Review · Dietary Supplements
Ignitra
Ignitra is a single-bottle metabolism-support supplement built on green tea, caffeine, and cayenne — sensible ingredients, no forced subscription, and a refund you can actually use, which earns it a RECOMMENDED at $182.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
Ignitra is a single-bottle metabolism-support supplement built on green tea, caffeine, and cayenne — sensible ingredients, no forced subscription, and a refund you can actually use, which earns it a RECOMMENDED at $182.
- Price checked
- $182
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- At $182 for a 30-day supply, you can buy the likely active ingredients as standalone, labeled products for less
- Better use case
- People who want a single-bottle trial of green tea, caffeine, and cayenne support alongside diet and exercise
- Skip if
- You take prescription medications — especially blood pressure meds, antidepressants, or blood thinners — and haven't checked the ingredients with a pharmacist first
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Ignitra is, in plain terms
Ignitra is a 30-day supply of metabolism-support capsules sold through ClickBank. It’s built around the familiar weight-management trio: green tea extract, caffeine, and cayenne. The idea is simple — these ingredients may help support energy and metabolism while you do the real work of diet and movement. Ignitra doesn’t replace that work, and it doesn’t claim to.
The front-end product is a proprietary blend, which means the label shows the total milligrams of the mixture rather than the exact dose of each active. That matters, because the research on these ingredients shows effects at specific doses. I’ll come back to that.
What you actually get
You get one bottle of Ignitra capsules. The sales page may include a digital guide or a bonus bottle, but the core deliverable is the bottle. After you buy, you’ll be offered at least one add-on — usually a “detox” or “accelerator.” Accept it and you may be enrolled in a recurring charge.
Buy only the first bottle and decline everything, and you pay $182 once. Click “yes” to a post-checkout offer, and you may see another charge in 30 days. So the rule is simple: read every checkbox at the upsell stage before you click.
Named ingredients and what they’re for
Here’s what this category — and Ignitra’s marketing — points to. Because of the proprietary blend, treat these as the likely lineup, not a verified panel.
- Green tea extract (EGCG) — typically studied around 400–500 mg of EGCG per day for metabolic support. Used to help support metabolism and fat oxidation.
- Caffeine — commonly 100–200 mg per dose. Used to support energy and alertness, and may modestly support metabolic rate.
- Cayenne pepper extract (capsaicin) — often around 10–30 mg of capsaicin. Used to help support metabolism and a feeling of warmth.
- Chromium (possible) — sometimes included to help maintain normal blood sugar already in the normal range.
These are structure/function roles — they support metabolism and energy. No supplement in this category is a substitute for diet and exercise, and Ignitra’s page does not claim to be one.
Does Ignitra really work?
Honest answer: it depends on the doses, and the proprietary blend hides them. The individual ingredients have real, modest support. Green tea catechins like EGCG have been studied for a small effect on metabolism and fat oxidation, and caffeine is one of the most-studied compounds for short-term energy and alertness — the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements summarizes the weight-related evidence as modest and inconsistent across green tea, caffeine, and capsaicin (see the NIH ODS dietary supplements for weight loss fact sheet). Capsaicin from cayenne has limited evidence for a small thermogenic effect.
The catch is dose. If a 750 mg blend is split across five ingredients, you might be getting 50 mg of green tea extract — well under the studied range. You can’t tell from the label. So the fair read is: the ingredients are plausible, and the effect, if any, is likely modest and comes mainly from the caffeine and green tea. I have not benched Ignitra in a lab, so I’m speaking to the category, not a verified assay.
Side effects
This is a stimulant-based formula, so the commonly reported issues track with caffeine and cayenne: jitteriness, trouble sleeping if you take it late in the day, a faster heartbeat, and mild stomach upset from the cayenne. People who are sensitive to caffeine tend to feel it most. Anyone taking prescription medication — especially blood pressure medication, antidepressants, or blood thinners — should check with a pharmacist first, partly because the proprietary blend may not list the exact caffeine amount. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Ignitra a scam or legit?
Legit, with caveats. A bottle arrives. The seller is a real ClickBank-listed company. The claims stay on the right side of the line — it’s marketed as a supplement, not a drug, and I didn’t spot illegal disease claims. The refund is processed by ClickBank, not the vendor, so it’s reliable.
The honest critique is price, not legitimacy. At $182 for 30 days, you’re paying more than the likely actives cost as standalone, labeled supplements. The marketing also leans on before/after photos rather than lab data. None of that makes it a scam — it makes it a convenience buy you should go into with clear eyes.
What it costs and how the refund works
$182 for the first bottle, one-time, with no forced auto-ship. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. You contact ClickBank with your order ID, and the refund typically lands in 3–7 business days. You may have to return the bottle and cover return shipping (roughly $5–10). The refund covers the initial purchase; any recurring upsell charge is a separate transaction handled by the vendor, so decline upsells you don’t want.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you want the convenience of a single bottle and you’ll run it as a one-month trial alongside diet and exercise — and you’ll track your weight, energy, and any side effects honestly.
Skip it if you take prescription medication and haven’t cleared the ingredients with a pharmacist, if you’re sensitive to caffeine, or if you want a fully transparent, dose-by-dose label before you spend.
Is Ignitra worth it?
Ignitra is a legit, single-bottle metabolism-support supplement at $182 with a 60-day ClickBank refund. It’s worth it if you value convenience and want one bottle of green tea, caffeine, and cayenne support rather than sourcing three separate products. If transparency and lowest price matter most, the standalone-ingredient route does the same job for less. Either way, the refund makes a one-month trial low-risk.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient lineup before I read the sales page, then compared the likely doses to the ranges in the published research and weighed the price against what the same actives cost as standalone, labeled supplements. I checked that the seller is real and that the refund is honored. I have not benched Ignitra in a lab, so where I couldn’t verify a dose, I said so and spoke in category terms instead of guessing.
— 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:
Ignitra 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 Ignitra have side effects?
- The most common thing to expect from a caffeine- and cayenne-based formula is what you'd expect from a stimulant: jitters, trouble sleeping if taken late, a faster heartbeat, or mild stomach upset from the cayenne. People sensitive to caffeine should be cautious. If you take prescription medication, ask a pharmacist before starting — this is general information, not medical advice.
- Is Ignitra a scam?
- No. A bottle arrives, the company is a real ClickBank-listed seller, and the 60-day refund is honored through ClickBank. The fairer critique is price: at $182 you're paying more than the same ingredients cost as standalone labeled supplements. That's an overpricing question, not a scam.
- How much does Ignitra cost with upsells?
- The front-end bottle is $182, one-time, with no forced auto-ship. After checkout you'll be offered add-ons (a 'detox' or 'accelerator' bottle, a diet guide). Accept any of them and you may enroll in a recurring charge, so read each checkbox before clicking. Decline everything and you pay $182 once.
- What's actually in Ignitra?
- Based on the marketing and category, expect green tea extract, caffeine, cayenne pepper, and possibly chromium. The catch is the proprietary blend: the label lists total milligrams for the blend rather than per ingredient, so you can't compare each dose to clinical research.
- Is Ignitra better than buying the ingredients separately?
- It's more convenient — one bottle instead of three. But you can buy green tea extract, caffeine, and cayenne as standalone, labeled supplements for less, with doses you can actually see. If transparency and price matter most to you, the separate route wins. If convenience matters more, Ignitra is the simpler buy.


