What ingredients are listed on Burn Peak supplement and their dosages?
Executive summary
Burn Peak’s manufacturer and some promotional outlets describe the product mainly as an exogenous ketone formula centered on BHB (beta‑hydroxybutyrate) salts — specifically Magnesium BHB, Calcium BHB and Sodium BHB — and advertise a natural, plant‑based positioning [1] [2]. However, reporting and third‑party listings diverge: several review pages and vendor copies list additional botanical ingredients (green tea extract, bilberry, brahmi, maqui, rhodiola, vitamins) or stimulant-containing extracts, and customer complaints point to inconsistent labeling and different formulations sold under the same name [3] [4] [5] [6]. Available sources do not publish a single, consistent ingredient list with exact dosages for every Burn Peak product variation (not found in current reporting).
1. What the maker clearly states: BHB ketone salts are the core
Burn Peak’s official materials and a GlobeNewswire clarification emphasize that the authentic product is based on exogenous BHB ketone salts — Magnesium BHB, Calcium BHB and Sodium BHB — and they frame the formula as free of botanical “pink salt” recipes or herbal compounds [1] [2]. Those statements position BHB salts as the defining active ingredients in the branded product [1].
2. Promotional reviews that repeat a “natural, plant‑based” narrative
Multiple press‑release style reviews and sponsored pieces describe Burn Peak as a “plant‑powered” or “natural” weight‑management supplement that combines BHB salts with plant extracts, digestive supports and vitamins, and they claim the product is non‑GMO, vegan, gluten‑free and GMP manufactured [7] [8]. Those articles present a comprehensive ingredient story — but they do not consistently publish a standardized ingredient panel with per‑ingredient dosages [7] [8].
3. Conflicting vendor lists: botanicals, stimulants and vitamins appear
Independent aggregator pages and some vendor listings show a very different ingredient profile that includes green tea extract (caffeine source), bilberry, brahmi, lutein, vitamin B12, maqui berry, rhodiola, cacao, astaxanthin and schisandra — a “superfood” or botanical blend not mentioned in the company’s BHB‑only clarification [4] [3]. Those discrepancies suggest either multiple distinct products are being sold under the Burn Peak name or some sellers list inaccurate ingredient panels [4].
4. Customer reports and review sites document inconsistencies and complaints
Consumer reviews and Trustpilot posts describe practical problems — missing capsules, aggressive marketing/subscription tactics, refund disputes and concerns when products bought from third‑party sellers differed from expectations — reinforcing the possibility of multiple formulations in the marketplace [9] [10]. Trustpilot reviewers explicitly warn against unauthorized sellers and claim problems obtaining refunds [9].
5. No reliable public source giving exact dosages for all listed ingredients
Across the available reporting and promotional pages, specific per‑ingredient dosages (milligrams or international units for each listed botanical, vitamin or salt) are not published in a single authoritative source. Company releases state which BHB salts are present but do not publish a complete Supplement Facts panel with dosages in the sourced documents; other vendor/review pages list ingredients but not consistent dosages [1] [7] [4]. Therefore, exact dosages cannot be confirmed from current reporting (not found in current reporting).
6. Two plausible explanations and their implications
Either (A) the official Burn Peak formula is a BHB‑salt product and third‑party sellers are listing different or embellished ingredient blends, or (B) multiple formulations (one BHB‑centric, others botanical blends) exist in the market under the same product name. Both scenarios carry consumer risk: mislabeled or mismatched formulations can expose people to stimulants (caffeine) or allergens unexpectedly and complicate safety assessments [1] [4] [3].
7. What consumers should do now
Buy only from the manufacturer’s official channel to minimize exposure to variant formulations and read the physical bottle’s Supplement Facts panel on arrival; the company’s statements emphasize BHB salts as the authentic composition [1] [2]. If a seller lists green tea extract, caffeine or other botanicals and you have sensitivity or contraindications, treat that listing as a potential red flag and consult a healthcare professional [4] [3].
Limitations: available sources include company press releases, promotional reviews and third‑party listings that conflict; none supply a single, independently verified Supplement Facts panel with ingredient dosages for every product variant, so precise mg dosages cannot be provided from the current reporting (not found in current reporting).