Review · Diets & Weight Loss
Viva Slim
An easy-to-take liquid drop you place under the tongue before meals, built around plant extracts often used for appetite and metabolism support — with no auto-ship and a one-time $76 price.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
An easy-to-take liquid drop you place under the tongue before meals, built around plant extracts often used for appetite and metabolism support — with no auto-ship and a one-time $76 price.
- Price checked
- $76
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Exact milligram amounts sit inside a proprietary blend, so you can't line them up against study doses
- Better use case
- People who prefer liquid drops over swallowing capsules
- Skip if
- You want every ingredient listed with its exact milligram dose
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Viva Slim is, in plain terms
Viva Slim is a 30-day supply of liquid weight-loss drops you take before meals, sold for $76 one-time through ClickBank. You place a few drops under your tongue or stir them into water, and the idea is that the liquid is easy to take daily and may help curb appetite while you work on diet and exercise.
The plan here is simple: a once-a-day liquid routine built around plant extracts that are commonly used in the weight-management category. It supports your own effort — it isn’t a replacement for it.
What you actually get
Four things, sized realistically:
- One 2 fl oz bottle of Viva Slim drops. The label lists a plant-extract blend (African mango, green tea, L-carnitine, raspberry ketones, and others). The amounts are grouped as a proprietary blend, so you see the ingredients but not each milligram total.
- An instruction pamphlet. Tells you to take a few drops under the tongue or in water before meals.
- Digital bonus materials. Usually a diet tips PDF and a recipe guide — generic but useful starter content that pairs with the drops.
- Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. Processed through ClickBank, not the vendor.
What’s in it, ingredient by ingredient
Here’s what the label names, and what each is typically used for. These are structure/function uses, not promises:
- African mango (Irvingia gabonensis). Studied doses in the literature often sit around 150 mg twice daily. It’s commonly used to support appetite control and healthy metabolism.
- Green tea extract. Typical study doses run roughly 250–500 mg of extract. Its catechins and modest caffeine are used to help support metabolism. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes green tea is widely studied for weight management with modest, mixed results (NIH ODS).
- L-carnitine. Often used around 500–2,000 mg daily. It plays a role in how the body uses fat for energy and is used to support that process.
- Raspberry ketones. Popular in this category for metabolism support, though human evidence is limited.
Because Viva Slim groups these in a proprietary blend, the exact per-ingredient amounts aren’t printed. That’s the honest catch: you can see the lineup, but you can’t line each one up against the study doses above.
Does Viva Slim really work?
Honestly: there’s no independent clinical trial on this exact liquid formula, so the fair answer is calibrated. The category evidence is real but modest. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements describes green tea, African mango, and similar plant extracts as showing small or mixed effects on weight in human studies, and notes that supplements may help alongside — not in place of — calorie control and activity (NIH ODS, Dietary Supplements for Weight Loss).
So set expectations the way the science does: Viva Slim may help support appetite and metabolism for some people, and it works best as a small assist to a diet-and-exercise plan. The drops aren’t magic, and the sales page’s big network sales figures aren’t proof of results — judge the formula on its ingredients, which are reasonable for the category.
Side effects — what’s commonly reported
Plant-extract drops like these are generally well tolerated, and Viva Slim’s label doesn’t flag common complaints. The one thing worth knowing: green tea extract contains caffeine, so caffeine-sensitive people may notice jitters, a faster heartbeat, or trouble sleeping if they take the drops late in the day. Taking it earlier usually solves that.
If you’re pregnant, nursing, or taking prescription medication — especially blood thinners, diabetes medication, or stimulants — talk to your doctor before starting. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Viva Slim a scam or legit?
It’s legit, with one honest limitation. The credibility check:
- Real company, real product? Yes — it ships a physical bottle and sells through ClickBank, an established retailer.
- Realistic claims? The ingredients are realistic for the category. The marketing leans on big headline numbers; treat those as sales talk, not evidence.
- Refund honored? Yes — 60 days, ClickBank-honored, processed by ClickBank rather than the vendor.
The only “scam” signal people worry about — getting charged forever — doesn’t apply here: there’s no auto-ship subscription surfaced at checkout. The fair criticism isn’t fraud; it’s transparency, since the doses live inside a proprietary blend.
How it tells you to use it
Take a few drops under the tongue or in water before meals. The liquid format is meant to be quick and easy to keep up with daily. Keep the bottle sealed and stored cool, since liquid supplements can be more sensitive to heat and air than capsules.
What it costs
$76 one-time at checkout, for a 30-day bottle. No recurring billing surfaced at the cart on the date above — a genuine plus, since many ClickBank supplements hide auto-ship subscriptions. You may see optional multi-bottle offers after purchase; decline them to keep the single $76 charge.
Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. The money comes back in roughly 3–7 business days after ClickBank processes it.
Is Viva Slim worth it?
Viva Slim is a fairly priced liquid appetite-support drop at $76 one-time, refundable for 60 days through ClickBank. If you prefer drops to pills and want a simple daily assist for a diet-and-exercise plan, it’s a reasonable, low-commitment pick. The plant extracts inside are sensible for the category, and the no-subscription checkout is the kind of thing I look for.
If your priority is seeing every ingredient’s exact milligram dose, you’ll be happier with a transparent-label product. But for an easy liquid routine you’ll actually keep up with, Viva Slim earns a recommendation.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient label before I read the sales page, checked each named extract against the dose ranges in the published literature, and confirmed the checkout terms and refund handling myself. I don’t hand out “medically reviewed” badges — I just tell you what’s in the bottle, what it’s reasonably used for, and where the marketing gets ahead of the evidence.
— 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:
Viva Slim 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 Viva Slim have side effects?
- Most plant-extract drops like this are well tolerated, and Viva Slim doesn't report common complaints on its label. Green tea extract contains caffeine, so sensitive people may notice jitters or trouble sleeping if they take it late in the day. If you're pregnant, nursing, or on prescription medication, check with your doctor first — this is general information, not medical advice.
- What are the ingredients in Viva Slim?
- The label lists a plant-extract blend including African mango, green tea, L-carnitine, and raspberry ketones. The exact amounts are grouped as a proprietary blend, so the milligram totals aren't printed individually. African mango and green tea are commonly studied for appetite and metabolism support.
- Is Viva Slim a scam?
- No — it's a real product that ships, sold through ClickBank, with a 60-day refund that ClickBank honors. The honest limitation is transparency: the doses are inside a proprietary blend, so treat the marketing's big numbers as sales talk and judge the formula on the ingredients you can see.
- How much does Viva Slim cost with upsells?
- The front-end price is $76 one-time for a 30-day bottle, with no recurring billing surfaced at checkout. As with most ClickBank carts, you may see optional multi-bottle offers after you buy; you can decline them and keep the single $76 charge.
- Is Viva Slim better than a weight-loss pill?
- It depends on what you want. Viva Slim's liquid format is easier to take for people who dislike capsules and may absorb faster. A capsule with a fully disclosed label lets you compare doses more precisely. Both work best alongside diet and exercise, not instead of them.