What active ingredients are listed on Burn Peak supplement labels?
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Executive summary
Available reporting shows two competing ingredient presentations for products named “Burn Peak.” The company’s official clarification states authentic Burn Peak lists magnesium BHB, calcium BHB and sodium BHB as its active components [1]. Independent reviews and many retail listings, however, also describe formulas containing BHB salts alongside various botanicals and vitamin blends — for example green tea extract, bilberry, brahmi, lutein and vitamin B12 — creating confusion about which labels consumers are seeing [2] [3] [4].
1. Brand claim: BHB ketone salts only — the company’s line
The clearest direct claim from the maker is that the authentic Burn Peak product is an exogenous ketone formula composed specifically of magnesium BHB, calcium BHB and sodium BHB, and that it “does not contain botanical extracts, pink salt recipes, or herbal compounds,” a point stressed in the company clarification [1].
2. Marketplace reality: multiple ingredient sets in circulation
Review sites and third‑party sellers list divergent ingredient panels under the same “Burn Peak” name. Some retail and review listings describe blends that include green tea extract, caffeine, L‑theanine and other plant extracts [3] [5]. Other pages present a much broader “superfood” or botanical mix — bilberry, brahmi, lutein, vitamin B12, green tea extract, maqui berry, rhodiola and astaxanthin are all named in various summaries—suggesting multiple products or mislabeled listings using the same brand name [2] [4].
3. Why the discrepancy matters: safety, efficacy and consumer confusion
Active ingredient differences are not trivial. BHB salts (magnesium, calcium, sodium) are exogenous ketones marketed to raise blood ketone levels, while botanicals such as green tea extract or rhodiola carry different pharmacology and potential stimulant effects [1] [3]. The presence or absence of caffeine or other plant compounds can affect tolerability and contraindications; some reports flag jitters when green tea/caffeine appears in listings [2] [3].
4. Signals of counterfeit or multiple formulations in the supply chain
Several consumer reports and review sites note shipping problems, inconsistent bottle counts and warnings about unauthorized sellers — patterns frequently associated with marketplace fragmentation, third‑party relabeling or counterfeit products [6] [4]. Theconsumerratings highlights that prominent marketing materials and other vendor listings show different ingredient sets, directly calling out the contradiction [2].
5. How third‑party reviewers describe the “active” ingredients
Many reviews frame Burn Peak as a BHB‑centered product while also attributing additional “digestive” or “superfood” components to the formula. Access Newswire articles repeatedly describe the formula as containing BHB ketone salts plus “natural, plant‑based ingredients” to support digestion and metabolism, though those articles vary in the specific botanicals they list [7] [5].
6. What consumers should check on a label and when to distrust a listing
Given the reporting, buyers must inspect the actual product label and buy from verified channels. If a listing claims BHB salts only, the physical label should show magnesium BHB, calcium BHB and sodium BHB [1]. If a seller’s page lists additional extracts (green tea, bilberry, brahmi, etc.), the supplement facts panel on the bottle should match that claim; mismatches between marketing copy and the printed label are a red flag [2] [3].
7. Limitations of current reporting and open questions
Available sources document conflicting label claims and third‑party listings but do not provide authoritative laboratory analyses confirming which products on the market actually contain which compounds. Neither an independent lab test nor a regulator’s enforcement notice is cited in the materials provided, so the true extent of mislabeling or counterfeit distribution is not established in current reporting (not found in current reporting).
8. Practical takeaway for readers
If you are evaluating Burn Peak, prefer purchases from the brand’s verified channels and scrutinize the supplement facts panel: the company says the authentic active ingredients are magnesium BHB, calcium BHB and sodium BHB [1]. If product pages or third‑party retailers list botanicals or vitamins (green tea extract, bilberry, brahmi, lutein, B12, rhodiola, etc.), treat those listings as potentially different formulations and verify the actual bottle label before use [2] [3].
Sources cited: company clarification and press [1]; multiple reviews and retailer summaries noting botanicals, BHB salts and marketplace inconsistencies [7] [4] [2] [3] [5] [6].