Are there regulatory approvals, warnings, or recalls related to Memo Genesis?

Checked on December 9, 2025
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Executive summary

Memo Genesis appears in promotional and review sources as a dietary supplement; those sources and consumer-watch reporting state dietary supplements like Memo Genesis are not FDA-approved [1] and not evaluated for safety or efficacy [2]. Available reporting in the provided search set contains no FDA recalls, warnings, or formal regulatory approvals specifically named “Memo Genesis”; current sources instead discuss wide FDA activity and unrelated recalls for brands named Genesis (automotive) and a controversial FDA internal memo on vaccines [3] [1] [4].

1. What “Memo Genesis” is and how regulators treat supplements

Memo Genesis is presented in commercial and review pages as a brain-health dietary supplement; those pages and investigative write-ups explicitly note dietary supplements are not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and therefore do not receive premarket FDA approval for safety or efficacy [1] [2]. That regulatory baseline matters: supplements can be manufactured in FDA-registered facilities, but FDA registration of a facility is not the same as FDA approval of the product’s claims [5].

2. No formal FDA approval for Memo Genesis found in the coverage

In the documents returned by the search, there are press releases and calendars from the FDA about approvals and programs—but none of them name Memo Genesis as approved or authorized by the agency [3]. Searches of the provided results turned up explicit statements that supplements like MemoGenesis are not FDA-approved [1] [2], and no FDA press announcement or regulatory notice in these sources announces an approval or clearance for a product called Memo Genesis [3].

3. No FDA warnings or recalls tied to Memo Genesis in current reporting

Among the collected sources there are multiple recall notices — almost all about the automotive brand Genesis or unrelated FDA safety actions — but no recall, safety warning, or enforcement action that references Memo Genesis the supplement [4] [6] [3]. Consumer-advice and scam-detection pieces flag Memo Genesis marketing practices and say it is “not evaluated or approved by the FDA,” and some allege it is promoted with misleading ads and fake endorsements [2]. Those are consumer-warned concerns reported by private sites, not formal FDA recalls or warning letters [2].

4. Confusion risk: “Genesis” appears across unrelated regulatory stories

The name “Genesis” appears frequently in the search results for car recalls and for company or mission names (automotive recalls for Genesis vehicles, regulatory approvals for banks or institutions named Genesis) and for FDA internal memos about vaccines [4] [7] [8]. This creates a strong possibility of conflating distinct topics: consumers asking about “Memo Genesis” should distinguish the dietary supplement from the Genesis automotive brand and from FDA memos that reference vaccine regulation [4] [8].

5. Consumer-safety posture and practical steps

Given the evidence in these sources, the practical reality is: Memo Genesis, marketed as a dietary supplement, is not FDA-approved and there are consumer reports raising red flags about marketing and unverifiable endorsements [1] [2]. For consumers: check for independent lab tests, third-party certifications, ingredient transparency on the vendor site, and report suspected scams or adverse events to the FDA’s MedWatch or to consumer-protection authorities. The provided sources do not include any traceable FDA safety alert, recall notice, or warning letter naming Memo Genesis itself [1] [2] [3].

6. What the sources disagree about — and what’s not in the reporting

Commercial pages and some reviews present Memo Genesis as “neurologist approved” and produced in U.S. facilities with “FDA registration” [5]. Independent watchdog and malware/consumer-fraud blogs counter that supplements aren’t evaluated by the FDA and some Memo Genesis marketing resembles common scam tactics [2]. The provided sources do not include authoritative clinical trials, FDA safety letters, or a formal recall notice for Memo Genesis; they also do not include any official FDA enforcement action against the product [1] [2] [3]. Available sources do not mention product-specific lab-test results, adverse-event totals tied to Memo Genesis, or a formal consumer-protection agency action specifically naming the supplement.

7. Bottom line — what readers should take away

Based on the documents in this packet, Memo Genesis is a marketed supplement that, like all dietary supplements, is not FDA-approved [1] [2]. There is reporting that flags aggressive or deceptive marketing around Memo Genesis but no FDA recall, warning, or approval for a product by that exact name in the provided sources [2] [3]. Separately, many “Genesis” regulatory notices in these results refer to unrelated auto recalls and FDA memos; those should not be conflated with the Memo Genesis supplement [4] [8]. If you want definitive regulatory status beyond these sources, request an FDA database search for the product name, examine the NDC/labeling if available, or provide more documents for review — those steps are not covered in the current reporting [3].

Want to dive deeper?
What is Memo Genesis and who manufactures or distributes it?
Have any national regulators issued safety warnings or advisories about Memo Genesis?
Are there product recalls or safety notices for Memo Genesis in the past five years?
Have consumers or healthcare providers reported adverse events linked to Memo Genesis?
How can I check regulatory databases (FDA, EMA, MHRA) for Memo Genesis approvals or recalls?