Has the FDA issued any warnings, recalls, or enforcement actions related to Burn Peak or its ingredients?

Checked on December 14, 2025
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Executive summary

Available FDA records and public notifications in the provided reporting show the agency has issued specific warnings about products named “Burn 7” that were found to contain undeclared, previously banned drugs (sibutramine and phenolphthalein) and has broader pages on tainted weight‑loss products and dietary‑supplement enforcement — but the sources do not mention a product called “Burn Peak” or any FDA action specifically naming “Burn Peak” [1] [2] [3].

1. What the FDA has explicitly warned about: tainted “Burn 7,” not “Burn Peak”

The FDA posted public notifications stating that the weight‑loss product Burn 7 was found by laboratory analysis to contain sibutramine (a drug removed from the market in 2010) and, in another notice, phenolphthalein — both undeclared and unsafe for consumers — and advised consumers not to purchase or use Burn 7 [1] [2].

2. No mention of “Burn Peak” in the supplied FDA materials

The set of provided FDA pages, recalls dashboards and enforcement directories include many product names and categories, but none of the cited pages or enforcement actions in the search results reference a product called “Burn Peak.” Available sources do not mention Burn Peak or any FDA warning, recall, or enforcement action that uses that exact name [4] [5] [6].

3. The agency’s approach to tainted weight‑loss supplements — broader context

The FDA maintains a specific program and public pages about tainted weight‑loss products and frequently issues public notifications when supplements contain hidden prescription drugs or banned substances; the agency’s “Weight Loss Product Notifications” page explains that many products marketed for weight loss are contaminated with hidden ingredients and provides guidance to consumers [3]. That program is the channel through which Burn 7 was called out [1].

4. What the Burn 7 notices mean for similar products and ingredients

When the FDA finds undeclared drugs in a supplement — sibutramine in one notice, phenolphthalein in another — it treats the product as adulterated or misbranded and issues public warnings to remove consumer exposure [1] [2]. The agency’s dietary supplement pages state it has authority to take action against adulterated or misbranded supplements and to post warning letters and recalls as needed [6].

5. How consumers can check for FDA actions and recalls

The FDA’s Recalls, Market Withdrawals & Safety Alerts and the Recalls of Foods & Dietary Supplements pages list current and recent recalls and advisories; the recall dashboards and device/drug recall pages provide searchable data for specific product names and firms [4] [5] [7]. To confirm whether a product like “Burn Peak” has an action, search those FDA pages or the Recall Dashboard for the exact product name and the firm [4] [7].

6. Sources, limitations and possible reasons for confusion

The evidence in the provided sources shows clear FDA enforcement against products named Burn 7 and general enforcement activity toward tainted weight‑loss supplements [1] [2] [3]. The supplied reporting includes no FDA notice, warning letter, recall, or enforcement record that mentions “Burn Peak.” It is possible a similarly named product exists in the marketplace or in private‑sector reviews (for example, a commercial review site references “BurnPeak”), but that commercial reporting is not the same as an FDA action and is not found in the FDA sources provided here (p1_s13; available sources do not mention FDA action on Burn Peak).

7. What to do next if you’re researching a specific product

If you want definitive confirmation about “Burn Peak,” search the FDA recall and public‑notification pages by exact product name and manufacturer, review the FDA Health Fraud Product Database for tainted supplements, and check the Warning Letters and Recalls dashboards; the FDA pages cited here explain where those notices and recall records are posted [3] [6] [4]. If you have product packaging or lot numbers, use those in the FDA searches for a more precise match [7].

Sources cited: FDA public notifications on Burn 7 containing sibutramine and phenolphthalein [1] [2]; FDA weight‑loss product notifications and dietary supplement enforcement pages [3] [6]; FDA recalls and dashboards overview [4] [5] [7]; a commercial review mentioning “BurnPeak” that is not an FDA action [8].

Want to dive deeper?
Has the FDA ever issued a warning letter to Burn Peak LLC or its manufacturer?
Are any ingredients in Burn Peak on FDA lists of unsafe dietary supplements or banned substances?
Have there been FDA recalls or import alerts for products containing Burn Peak ingredients since 2020?
What adverse event reports to FDA’s MedWatch mention Burn Peak or its active compounds?
How do FDA enforcement actions against similar weight-loss supplements inform potential risks of Burn Peak?