calling water “muscle-building.” It’s technically true that you need water to build muscle, but no one would pay $70 for a bottle of Evian with that label.
“Optimizes GLP-1 hormone levels” — This is the big one. There is no published human study showing that an electrolyte powder with a proprietary metabolic blend raises GLP-1 to a clinically meaningful degree. If there were, the vendor would cite it. They don’t.
Who Should Buy, Who Should Skip
Buy this if you want to spend $70 on a flavored electrolyte powder, enjoy the taste, and don’t mind losing $20 in shipping if you return it. That’s a very small group.
Skip this if you’re looking for real weight-loss support. If GLP-1 is your concern, talk to a doctor about prescription options. If hydration is your concern, buy unflavored electrolyte powder in bulk and add your own citrus. If you want a supplement that might modestly help with appetite, berberine is available from reputable brands for a fraction of this price, and you’ll actually know the dose.
The Honest Read
ElectroSlim is a commodity product — electrolyte powder — with a high-concept marketing frame. The frame is doing all the work. The product itself is fine; it’s a drink mix. But at $70, you’re paying for the story, not the ingredients. The story is that a lemon-lime powder can hack your hormones and melt fat. The reality is that you’re drinking flavored salt.
If you’re curious, buy it, try it for a week, and return it inside the window. You’ll lose the shipping, but you’ll have satisfied your curiosity. If you’re hoping it will change your body, save your $70 and invest it in a dietitian consult or a gym membership. Both will do more for your GLP-1 levels than this powder ever could.
— 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. ElectroSlim | Trending Weight Loss Electrolyte Offer 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is ElectroSlim a scam?
- No. You'll receive a tub of flavored electrolyte powder and some PDFs. The scam is the pricing and the GLP-1 narrative, not the delivery. It's a real product, just a wildly overpriced one with claims that don't hold up.
- What's actually in ElectroSlim?
- The vendor doesn't publish a full supplement facts panel on the sales page. From the marketing copy, it's a blend of electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium) plus a 'proprietary metabolic complex' that likely includes ingredients like berberine, chromium, or green tea extract — all of which have thin evidence for GLP-1 in humans at supplement doses. Without a label, you're buying blind.
- Does the 60-day refund really work?
- Yes, through ClickBank. But for physical goods, the vendor requires you to return the product (even empty) and you pay return shipping. The original shipping cost isn't refunded either. So a 'full refund' minus $10–15 in postage. That's standard for supplement refunds on ClickBank, but it's not the risk-free promise the VSL implies.
- Will ElectroSlim actually help me lose weight?
- If you replace a sugary drink with it, you'll save calories. That's the extent of the weight-loss mechanism. The GLP-1 claim is marketing. Electrolytes don't burn fat, and the added 'metabolic' ingredients are almost certainly underdosed. You'd get the same hydration benefit from a $10 tub of plain electrolyte powder.