What are the ingredient lists and dosages for each Flash Burn formula variant (original, advanced, and ultra) as labeled by the manufacturer?

Checked on November 26, 2025
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Executive summary

Available reporting does not provide a single, authoritative manufacturer label that lists the exact ingredient lists and dosages for each named Flash Burn variant (original, advanced, ultra); most pages list differing ingredient sets and none publish measured dosages (not found in current reporting) [1] [2] [3]. Multiple merchant and review sites attribute ingredients such as green tea extract, garcinia, chromium, L‑carnitine, grape seed, capsicum/cayenne, guarana, maca and others to “Flash Burn” formulations, but those lists conflict across sources and lack per‑variant dosage information [3] [4] [5] [6].

1. Conflicting ingredient lists across official and retail pages

Flash Burn “official” pages and third‑party sellers do name many overlapping botanicals and nutrients, but they disagree on which ingredients appear in which variant: Flash Burn official sites highlight green tea, guarana, African mango, maca root and capsicum among others [7] while other official/affiliate pages emphasize grape seed, eleuthero, and cayenne pepper [2] and an e‑commerce listing cites butcher’s broom, gotu kola, grape seed, horse chestnut and motherwort [6]. These divergent ingredient lists indicate either multiple product formulations or inconsistent marketing copy rather than one consistent manufacturer label [7] [6].

2. Review and aggregator coverage: ingredient names but no dosages

Independent reviews and aggregator sites commonly publish “active ingredient” lists for Flash Burn that mix herbal extracts (green tea, garcinia cambogia, ginger), amino acids (L‑carnitine), minerals (chromium) and novelty weight‑loss ingredients (raspberry ketones, African mango), yet these pieces do not report exact per‑serving milligram or microgram dosages for “original,” “advanced,” or “ultra” variants [3] [4] [8]. For example, Health Insiders lists chromium, holy basil, olive leaf, green tea and L‑carnitine among its active ingredients but provides no dosing breakdown by product variant [3].

3. Retail listings imply “advanced” drops exist but don’t show labels

Retail pages such as Walmart list “Flash Burn Advanced Formula Drops” and supply claims (30 servings per bottle; max strength) but the publicly visible snippet and product page metadata in search results do not display a full manufacturer ingredient panel or dosages for each variant [9] [10]. The Walmart entries confirm an “Advanced” product name exists in commerce but do not substitute for a labeled Supplement Facts panel from the manufacturer [10].

4. Manufacturer marketing emphasizes benefits, not exact formulations

Multiple “official” Flash Burn sites emphasize manufacturing origin, liquid delivery, and thermogenic/metabolic benefits—claiming combinations like green coffee, forskolin, cayenne extract and chromium picolinate in marketing copy—but these promotional claims are not matched to a downloadable label with per‑ingredient dosing for “original,” “advanced,” and “ultra” variants in available snapshots [11] [7]. Where sites claim “proprietary blends” or “advanced delivery,” they frequently omit granular dose information in public pages [11].

5. Variant names (“original/advanced/ultra”) — present in commerce but not standardized

Search results show references to an “Advanced” formula and multiple product offerings under the Flash Burn name (drops, liquid) across marketplaces [9] [10], and many review sites treat “Flash Burn” generically rather than distinguishing distinct labeled variants with separate Supplement Facts [3] [4]. There is no consistent authoritative source among the provided links that maps an “original,” “advanced,” and “ultra” label to unique ingredient lists and dosages.

6. What we can and cannot conclude from available reporting

We can conclude that many commonly cited ingredients appear across Flash Burn marketing and reviews (green tea extract, garcinia, chromium, L‑carnitine, grape seed, capsicum/cayenne, guarana, maca, various herbal extracts) [3] [4] [5] [6]. We cannot, based on the provided sources, produce an exact, manufacturer‑labeled ingredient list with per‑serving dosages for each variant “original,” “advanced,” and “ultra” because no source supplied a Supplement Facts panel with those variant names and doses (not found in current reporting) [1] [7].

7. How to get an authoritative answer

Request or inspect a current product label (Supplement Facts) from the manufacturer’s packaged product pages, a scanned label image on an official retail listing, or direct manufacturer/customer‑service confirmation; the available sources are promotional or review summaries and do not supply the per‑ingredient dosing by named variant [7] [6]. If you want, I can attempt a targeted search for images or PDFs of labels (Supplement Facts) for each variant or draft wording you can send to the manufacturer to request official panels.

Limitations: All factual points above cite only the supplied search results. If you need me to attempt a new, deeper crawl of live webpages for label images or regulatory filings, tell me and I will search those specific assets next.

Want to dive deeper?
What ingredients are listed on Flash Burn Original, Advanced, and Ultra product labels?
Are the ingredient dosages for Flash Burn variants compliant with FDA or local supplement labeling regulations?
Have any third-party labs tested the ingredient composition and dosages of Flash Burn products?
Are there reported adverse events or recalls associated with Flash Burn Original, Advanced, or Ultra?
How do Flash Burn's ingredient dosages compare to clinically studied doses for weight-loss or thermogenic supplements?